Suspension of all diving and watersports activities in Sharm el Sheikh

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And this one from HEPCA:

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Shark incident off Southern Sinai

Short summary of the events:
On November 30th, 2010, two snorkelers were attacked by a shark off a beach just north of Naama Bay, both suffering serious injuries. Photographs taken minutes before the 2nd attack show a fully grown oceanic whitetip shark (Carcharhinus longimanus), that closely circled divers before approaching and eventually attacking a swimmer on the surface.
On December 1st, 2010, a third swimmer was attacked just a few kilometres north of the previous incidents; no photographic material is available from this event.
Reports of a fourth attack were later corrected, stating that the injuries to the hands of the swimmer involved were sustained by contact with corals rather than from the bites of a shark.

As a first response, the Ministry of Tourism suspended all water activities for the Sharm El Sheikh area, with the exception of Ras Mohamed National Park, until the evening of December 3rd, 2010.
Additionally, National Park Authorities attempted to capture the shark(s) believed to be involved in the attacks. As a result, two individual sharks were caught on December 2nd, one mako shark (Isurus oxyrinchus) and one oceanic whitetip shark.

Comparing the photographs of the oceanic whitetip shark responsible for the 2nd attack with the images of the captured oceanic whitetip shark, it is clear that they don't show the same individual.

Hesham Gabr, the chairman of the CDWS (Chamber of Diving and Watersports), has condemned the random catching of sharks in the area. In agreement with HEPCA, both organisations would have preferred a more graded response to the unfortunate events. No attacks on divers have been reported from any of the dive sites in the Egyptian Red Sea, making the closure of all diving activities an unnecessary and extreme measure. While we fully appreciate the difficult and sensitive situation after such an unusual string of attacks for the tourism sector, the random catching and killing of large oceanic sharks in the area does not help to mitigate the problem; additionally it sends the wrong message that people entering the water are generally in danger of being attacked by sharks. Such attacks are extremely rare and in the past have often been connected to illegal fishing and feeding activities.

We therefore welcome the efforts of the CDWS today, sending out volunteering dive professionals and registered CDWS members to monitor and observe the Sharm El Sheikh dive sites for any shark activity. These divers were encouraged to document any shark sightings by taking underwater images, so that we will be able to verify and potentially identify any oceanic whitetip sharks still present in the area.

According to an ongoing study of oceanic whitetip sharks in the Egyptian Red Sea, only 11 individuals resembling the size and proportion of the shark responsible for the 2nd attack have been documented throughout the last 6 years. All these sightings were from remote areas such as Daedalus, Brother Islands or the St. Johns plateau. 10 of these sharks were photographed by divers only on one occasion, and – to our knowledge – did not approach any humans or human activity afterwards.
These observations support the idea, that the string of attacks is the result of a single individual behaving in a highly atypical way.

Both HEPCA and CDWS call for calm in this unprecented and difficult situation, and appeal to tourists and professionals to follow well-known behavioural guidelines recommended in areas where sharks might be present.
· Do not fish, feed or bait any marine animal. Do not enter the water if any of these activities occur in the vicinity.
· Stay calm! Avoid any quick, jerky or erratic movements.
· If you want or need to leave the water for any reason, do so in a calm and orderly fashion.

For more detailed guidelines on diving with sharks in the Egyptian Red Sea, feel free to contact sharks@hepca.com.

According to latest information, all restrictions on diving and other water activities in the Sharm El Sheikh area have been lifted, and operations will be back to normal tomorrow morning (saturday, December 4th).
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Thanks Asser - that confirms what we had suspected - the problem shark has not been captured and one of the sharks killed was not Longimanus....

The problems we face now are that the rogue shark has not been captured - I think the MoT has bowed down to the pressure of complaints made by holidaymakers who are demanding refunds from their tour reps (we've been fielding such calls all day) because they booked a beach holiday and can't get into the water. This, I think, is understandable. Secondly, a whole pile of Indiana Jones wannabes are going to try to catch every shark they can find in the hope they will get some kind of reward - this is not to slight the egyptians, the same thing happens anywhere there is a shark attack in a popular tourist resort - big manly australians out to catch THE white pointer that ate granny when she was swimming - and along the way, a whole bunch of innocent sharks get caught in the process.

I don't want to see any shark killed, but a maneater in a tourist resort has, ultimately, got to go - otherwise there would be no tourism, but more importantly, until the actual problem shark is removed, the hunt will continue.

Sucky times. On the other hand, nothing this interesting has happened in sharm since it rained in January this year...!

Cheers

C.
 
I don´t know - probably nothing...
You brought it up!
That was in response to comment by Searcaigh on p 3 that suggested that standing on corals and shark attacks are somehow connected.

On a side note, though standing on corals etc is highly irresponsible and damaging, we still do not know what is causing most of the damage to coral reefs. Therefore, though damage caused by some ill-behaived individuals may attract a lot of finger-pointing, little do we know about the silent coral killers that do most of the damage. Maybe a nice American girl who never steps on corals kills more corals than a drunk Russian because she shampoos her hair twice a day while staying in a marine resort, and all the non-ionic detergents and sunscreen chemicals that she uses kill sea life. Maybe all these Prozac and pain-killers that American pee into the Carribean waters kill 100 times more. Maybe this is CO2 in the air that acidifies sea water that is the real killer, so maybe we kill 1 square foot of corals for every 100 miles we drive. Or maybe it is the eco-balance shift, so we kill this 1 square foot of corals every time we eat a snapper? All we know is that corals gradually vanish even in places where not a single Russian set his foot yet. By the time we know who did it, it will be too late, as usual.

But this has nothing to do with you, just my usual bla-bla-bla.
 
Sucky times. On the other hand, nothing this interesting has happened in sharm since it rained in January this year...!

Hmm, I don't know. A lot of exciting things could be done about the human trafficking, mainly of young Russian girls, in Sharm. I was very dismayed to learn while I was there about how rampant human trafficking is in Sharm and the U.S. and Egyptian military and police are fully aware of it (and many use the "services") and apparently do nothing to stop it or protect these young women.

There has been more effort to stop this rogue shark than to stop human trafficking in Sharm! Shame! :no:
 
Hmm, I don't know. A lot of exciting things could be done about the human trafficking, mainly of young Russian girls, in Sharm. I was very dismayed to learn while I was there about how rampant human trafficking is in Sharm and the U.S. and Egyptian military and police are fully aware of it (and many use the "services") and apparently do nothing to stop it or protect these young women.

There has been more effort to stop this rogue shark than to stop human trafficking in Sharm! Shame! :no:
And the US should do something about that exactly WHY?
Russian victims in a sovereing country in a different part of the world...
 
Sorry, I was referring to the U.S. military that is BASED in/near Sharm El Sheikh, as well as the Egyptian military and police. We were told some of it by several Egyptian people, but were told by a U.S. peacekeeper on his way home from the Gaza strip that many of the American soldiers went to Sharm for the purposes of prostitution and that Russian women were "preferred". He told us that not only is nothing done about it and a blind eye is turned to it, but there is open military involvement - yes, including U.S. soldiers.
 
This has gone off topic, but the fact that theres US soldiers based there doesnt mean they have any mandate to intervene with ANYTHING. Theire not allowed to violate local law either, of course, but theire under no right nor obligation to try stopping the activity. The international forces down there (which include a few norwegians as well) is an observational force.
 
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