
Shark Bites Tourist Who Was Trying to Take Photo With It
The tourist was treated at a hospital before she left the island, Providenciales, a sandy, 38-square-mile magnet for snorkelers and sun seekers that is ringed by turquoise waters.
The shark was about six feet long, according to the Turks and Caicos government, but its species was unclear.
The tourist had 'attempted to engage with the animal' in an effort to take pictures of it before she was bitten on Feb. 7, the Department of Environment and Coastal Resources in Turks and Caicos said in a statement.
Her identity was not immediately released and officials did not describe the extent of her injuries.
The beach was closed but reopened on Feb. 9 after the shark was found to have moved into deeper water, according to the environment department. Turks and Caicos, an archipelago, is a British territory and one of the Caribbean's fanciest tourist destinations.
Shark bites are extremely rare and are typically accidents, experts say. But sharks can cause severe wounds when they mistake humans for prey.
Across the world, there were 88 confirmed or potential shark bites logged last year by the International Shark Attack File at the University of Florida, an organization that tracks shark data.
Twenty-four were provoked, meaning that a human had initiated contact with the shark, according to the organization. Four people died from shark bites. One of last year's recorded bites was in Turks and Caicos; it was not fatal.
The file's director, Gavin Naylor, said on Saturday that it was too soon to say if this month's bite in Turks and Caicos was provoked or unprovoked.
But Chris Stefanou, a New York fisherman and conservationist who tags sharks, said that photographing sharks can carry risks, and that the shark might have confused a phone for a fish.
'Sharks, or any predatory animal in the ocean, can confuse that as like a bait fish,' Mr. Stefanou said, referring to small, shiny fish that draw sharks to shore. 'The shark didn't just see a human: 'Ooh, I'm hungry, I want to go take a bite.' That did not happen.'
The episode was not the only reported shark bite in the Caribbean on Feb. 7. Two Americans were injured in what appeared to be a shark encounter in Bimini Bay in the northern Bahamas, according to the Royal Bahamas Police Force.
Mr. Naylor said having two bites in one day in the region was unusual and made him 'sit up a little.'
But it was not clear whether there was any trend. The number of confirmed unprovoked shark bites dropped to 47 last year, down from 69 the year before, according to the International Shark Attack File.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Post
an hour ago
- New York Post
US hitwoman who flew to UK to murder lover's business rivals gets 30 years in prison
An American woman who traveled to the UK to try to assassinate her lover's business rivals — just for the gun to jam on her — was sentenced Thursday to 30 years in prison. Loved-up Aimee Betro, 45, traveled from Wisconsin for the twisted murder plot nearly six years ago in Birmingham, England, to please Mohammed Nazir, a British man she fell for on a dating app. Surveillance footage caught Betro as she hid behind a full Islamic niqab face covering while waiting in a car — then stepping out to try to shoot her main target's son, Sikander Ali, as he arrived home, just for the gun to jam. She came back hours later and fired three shots through the upstairs window, seemingly aiming to kill Ali's father, Aslat Mahumad, over an earlier fight he had with her lover, according to cops. 4 Aimee Betro of Wisconsin has been sentenced to 30 years in prison for trying to kill her British lover's business rival. She even texted Mahumad, threatening him: 'Stop playing hide n seek. You're lucky it jammed. Who is it? Your family or you? Pick one.' Betro fled the UK the next day – and remained on the run for five years. She was finally tracked down when she and Nazir tried to frame an innocent British man for the shootings. Betro, from West Allis, Wisconsin, was sentenced Thursday to 30 years in prison for her 'leading role' in the twisted September 2019 plot, for which her online lover and his dad are already behind bars. 4 Betro was hired by Mohammed Nazir, whom she fell in love with online. West Midlands Police/SWNS 'You went beyond simply reaching an agreement to kill,' Judge Drew told Betro at sentencing, according to the BBC. 'It is only a matter of chance that Mr Ali wasn't killed. You were engaged in a complex, well-planned conspiracy to murder. You were prepared to pull the trigger and did so on two separate occasions,' the judge said. Betro — her hair in plaits and wearing glasses, a white top and black cardigan — sat expressionless as she was convicted of conspiracy to murder, possessing a self-loading pistol with intent to cause fear of violence, and illegally importing ammunition at Birmingham Crown Court. 4 Betro's murder plot failed when her gun jammed, the jury was told. Nazir was last year sentenced to 32 years in prison for the failed contract killing, while his dad, Mohammed Aslam, got 10 years. The pair had feuded with Aslat Mahumad, and all three were hurt in a brawl at the target's clothes shop a year before the attempted hit, police noted. Betro had flown twice before to the UK to visit Nazir — in December 2018 and May 2019 — before coming back in August 2019 for the doomed hit. 4 Nazir's father, Mohammed Aslam, was sentenced over the plot in 2024. West Midlands Police/SWNS 'It's by luck that her attempt to kill her target failed, thanks to the jamming of her gun,' Detective Chief Inspector Alastair Orencas of West Midlands Police said. 'While she was passing herself off as a tourist, posting pictures and video of landmarks such as the London Eye while she was here, her real purpose was to commit murder.' The American convict will serve her prison sentence in the UK, which is likely to be 'particularly difficult,' the judge said in sentencing. 'All her family and friends are in America and she has had very few visits except for her lawyers,' Judge Drew said, noting that Betro had expressed 'remorse.'


USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
A fisherman wanted a picture of his catch. The 6-foot shark bit him.
A fisherman on a birthday trip in Florida suffered serious injuries to his leg over the weekend while posing with a large shark for a photo after he and his friends caught the animal. The encounter took place on the barrier island of Cayo Costa in southwest Florida, Boca Grande District Fire Chief C.W. Blosser confirmed to USA TODAY on Aug. 21. Cayo Costa is in Lee County west of Naples. According to Blosser, the man was taken to a hospital to be treated after the shark bit his leg during the Aug. 16 incident that occurred just before 11 p.m. ET. Two 911 calls alerted authorities of the shark bite, reported the Fort Meyers News-Press, part of the USA TODAY Network. "We caught a lemon shark. ... We just took the hook out," 48-year-old Shawn Meuse said. "We're getting ready to release him back in the water, and he turned around and bit me." Fisherman bit by shark was posing with photo with it Video shows Meuse holding the shark by the nose along a shoreline as another man lifts the shark's tail fin. Footage goes on to show the shark struggling to avoid capture, apparently attempting to get back into the water. Watch the harrowing moment in the video at the top of the story. 'For the picture, for the memory' The injured man told Storyful and local NBC News the shark reared as he attempted to hold the nearly 6-foot lemon shark, before it bit his leg below his knee. Footage of the video shot by one of Meuse's friends shows the shark flop back into the water. "They took me off the boat, threw me in the ambulance and drove me to the helicopter and now I'm here," Meuse told the TV station in an interview from the hospital where he said he had undergone surgery. When a reporter asked why Meuse wanted a photo with the shark he responded, "For the picture, for the memory." After the incident, Blosser reminded people to never underestimate mother nature. "He got lucky," the chief told USA TODAY. "It could have been a lot worse." How many people die from shark attacks every year? According to data from the International Shark Attack File, run by the Florida Museum of Natural History, the world averages 65 documented shark attacks annually. On average, six fatal attacks are reported each year, data shows. Last year, 47 people were bitten in unprovoked attacks. Contributing: Tomas Rodriguez, Fort Myers News-Press Natalie Neysa Alund is a senior reporter for USA TODAY. Reach her at nalund@ and follow her on X @nataliealund.


New York Post
3 hours ago
- New York Post
BBC pressured to cut ties with author Sally Rooney over support for terrorist group Palestine Action
The BBC faces mounting pressure to sever ties with bestselling Irish author Sally Rooney who recently said she would donate money to a pro-Palestinian organization that British authorities have categorized as terrorists. Rooney, the controversial author of a book that was adapted to a popular movie streamed on the British public broadcaster, stunned critics last weekend by announcing she would give a percentage of proceeds from book sales to Palestine Action. 'I want to be clear that I intend to use these proceeds of my work, as well as my public platform generally, to go on supporting Palestine Action and direct action against genocide in whatever way I can,' the 34-year-old Rooney told The Irish Times. Advertisement 4 The BBC faces mounting pressure to sever ties with bestselling Irish author Sally Rooney. Getty Images The defiant novelist, who lives in Ireland and has declared a boycott of Israel, said if that branded her a 'supporter of terrorism' under British law, 'so be it.' Her bombshell declaration triggered fierce backlash from Jewish groups and legal experts who warned the BBC could face criminal liability for continuing to profit from her work. Advertisement Palestine Action, which was founded in 2020, has generated headlines for targeting British arms companies that conduct business with Israel. The group's members have engaged in blockades, occupied facilities and inflicted property damage at weapons factories and military installations. On July 5, the UK government officially banned Palestine Action as a proscribed terrorist organization under the Terrorism Act 2000, making membership punishable by up to 14 years in prison and criminalizing any form of support including fundraising, statements or displaying associated materials. 4 Rooney stunned critics this past weekend by announcing she would give a percentage of proceeds from book sales to Palestine Action. Getty Images for Hulu Advertisement Since the ban took effect, over 744 individuals have been arrested for showing support for the group, including a record-breaking single-day arrest of 522 people at a London Parliament Square protest on Aug. 9 The Campaign Against Antisemitism, a UK-based nonprofit, torched Rooney's stance as 'utterly indefensible' and demanded platforms cut ties immediately. 'This goes far beyond political activism — it is a deliberate statement of intent to channel money towards a group that vandalized RAF jets and terrorized the Jewish community,' the organization said. Advertisement 'Platforms and publishers profiting from her work must urgently review their relationship with her, as they now risk enabling the flow of funds to a terrorist organization.' The BBC has hosted 'Normal People' on iPlayer since its 2020 launch and aired another Rooney adaptation, 'Conversations with Friends,' in 2022. The corporation scrambled to distance itself from the controversy. 4 Rooney has declared a boycott of Israel over its policies in the Palestinian territories. She has refused to have her books translated into Hebrew. Nasser Ishtayeh/SOPA Images/Shutterstock 'Matters relating to proscribed organizations are for the relevant authorities,' the BBC stated tersely, noting Rooney was never a staff member and what authors do with previously received money is 'a matter for them.' But several BBC insiders expressed dismay privately, with some remarking that Rooney 'had form' for courting controversy, according to the UK-based Times. The timing couldn't be worse for the broadcaster. Netflix began streaming 'Normal People' just two weeks ago, with the 12-part drama immediately cracking the platform's top-ten UK chart. Every morning, the NY POSTcast offers a deep dive into the headlines with the Post's signature mix of politics, business, pop culture, true crime and everything in between. Subscribe here! Advertisement Downing Street fired back Monday, warning donors to Palestine Action they were committing terror offenses under the Terrorism Act. 'There's a difference between showing support for a proscribed organization, which depends on the Terrorism Act, and legitimate protest,' a government spokesman said. 'Where activity breaks the law, then obviously the police will take action.' Rooney has been reported to counterterrorism police, though no action is expected since Palestine Action isn't banned in Ireland, where she made her comments. Advertisement 4 Jewish groups have demanded that the BBC sever ties with Rooney. REUTERS A law enforcement official told the Times that arresting Rooney would be complicated given jurisdictional considerations. 'Ordinarily, offenses occur based on where the person is at the time,' the official told the newspaper. Advertisement 'If you're in the UK and you're sending money to a proscribed terrorist organization then yes, it would likely be an offense.' But legal experts told the Times that they believe Rooney could still face prosecution under UK terror finance laws that cover overseas actions. Jonathan Turner, chief executive of UK Lawyers for Israel, argued the author along with the BBC and booksellers could have broken the law. 'By providing financial assistance to an organization which clearly intends to commit criminal damage in the UK, she is likely to be guilty under UK law for knowingly assisting the commission of criminal offenses,' Turner said. Advertisement 'I think the BBC and other sellers of her books could also be liable for assisting criminal offenses by Palestine Action as well as offenses under the Terrorism Act 2000 for transferring funds that may be used for the purposes of terrorism.' Home Secretary Yvette Cooper branded Palestine Action more than 'a regular protest group' this past weekend, citing its 'escalating campaign' of activities. The Post has sought comment from the BBC and Rooney.