'I had to stick to the plan': Officer describes retrieving crocodile with human remains inside

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DNA tests are underway to confirm whether remains found inside the crocodile match that of a missing man.

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Captain Johan Potgieter was tasked with capturing a crocodile suspected of eating a businessman who had been swept away by floodwater.

"The crocodile itself was lying on an island... there really was no other way to get to it except from the air," he told the BBC.

Since the operation, remains have been found inside the 4.5m (15ft) and 500kg (1,100lb) crocodile. DNA tests are underway to confirm their identity.

The man's car had become stranded attempting to cross a low bridge in the flooded Komati River last week. By the time the police got to the scene, it was empty, leading them to suspect he had been swept away by the water.

Drones and helicopters were used to in the search mission which led police to a small island where a number of crocodiles lay in the sun, one of which they believed had eaten the man.

The suspect crocodile was shot by Potgieter's colleagues before he was called.

"It turned onto its back and they thought that it was dead. But by the time we went back, it was back onto its right side and it had swum a bit upstream," he explained.

The presence of other crocodiles, hippos and rocks in the river, meant it was too dangerous to use a boat or canoe to recover the body, Potgieter told the BBC.

"There were other crocodiles next to that one that were probably there because of the blood in the water. But luckily because of the noise of the helicopter and the downdraft blowing around, they moved away and didn't bother me," the veteran officer said.

Once Potgieter agreed to do the recovery operation, there was no turning back.

"When I was hanging there, there was no way for me to communicate with the pilot. So irrespective of whether I changed my mind and decided not to do it, there was no way that that was going to happen," he added.

"I had to stick to the plan and do as we had planned... otherwise things would have gone wrong.

Source: BBC

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