A child’s laughter turned to screams in seconds. A rock-jumping game became a nightmare no one on that beach will ever forget.
Friends dived into bloody water. Parents watched rescue boats race against time.
Surgeons fought through the night as a family’s world collapsed.
Now, a city is asking how a Sunday swim could en… Continues…
On an ordinary summer afternoon, 12-year-old Nico Antic joined his friends at a favorite rock-jumping spot near Sydney’s Shark Beach,
a place that had always felt safe. In an instant, that illusion shattered.
A suspected bull shark surged from the harbor,
tearing into the boy’s legs as his friends watched in horror.
One child leapt into the water to help, while others dragged Nico,
unconscious and bleeding, onto the rocks, desperately trying to keep him alive until rescuers arrived.
Paramedics, police, and hospital staff battled to save him,
but the injuries were too severe.
As news of his death spread,
Sydney was left reeling. A fundraiser,
launched by a close family friend,
quickly filled with donations
and messages of disbelief, love, and anger.
Nico’s story now sits at the
center of a growing unease:
a city forced to confront the
fragility of life in waters it thought it understood.