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Latest Update: Sunday19/7/2009July, 2009, 11:34 PM Doha Time


Shark attack victims fight for their very attackers



AFP/Washington
They may have lost fingers, or perhaps even an arm or leg, but these former 
surfers and vacationers paced down the halls of Congress in Washington to seek 
protection for sharks, their very attackers. "I'm here to lobby for the bill to 
save the sharks, I lost my arm. It's a very powerful statement," said Al 
Brenneca, a 52-year-old who was attacked by a shark in 1976 in Florida.

Along with a group of eight other survivors brought together by the Pew 
Environment Group research centre, Brenneca descended on Capitol Hill to lobby 
senators to pass a measure placing tough restrictions on shark fishing. More 
than a third of all shark species are endangered, in part due to finning, a 
practice in which a shark's fins are cut off before the body is thrown back 
into the water. Shark fin soup is a beloved delicacy in Asia, where it is in 
high demand. Some 70mn sharks die in the ocean each year. In contrast, shark 
attacks on humans are rare - between 60 and 100 per year worldwide.

"You might ask why considering I was attacked by a shark, why don't I want eat 
the sharks or kill them all?" quipped Krishna Thompson, a 44-year-old New York 
banker whose spectacular attack by a bull shark in 2001 during his 10-year 
wedding anniversary in the Bahamas had captured the media's attention. Fighting 
back with his bare hands, he finally freed himself from the steel-sharp jaws. 
"I had the leg but all I could see was the femur and tibia, no skin, no vein, 
no muscle and I remember seeing the white bones. And I thought, 'Oh man, I'm 
going to be amputated,'" he recalled.

Now wearing an artificial limb and a T-shirt declaring his determination to 
defend the shark, Thompson has converted himself into an activist fighting for 
the survival of the predators. "What the shark did to me was what they are 
supposed to do," he insists. "Sharks have been around for 300mn years - before 
dinosaurs. They haven't changed much from then till now.

He added that people should not mess with mother nature, and let the sharks be. 
"I don't want find out what life would be for us as human if they ceased to 
exist," Thompson stressed. "If we killed all the sharks that will have an 
effect on us as humans. That's why I'm here."

Wednesday's demonstration in the Halls of Congress was unusual and startling 
even for veteran lawmakers who have seem many expressions of public sentiment. 
All described scenes of carnage at sea when the were forced to swim in their 
own blood to save their lives. Most have suffered cardiac arrest by the time 
they arrived to the hospital. 

Mike Coots, 30, from Hawaii was attacked by a tiger shark in 1997 when he was 
surfing in the morning. The predator grabbed him by the right leg, shook him 
back and forth while he was trying to fight back the attacker by punching it on 
the head. The shark released him went back into the deep water while Mike 
started paddling toward the shore. But his leg was gone.

"I didn't feel it come off," he recalls. "It was gone. My friend took my 
surfing leash and made a tourniquet to stop the bleeding. Yeah. He saved my 
life." But Coots believes that he may have been bitten by a shark to help 
protect the species. "I feel very strongly that these animals have a place in 
the world," he insisted. "And without them, I think it's going to disrupt the 
entire ecosystem."

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