Dingo pack chased down French mum and son on Fraser Island

A dingo has mauled a boy and a woman not far from a similar attack on a child on Queensland's Fraser Island.

Visitors to the island are warned to stay away from dingo packs.

Visitors to the island are warned to stay away from dingo packs. Source: Dateline


A pack of dingoes chased down a French woman and her son with at least one of the wild dogs mauling them on a Fraser Island beach.

The boy, aged nine, has wounds to his face, legs and arms, and the woman, aged in her twenties, suffered leg injuries after coming across the pack on Eurong beach late on Thursday afternoon.

They had just gotten out of a vehicle when they encountered the dogs and were attacked as they tried to run back to the safety of the car.

A key piece of advice given to tourists on the island is never to run if they encounter wild dogs.

Five weeks ago, six-year-old Michael Schipanski was rushed to hospital after being bitten on the leg while returning to his Eurong campsite with his family.
A woman and a child were attacked by a dingo on Fraser Island.
Una mujer y un niño fueron atacados por un dingo en la Fraser Island, Queensland, Australia. Source: Dateline
His father later told how he had to wrench his son from a dingo's jaws, after the boy encountered a pack and one of the dogs turned on him.

The woman and boy injured in Thursday's attack were flown to the Sunshine Coast University Hospital, where they are recovering.

"The mother and child had just exited a vehicle and commenced a walk down the beach when they came across this pack of dingoes," Queensland Ambulance Service director Michael Augustus said.
Fraser Island Janka Weis Australia's favourite places
Queensland's Fraser Island (Fraserfree) Source: Fraserfree
"The couple both panicked, and ran back towards the vehicle and it was at that time when the pack actually chased them and attacked."

Rangers continue to warn people about the dangers of the island's dingo population.

Visitors are told to keep their distance, and if they do encounter the animals never to run.

Tourists are also told not to jog along the beach, and to make sure food and bait is securely stored, to walk in groups, and always keep children within arm's distance.


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By AAP-SBS
Presented by Audrey Bourget
Source: AAP, SBS

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