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Man punches shark to save wife from attack off coast of remote island

Couple were snorkelling at the popular holiday spot when shark bit woman’s leg

Rachael Revesz
Monday 24 April 2017 08:12 EDT
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The victim was treated locally then airlifted to the UK
The victim was treated locally then airlifted to the UK (Terry Goss/Wikipedia)

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A British woman was saved from a shark attack when her husband punched the fish to scare it away.

The woman was snorkelling near the remote Ascension Island, in the British territory of St Helena, when the shark bit her leg.

A source told The Times that her husband punched the shark. A witness said the shark then also attacked her husband, but this report is unconfirmed.

The mother of two, named by locals as Frankie Gonsalves who works for the government of St Helena, was treated at local Georgetown Hospital and then airlifted to the UK.

The extent of her injuries are unclear. The type of shark that attacked her is also not known.

The Government has warned that people enter the water at their own risk.

A statement from St Helena government read: “SHG can confirm that a member of staff has been involved in an incident on Ascension Island.

Great white shark discovered trapped on beach

“The person concerned was swimming near the shore and her injuries were attended to at the Georgetown Hospital.”

The island from where the woman was airlifted lies more than 1,100 miles off the west coast of Africa.

Ascension Island, St Helena and Tristan da Cunha are situated between Africa and South America, and form one section of a mostly self-governing British territory.

Their combined population stands at less than 6,000 people.

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