It is estimated that each year hundreds of people die from crocodile attacks in Africa – many of these attacks are never reported in the media. Without an accurate reporting system in place, crocodile attacks in Africa are difficult to track and very few are reproduced here. The majority of attacks recorded below have occurred in Southeast Asia and
Australia. ;1980s • On March 17, 1987, 40-year-old Kerry Mcloughlin was killed by a crocodile while fishing with his son Michael in
Kakadu National Park in the Northern Territory of Australia. • On March 29, 1987, Ginger Faye Meadows, an American model, was killed by a crocodile while swimming in the
Prince Regent River near
Broome, Western Australia before her birthday. She and her friend Jane Burchett were cornered by the crocodile, but she tried to get away from it, thinking she could outswim it before it caught up to her and killed her. ;1990s • On May 22, 1992, an Iban girl Dayang anak Bayang was killed by
Bujang Senang at Pelaban River, another tributary of the great Batang Lupar River near
Lingga in
Sri Aman Division,
Sarawak,
Malaysia. The crocodile was shot to death by several police sharpshooters and Iban hunters. It was the biggest and oldest crocodile ever caught in the area. ;2000s • In January 2001, attacks by mugger crocodiles were reported on tribal population around the
Neyyar reservoir in
Kerala, India. Muggers are raised and periodically released into the reservoir from the
Neyyar crocodile centre. This rare display of aggression was found to be the isolated behaviour of an abnormal minority among the Neyyar muggers, which are usually not known to attack humans. • In October 2002, 23-year-old German student Isabel von Jordan was killed by a saltwater crocodile in Australia's
Kakadu National Park while swimming in Sandy Billabong with her sister Valerie and a few other foreign backpackers. The tour guide, Glenn Robless, pleaded guilty to a charge of making a dangerous omission with a suspended prison sentence. •
Gustave is the nickname of a crocodile which has been credited with killing hundreds of people at the
Rusizi River in
Burundi. His size is estimated at and more than . Numerous capture attempts have been made, including using a massive bear trap in 2002; however, Gustave has evaded capture. Gustave is the basis of the film
Primeval (originally titled "Gustave"), which follows a news team sent to
Burundi to capture Gustave; while doing so they become a target of a warlord in the midst of an African civil war. • In September 2005, Russell Harris, a 37-year-old British engineer, was killed by a large saltwater crocodile while snorkeling off Picnic Beach in Australia. His body was recovered. • On March 19, 2006,
University of Washington medical professor
Richard Root, age 68, who had moved to alleviate a shortage of physicians, was killed on a wildlife tour of the
Limpopo River when a crocodile emerged from the river and pulled him underwater. • In April 2007, a 9-year-old Chinese child was killed in a crocodile pool at the Silver Beach holiday resort in southwest Guangxi region. • On February 8, 2009, 5-year-old Jeremy Doble was attacked by a crocodile in far north
Queensland Daintree River, Australia. Police confirmed that human remains found in a saltwater crocodile caught nearby were those of the boy. • On March 15, 2009, 11-year-old Briony Goodsell was killed by a crocodile when swimming with friends at Lambell's Lagoon near
Humpty Doo in
Northern Territory. ;2010s • In April 2010, a 25-year-old woman from New Jersey was killed by a saltwater crocodile while snorkeling in India's Andaman Islands. Havelock Island, where the attack took place, lies from the Lohabarrack Salt Water Crocodile Sanctuary. Her boyfriend caught the attack on film; the camera was recovered two days later along with her remains. • On December 7, 2010, South African outdoorsman
Hendrik Coetzee was killed after being attacked by a Nile crocodile. Coetzee was leading a kayaking expedition through Congo's
Lukuga River when a crocodile, which had been concealed below the surface of the river, attacked him from behind. The crocodile pulled him from his kayak into the water and he never resurfaced. Neither Coetzee's remains nor any of his clothing or gear was found. • On September 4, 2011,
Lolong, a 20.2-foot (6.17-metre) saltwater crocodile believed to be the largest ever captured, was trapped in the southern Philippines after a spate of fatal attacks. The crocodile is suspected of eating a farmer who went missing in July in the town of
Bunawan and of killing a 12-year-old girl whose head was bitten off two years before. • On May 29, 2016, 46-year-old Cindy Waldron and her childhood friend, Leann Mitchell, 47, went for a late night swim at Thornton Beach in
Daintree National Park, Australia, to celebrate the end of Mitchell's cancer treatment. Waldron was snatched by a crocodile and called for help. Mitchell tried to save her but was unsuccessful. What were believed to be Waldron's remains were found inside a 14-foot crocodile on June 3, 2016. • On September 14, 2017, 24-year-old
Financial Times journalist Paul McClean was reportedly killed by a crocodile near
Arugam Bay in
Sri Lanka. McClean stopped by a lagoon known as Crocodile Rock to wash his hands when a crocodile bit him and dragged him into the water. The lagoon is known for its large population of crocodiles. • On April 30, 2018, 25-year-old former tennis player Zanele Ndlovu was canoeing on the
Upper Zambezi River in
Zimbabwe when she was pulled underwater by a Nile crocodile. Ndlovu lost her right arm in the attack. • In July 2018, a man was reportedly killed by a saltwater crocodile in a breeding farm in
West Papua,
Indonesia. Locals slaughtered 292 crocodiles in revenge. • On January 11, 2019, scientist Deasy Tuwo was eaten alive by a crocodile after falling into an enclosure at a research facility in
North Sulawesi,
Indonesia. Local police say the crocodile leaped up against the wall of the enclosure during feeding time and grabbed Tuwo, pulling her into the pool and eating parts of her body. ;2020s • On 3 May 2023, 65-year-old Kevin Darmody was last seen at Kennedy's Bend in a remote part of northern Queensland. After a two-day search of the area, police euthanized two large crocodiles and found human remains, which are believed to belong to Darmody. • On May 26, 2023, about 40 crocodiles killed a Cambodian man after he fell into their enclosure on his family's reptile farm. Luan Nam, 72, was trying to move a crocodile out of a cage where it had laid eggs when it grabbed the stick he was using as a goad and pulled him in. • On July 29, 2023, 29-year-old
Costa Rican footballer Jesus Alberto Lopez Ortiz was attacked and killed by an
American crocodile while swimming in
Cañas River, in Costa Rica. • On 2 July 2024, a 12 year old girl was taken by a crocodile while swimming with her family in Mango Creek, near
Nganmarriyanga, Northern Territory. Her remains were found two days later. • On 3 August 2024, whilst holidaying with his wife and three sons in the Northern Territory, Doctor David Hogbin was taken by a 3.9 metre saltwater crocodile when a riverbank on the Annan River gave way and he slipped into the water below. Remains later found inside the crocodile were confirmed to be Hogbin’s. • Between 2007 and the end of 2024, East Timor recorded 173 crocodile attacks on humans, 78 of them fatal. Those figures represented a record high, and a 23-fold increase since East Timorese independence from Indonesia in 2002 (during the
Indonesian occupation of East Timor, the occupying authorities would regularly kill crocodiles). Most of the victims were impoverished fishermen. • On 14 August 2025, a 53-year-old man called Arifuddin was killed by a crocodile while bathing with his family in the Bulete River in
South Sulawesi,
Indonesia. Local residents later retrieved his remains about one mile from where he was initially attacked and handed them over to his family for a burial.
Notable attack survivors • Australian philosopher
Val Plumwood survived a prolonged saltwater crocodile attack during a solo canoe excursion in
Kakadu National Park in 1985. Plumwood recounted the details of the attack and her escape in her 1996 essay "Being Prey". Following the attack, she spent a month in intensive care in a
Darwin hospital and required extensive skin grafts. • In December 2003, two Australian teenagers, Shaun Blowers and Ashley McGough, both 19, spent 22 hours in a tree above rising flood waters after a crocodile killed their friend and "showed him off" to them as it held the body in its jaws. • In July 2006, a 7-year-old boy was bitten by a 1.7-metre (5.6-foot)
Nile crocodile at a French safari park after falling into its enclosure. • In April 2013, 29-year-old French fisherman Yoann Galeran was attacked by a 2-metre (6.5-foot) crocodile as he swam along a remote stretch of Australia's northern coast. The reptile tried to kill him with the death roll until it let go off him five seconds later. Galeran was taken to a hospital, where he received several stitches to wounds to his head and neck. • In July 2014, 31-year-old zookeeper Trent Burton was grabbed and dragged underwater by a
saltwater crocodile during a feeding show at a zoo in
New South Wales. He suffered minor puncture injuries to both hands. • On August 24, 2014, 26-year-old Alejandro Jimenez and his friend, Lisset Rendon, 23, went for a late night swim at a lake in
Coral Gables, Florida, for a party, when a
American Crocodile bit Jimenez on his torso and hand while Rendon was bitten on her shoulder; Jimenez and Rendon were hospitalized the next day. • In January 2017, a 47-year-old French tourist got bitten by a
Siamese crocodile in
Khao Yai National Park in Thailand after she went off the trail to take a selfie with the crocodiles. • On August 20, 2019, 79-year-old Lasse Liedegren was bitten by a crocodile at Skansen aquarium in Sweden during a gentlemen's club party. He stood in front of the crocodiles enclosure, and when he reached back out with his left arm over the glass barrier, the crocodile reacted and attacked. He later had his left arm amputated due to the attack. • On August 23, 2019, a male
Philippine crocodile at
Zürich Zoologischer Garten attacked a zookeeper, biting through a partition into her hand while she was cleaning the enclosure. The animal was 1.5 metres (4 ft) long and weighed 15 kilograms (33 lb). After it didn't let off her for several minutes, the crocodile was shot by other zookeepers who feared that it could rotate and tear off the hand. Because her hand was severely injured, the victim underwent surgery. • On November 10, 2021, 68-year-old Nehemias Chipada was bitten on his left arm by a 12-foot crocodile mistaken as an animal statue in Amaya View, a mountain resort in
Cagayan De Oro, Philippines, while taking a picture with it. It was his birthday when the incident happened. Though seriously wounded, he was later able to escape the attack and hospitalized for recovery. A crocodile tooth was found in his arm during surgery. The resort paid Chipada's hospital expenses and apologized for the incident. • On November 30, 2021, 18-year-old Amelie Osborn-Smith was attacked by a Nile crocodile in the
Zambezi River,
Zambia. Osborn-Smith and her friends were able to prevent the crocodile from dragging her underwater, sustaining blood loss as well as serious injuries to her hip, lower leg, and right foot. Osborn-Smith told SkyNews that she intends to return to Zambia in the future to start a school for local children. • On August 18, 2024, a 45-year-old maintenance worker at
Jerusalem Biblical Zoo was severely injured by a male crocodile named Clarence. A security guard stopped the attack by shooting the animal, which later died of his wounds. Before Clarence was donated to the zoo in 2013, he had been a pet of British physician Dr. Reginald Morris for 30 years. • On April 28, 2025, a 29-year-old man was bitten on his right leg by a 15-foot saltwater crocodile mistaken as a life-size statue after intentionally entering an enclosure in Kabug Mangrove Park and Wetlands in
Siay,
Zamboanga Sibugay, Philippines. Footage of the incident show the crocodile, who locals fondly named Lalay, repeatedly dragged and threw around the victim inside the enclosure until Lalay released him when an owner of the park arrived to further rescue the man out of the enclosure. Sustaining bite injuries in his legs and arms, the man was given first aid and later hospitalized for further medications. The park's owner covered the victim's hospital expenses. Local authorities found the victim mentally unstable according to his relatives. == See also ==