An eight-year-old British boy was attacked by sharks while on holiday in the Bahamas, in what his father described as “a scene out of Jaws”.
Finley Downer had to be pulled to safety by his sister after he was attacked by around three nurse sharks while swimming in a lagoon at Compass Cay last week.
He suffered flesh wounds after being bitten on both legs, and had to be taken to a local health clinic on a golf buggy before undergoing a three-hour operation in the capital Nassau.
Finley’s father, Michael Downer, 44, told The Sun his son “could have been killed” in the attack.
“It was like a scene out of Jaws,” he described.
Mr Downer had taken his children Finley, Lily, nine, and Emily, 12, on a luxury holiday.
He said the family had been part way through their five-island tour when the attack took place.
He said the children had decided to join a crowd of people in a lagoon in which nurse sharks were swimming.
Mr Downer said he suddenly “heard a terrified scream and saw dozens (of sharks) circling Finley”.
“There was so much blood. Bits of his leg were hanging off.
“He kept saying, ‘Dad I don’t want to die. Dad, I don’t want to go to heaven’.”
Finley was pulled from the water by his older sister Lily, and Mr Downer had to spend £2,000 on flights to the Bahamas capital, Nassau, for a three-hour operation on Finley’s legs.
The family has now returned home to Kettering, Northamptonshire, where Finley is recovering from his injuries and using a wheelchair.
In an interview with The Sun, Mr Downer expressed his anger at being told by tour guides the sharks were safe.
Operator Exuma Escapes claimed in a statement to the newspaper that the family went unguided into a lagoon which it does not use on its tour, adding that nurse sharks are docile bottom-feeders unless they are handled incorrectly.
The tour operator was approached for comment.