Boy, 10, eaten by crocodile off Palawan town | Inquirer News

Boy, 10, eaten by crocodile off Palawan town

/ 07:41 AM August 17, 2019

A stilt house in the waters off the island of Balabac. Humans and crocodiles sharing the same space in this southernmost town of Palawan has resulted in multiple run-ins, in which people have been killed or mangled by the animals. (Photo by Orlando Maliwanag)

MANILA, Philippines–A boy was killed after being snatched from a boat by a saltwater crocodile off the southernmost island of Palawan, as the reptiles’ shrinking habitat leads to repeated attacks, authorities said Wednesday.

The 10-year-old was on board with his two older siblings near the town of Balabac, which is notorious for confrontations with the massive creatures, when he was yanked into the water.

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His father failed to find the boy after an overnight search, but a fisherman discovered the child’s half-eaten remains late Monday in a mangrove swamp, a police report said.

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The Philippines’ booming development and population have steadily invaded the creatures’ habitat, forcing them into ever-smaller stretches of swamp.

Humans and crocodiles sharing the same space has resulted in multiple run-ins, in which people have been killed or mangled by the animals.

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“Since 2015, we’ve never had a year with zero (crocodile) attacks” in Balabac, said Jovic Pabello, spokesman for a government council that works to conserve the environment of the Palawan island group that includes Balabac.

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“It’s a conflict on water use,” he added.

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Also called the estuarine crocodile, the saltwater is one of the world’s largest reptiles, growing to up to six meters (20 feet) long and weighing up to a ton.

In February a crocodile grabbed a 12-year-old boy as he swam at a Balabac river, but he escaped when his siblings hit the reptile’s head with oars until it let him go, Pabello said.

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A Balabac crab fisherman was killed and half-eaten by a saltwater crocodile in February last year, police said, three months after his 12-year-old niece was dragged away by a crocodile in late 2017.

The girl was never seen again.

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The Palawan island group, often called the Philippines’ “last frontier” is home to a remarkable diversity of flora and fauna, but is threatened by unchecked development.

Crocodile

A saltwater crocodile crawls inside its pen at a crocodile farm in Puerto Princesa, Palawan. (AFP File Photo)

TAGS: Crocodile, habitat, wildlife

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