Odisha: Six-year-old girl hits crocodile to save her friend

A six-year-old at a remote village in Kendrapara district did not fear a furious estuarine crocodile and showed exemplary courage to save her friend from claws of that crocodile after it attacked her friend.

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Navnidhi Chugh
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Odisha: Six-year-old girl hits crocodile to save her friend

Odisha: Six-year-old girl hits crocodile to save her friend (representative image)

A six-year-old at a remote village in Kendrapara district did not fear a furious estuarine crocodile and showed exemplary courage to save her friend from claws of that crocodile after it attacked her friend.

The survivor Basanti Dalai, a class I student of a government-run primary school in Bankuala village undergoing treatment at a government-run hospital recalled the harrowing experience and thanked schoolmate Tiki Dalai for surviving from crocodile attack.

The victim sustained multiple wounds on her hand and thigh and is stated to be out of danger.Both the girls were taking bath in the village pond on Tuesday when a crocodile leaped from the water and attacked Basanti all on a sudden.

However, she survived as her schoolmate picking up a bamboo stick dealt a blow on animal's head. The reptile which had clung onto the victim was jolted by the sudden attack and left the girl to slip into the water. She deserves praise for the brave act, said a local resident Pradip Kumar Das.

"The attack was so sudden that I had little time to react. The stick lying near the pond saved my friend," Tiki, who is also enrolled in the village school, narrated.

The state Forest department would bear the cost of treatment of the girl injured following crocodile attack.

Besides the department would also award compensation sum to the injured person's family as per revised rules, said Divisional Forest Officer, Rajnagar Mangrove (wildlife) Forest Division, Bimal Prasanna Acharya.

Forest officials, however, are of the view that people are exposing themselves to crocodile attack by venturing into croc-infested water bodies.

"Forest department has taken several measures to save human and domesticated animals from preying crocs. Over two dozen riverside spots were identified as danger zones due to frequent sighting of reptiles in these places. Warning has been issued to people to avoid these troubled water zones. The bathing ghats which are vulnerable due to croc intrusion have been barricaded", said officials. 

Kendrapara