11-year-old girl’s foot mauled in suspected shark attack near Spanish resort of Benicassim popular with Brit tourists as beachgoers told to avoid the area
Lifeguards rushed to stem the girl's heavy bleeding before she was rushed to hospital on Saturday
A SUSPECTED shark attack on a tourist beach in Spain left a young girl with deep wounds to her foot.
The 11-year-old was bitten while swimming in shallow waters off Grao de Moncofa, just south of the tourist resort of Benicassim and two hours from Benidorm.
Lifeguards had to give her first aid treatment to stem heavy bleeding when her dad lifted her from the water, the town's mayor Wenceslao Alós said.
She was then rushed in an ambulance to a nearby health centre after the alleged attack at midday on Saturday.
The company that provides lifeguards in the area said that while they could not confirm it was a shark bite, they had "never seen anything like it", local paper reported.
A small species of blue shark around 60-70cm long is thought to have attacked her, Mayor Alós added.
Beachgoers were told to avoid the area where the girl was bitten, but a full evacuation was not ordered because witnesses had not spotted the creature.
It is the first reported shark attack in the area in at least ten years, officials said.
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But maritime experts said: "There is still the possibility that this was a normally harmless animal that confused the girl with prey".
Tourists in Majorca were placed on shark alert in May after pictures were taken of a mystery creature in the sea off Palmanova.
Holidaymakers stopped to take snaps of the monster fish – either a shark or a harmless red tuna – after it was spotted close to the party resort of Magaluf.
The sighting coincided with the busy Bank Holiday weekend and the first major influx of tourists to the holiday island after Easter.
Around 90 species of shark can be found in the Spanish Med.
Shark attacks in the sea, where the most common danger to bathers are jellyfish, are extremely rare.
A Spanish windsurfer was bitten in the leg in 1986 and seriously injured by what is thought to have been a Great White.
He later had to have a leg amputated. In 1993 a man lost several toes on one foot in a second attack by a two-metre long slender shark that was never properly identified.
A Great White shark was washed up injured at the Catalan resort of Tossa de Mar in 1992 and later died.
Authorities at the time were accused of covering up the incident through fear of upsetting the tourist trade.
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