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Chilling wolf map shows ferocious beasts prowl Brit holiday hotspots after boy, 6, snatched from mum by infamous ‘Bram'

Chilling wolf map shows ferocious beasts prowl Brit holiday hotspots after boy, 6, snatched from mum by infamous ‘Bram'

The Sun6 days ago
FEROCIOUS wolves are prowling British holiday hotspots as the number of the predators continues to grow.
It comes after a six-year-old boy was dragged into the woods by a child-hunting wolf in front of his horrified mum in the Netherlands.
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The child suffered horrific bite wounds, which required stitching - and was found with multiple scratches and abrasions on his body.
The tot went for a walk with his mum and younger brother in the Dutch province of Utrecht when they saw an animal running towards them.
At first, Mum Nynke, 41, thought it was safe for her children to play with what appeared to be a friendly dog from a distance.
It was only when the wild wolf jumped on the boy and dragged him into the woods, the mum realised the danger.
Passers-by in the tourist hotspot Den Treek nature reserve then rushed to save the boy from the wolf's jaws.
The terrified mum told The Times:"There were two men with big sticks who beat the animal and eventually they got it off my son. I was in a state of total panic and grief."
Locals suspect that a rogue wolf named Bram was behind the dangerous attack.
Bram, who is officially designated GW3237m, is reportedly on a death sentence for attacking other people and dogs in the region.
Parents of boy, 3, mauled to death by devil dogs facing jail after they 'let him wander into pen unsupervised'
Just a few weeks ago, the lone wolf bit a female hiker twice on the leg at the Den Treek estate near Leusden
A court permitted the province of Utrecht to shoot the wolf dead, saying it poses a threat to the people, the NL Times reports.
According to the court, the risk of serious injury to people is 'so severe' that the wolf must be culled.
Recent wolf attacks on pet dogs, livestock and even children have sparked uproar across Europe.
Wolf populations have continued to grow due to the predators being protected under the Bern Convention in EU law.
But this also means there has been an increasing contact with humans.
Chilling figures released in June show the number of wolf attacks on sheep and other livestock is at an all-time high.
In the first three months of 2025 in the Netherlands, 368 attacks on animals were recorded, compared to a much lower 266 the year prior.
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The Central European lowlands population of wolves currently sits at between 780-1030 wolves.
And our map shows how the Dinaric-Balkan region are having to deal with the highest number of the beasts - roughly 4,000.
The wolf-ridden region of mountains covers holiday hotspot destinations like northeastern Italy, Croatia, Slovenia and Albania.
Wolves may also prowl Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro and Serbia, as well as the northwestern part of Kosovo.
Central European lowlands are also having to grapple with between 780 to 1030 wolves.
Meanwhile the Alps and areas of Italy are dealing with up to 3,000 of the beasts.
The EU law was modified in March of this year, however, shifting the protection status of wolves in Europe from "strictly protected" to "protected".
This change grants member states more flexibility in managing the ever-growing wolf populations.
The remains of a little two-year-old boy named Emile Soleil were found in a forested ravine last year with a bite mark on his skull in a case that shocked France.
Cops said that little Emile's remains were found outside of the hamlet Le Vernet almost eight months after the tod mysteriously disappeared from Alpine village.
A few locals believed at the time that Emile was killed in a chilling attack by a pack of wolves.
Another boy was attacked by a rogue wolf in a snow-covered Russian park a few years ago.
Shocking video shows the predator mauling the child's leg while the boy - believed to be aged around five - screams and cries.
However, according to the WWF, wolves in Europe don't pose a threat to humans.
The animal charity says that scientific evidence has proved that wolves don't treat humans as prey, with fatal encounters being exceptional.
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Spade attack neighbour from hell: Mother-of-three, 44, who beat young man over head with shovel in bitter five-year feud with family next door
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RAW VID - 3488293 A family who were subjected to a campaign of abuse by their neighbour before she launched a vicious spade attack are living in fear that she could return to 'finish the job she intended' after she was spared jail. Mother-of-three Catherine 'Cat' Lloyd, 44, pounced from behind her gate and smashed her victim over the top of the head in a narrow alleyway between their homes in a late-night attack his family say he was lucky to come out of alive. In new CCTV from the night obtained by the Daily Mail, she then smashes him over the head with a wooden bat with the help of her ex-boyfriend whom she had called over to join in. The horrifying double attack, caught on CCTV, followed a three-year campaign of abuse against the victim's grandparents-in-law in which she made 1am death threats, branded them 'paedophiles' and 'murderers' online and even threw bricks at them. Cambridgeshire Police said Lloyd struck her neighbour, in his 20s, over the head with a spade in Peterborough on May 14 2023 after a 'long-running dispute', leaving him with a large gash to the head which required hospital treatment. But his grandparents-in-law, who live next door to Lloyd, told the Daily Mail today: 'This is not a long-running dispute. It's not "she had a go, we had a go". There's no tennis involved. It's her just persecuting us for her own enjoyment. 'We were subjected to a hate campaign and we have no idea why. It's been hell, it's been purgatory. She's a calculated, scheming woman.' Lloyd - who has two young twin girls and a teenage boy - admitted grievous bodily harm without intent and was sentenced to 10 months in jail this week, but she has been released back onto the streets due to time she has served in custody. The terrified pensioners, who cannot be named for legal reasons, have now installed an iron gate in the passageway, explaining: 'We are having to safeguard ourselves from the possibility of an absolute nutjob coming back to finish the job that she intended.' Half an hour after the spade attack, Lloyd and her ex-partner, Aaron Hockey, attacked the victim again - this time with a wooden bat. Hockey first attacked the victim's mother and then turned on him when he came outside We can reveal today the 'dispute' stemmed from a random letter that Lloyd - who had been completely fine with them when she first moved in back in 2019 - put through their letterbox on May 27, 2020. In the strongly worded letter, Lloyd claimed her neighbours had left 'broken roof tiles' and 'tree trimmings' in her garden and threatened to report them to the police. The next day, the husband and wife unsuccessfully attempted to engage in a 'reasonable discussion' with Lloyd so instead wrote a letter back to her, which she refused to open. In the letter, they explained external contractors had completed work on their bathroom roof three months prior and all the old tiling had been removed with any debris swept up. They also attempted to call round to clear up the small amount of tree clippings that had fallen into Lloyd's garden but got no answer. 'Then all of a sudden she just turned,' the couple explained. 'To this day we don't know what reason, but that's when the abuse started. 'She was shouting at 1am in the morning that she was going to kill us. I was frightened of going out my front door.' Lloyd returned the sealed letter back to her neighbours, but wrote on top: 'Do anything to hurt or harm my children and I will go to the police!' 'From there on, we were called paedophiles, we were called murderers, you name it. We had to get cameras put in. She was shouting it over the fence. For nearly two years I didn't dare go out our back gate because she'd be there all the time waiting for me. 'We had the police out so many times and we told them she's like a ticking time bomb. You just don't know when she's going to kick off.' In social media posts seen by Daily Mail, Lloyd posted their faces and names online, calling them 'sex pests, child abusers and creepy ass stalkers'. When their grandson-in-law stuck up for them one day, Lloyd turned and 'suddenly hated him' as well, shouting abuse at him and issuing death threats. They explained: 'If she mouthed off, he would give her as much as back. That's what she didn't like. Our policy was to ignore her and it made it worse. His policy was you bite me, I'll bite you back. That made her worse too, you couldn't win.' In one terrifying moment in 2021, Lloyd allegedly pushed her pensioner neighbour off her bike, leaving her with bruises all over her arm. 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In other CCTV obtained by the Daily Mail, Lloyd is seen putting her middle finger up at her neighbours' camera while her children walk in front of her, while in another she throws her parking ticket on the floor. 'To say she's got no respect for the law would be an understatement,' they said. The neighbours, who have lived in their house for 30 years, say they had 'never encountered' anyone like Lloyd before, adding: 'We weren't sure what she was capable of and that's the scary bit.' They added: 'She'd used this tenuous excuse that we were all paedophiles and after her children to exact violence and threats and assault us. 'It's a total fabrication. It's so degenerate, it's like she was provoking us and looking for a reaction. When she didn't get it, it made her worse. It's about the worst thing you can call a person, a paedophile.' Although Lloyd has finally been convicted two years later, they say it has brought 'no relief'. 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