WARNING: GRAPHIC CONTENT Horrifying footage from the scene of the attack in Uttar Pradesh, India, captured the moment 12-year-old Sunil was thrashed around by a killer crocodile
A 12-year-old boy was snatched and hurled around by a crocodile in a deadly attack in front of his uncle as the two knelt down to wash their hands in a river.
Distressing footage captured the moment the reptile thrashed about with the child clamped between its jaws after rising out of the water in Baundi, in India’s Uttar Pradesh, on July 16. The boy, named Sunil, had been helping his uncle plant rice seedlings that afternoon when he and his guardian stopped at the Ghaghara River on the way to their home in Tikuri to wash their hands and feet.
As the two bathed, the youngster’s leg was snatched by the crocodile, which suddenly emerged from the river and dragged him in, leaving bystanders watching on in horror as he was pulled to his doom.
The 6pm attack took place after Sunil had worked for several hours with his uncle, Vijay Raj Singh, and the two had stopped to wash off dirt they had accumulated during the day. Mr Singh raised the alarm when the boy was dragged under water, and tried desperately to free him from the croc’s grip.
Locals, one of whom started filming the shock scenes, quickly tried to intervene but to no avail as bricks, stones and sticks failed to stop the predator’s rampage.
Sunil was repeatedly thrashed for some time before the crocodile made a bid to escape, dragging the boy into deeper water before eventually disappearing from sight. Locals quickly mounted a desperate search for the young boy using bamboo poles to try and locate his body in the water.
After several hours of searching, the group was able to recover Sunil’s remains from the water, with his body removed at around 10pm that day.
Local authorities said his right leg and abdomen had been partially eaten when they found him later in the day, adding that his right leg and lower waist were severely mutilated. TN Maurya, a station house officer from the nearby Baundi police station, confirmed that footage circulating in the aftermath of the attack was real.
Schoolboy Sunil was an orphan who had lost both of his parents some years earlier and was being looked after by his uncle. He is survived by a brother and two sisters
According to local reports, state authorities are set to compensate his remaining family with a payment of 400,000 INR (£3,091) following his death. Forest officials have said they are monitoring the area after the attack, although residents have long used the Ghanghara River waterway for their daily activities despite the continued presence of crocodiles.

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