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Police Search for Feared Shark Victim

Police Search for Feared Shark Victim

Miami Herald22-04-2025

Israeli police searched the waters off its Mediterranean coast amid fears that a swimmer may have been attacked by a shark, according to local media reports.
Newsweek has reached out to the Israeli police and Israel's Parks and Nature Authority' for comment.
Police in Israel's Coastal District resumed search efforts Tuesday for a swimmer who disappeared after a suspected attack-by one or more sharks- near Hadera's Orot Rabin Power Plant the previous day, Israeli media reported.
The search has drawn a large-scale response, with multiple agencies-including military, emergency, and volunteer teams-joining the effort. Graphic footage of the alleged attack allegedly filmed by people on the beach emerged on social media.
In one video showing the possible victim in the distance near a shark, one man was heard saying: "Wow, wow, he's with the shark, he's fighting him. They're eating him, eating the man... Can't see him," The Times of Israel reported, adding that the Hadera Stream Beach has been closed.
Despite a longstanding ban on swimming in the area-where warm water from a nearby power plant attracts dozens of sharks between October and May-beachgoers continue to enter the sea, prompting police to close multiple beaches between Hadera and Netanya's Poleg Beach.
While the exact species involved in the recent shark attack near Hadera has not been officially confirmed, dusky sharks are commonly found in the area, experts say.
Yigael Ben-Ari, head of Israel's marine ranger force, said it's unclear how the missing swimmer interacted with the sharks but stressed the public should avoid entering the water or approaching the animals, whose behavior can be unpredictable, according to The Associated Press.
Society for the Protection of Nature in Israel, as quoted by The Associated Press: "It would have been appropriate to take steps to preserve and regulate public safety, but over the years chaos has developed in the area."
Extreme Simulations representative Daniel told Maariv, as quoted by The Jerusalem Post: "I entered the water as soon as we got to the beach, six minutes after the call. The beach was crowded, and I immediately put on my clothes and entered a place where I know there are no sharks. I am a diving instructor, and I knew where it was safe, but they asked me to go out."
Authorities are investigating the shark attack and considering stricter safety measures, while environmental groups push for designated observation zones to prevent future incidents, according to the media.
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