A fox dragged a one-month-old
baby from his cot and mauled his hand, biting off one finger, it has been
reported.
The boy was left seriously
injured after the animal crept into his bedroom in Bromley, southeast London.
His mother was alerted by his
screaming and rushed into his room to see his hand in the animal's mouth, the
Mail On Sunday reported.
Plastic surgeons were able to
reattach the boy's finger and he is said to be recovering well at home. The
animal had got into the family home through an open backdoor.
Neighbour Paula Wellington told
Sky News: "I was at work when it happened but heard about it when I got
back. The ambulance was still here and then police forensics arrived.
"I've seen foxes around here
before but I've never heard anything like this. I saw the mother a couple of
days ago and she told me the fox had got into the house and grabbed the baby.
"She was fighting with it,
trying to pull it away from the baby. She said it lasted a couple of minutes
and she had to wrestle the fox off the baby.
"The fox had the baby she
said and she was really shaken by it. It's really scared everyone and the
family have now moved out."
Another neighbour, Khadine
Peters, said: "I was on the school run but when I got back I heard people
screaming that a fox had attacked the baby. I think it's really terrible. You
see them around here all the time.
"I look out of my window and
often see a big fox sitting on the grass in the front garden. Something should
be done about it but nothing has, no one from the council has been
around."
A Metropolitan Police spokesman
said: "We were called at 1638 on February 6 by staff at St Thomas's
Hospital to reports a baby boy who had been admitted to hospital after being
attacked by a fox.
"Police attended to find a
four-week-old baby with a hand injury. The baby was admitted to hospital after
the attack at its home address in Bromley."
London Mayor Boris Johnson said
more needs to be done to deal with the problem of urban foxes.
"Thankfully this sort of
attack, though terrible, is rare, but we must do more to tackle the growing
problem of urban foxes," he said.
"They may appear cuddly and
romantic but foxes are a pest and a menace, particularly in our cities."
A spokesperson from Lewisham
Council, the local authority that covers the area, said: "Although rare,
fox attacks can be devastating as this tragic case shows and our thoughts go
out to the family at this difficult time."
The spokesperson advised
residents to make their homes and back gardens "less attractive to
foxes" by using repellents and "making sure that waste food is always
disposed of in secure, lidded bins and containers".
An RSPCA spokeswoman said the
only reason a fox would attack is due to fear.
"It's extremely unusual for
foxes to attack young children or anyone," she said.
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