The tragic death of 12-year-old Nico Antic has left Sydney’s eastern suburbs in mourning, following a ferocious shark attack in Sydney Harbour that unfolded on January 18, 2026. Witnesses at Nielsen Park near Vaucluse described a sudden eruption of chaos: joyful laughter and splashing from teenagers jumping off a six-meter rock ledge into the water quickly turned to piercing screams as a suspected bull shark mauled the boy. “We heard screaming — then silence,” one bystander recounted in early reports, capturing the abrupt shift that stunned those on the foreshore and in nearby boats.

Nico, a happy, sporty child with a “kind and generous spirit,” according to his parents Lorena and Juan Antic, had been enjoying a typical summer afternoon with friends. He was part of the North Bondi Surf Life Saving Club’s Nippers program and a talented soccer player who had represented his club in international tournaments like the Sydney International Cup. The group was leaping from the popular ledge west of Shark Beach—ironically named—when the attack occurred around 4:20 p.m. Heavy recent rainfall had flushed murky freshwater into the harbour, creating ideal conditions for bull sharks to venture closer to shore, experts later explained. The splashing from jumpers may have further attracted the predator.
The screams began almost immediately after Nico hit the water. Friends and onlookers reported hearing his cries of pain and panic mix with the crowd’s horrified reactions. One brave friend jumped in without hesitation, swimming through the bloodied water to drag Nico toward the rocks despite the ongoing danger. Two others helped pull him onto a rock platform. Police Marine Area Command vessels rushed to the scene, officers applying tourniquets to his severely injured legs and performing CPR en route to Rose Bay ferry wharf, where paramedics awaited. Nico was airlifted to Sydney Children’s Hospital at Randwick in critical condition, having lost massive amounts of blood from bites to both legs.
That sudden silence witnesses described—the moment the screaming stopped—has become a haunting focal point. Initial accounts suggested the shift happened as rescuers reached Nico and began stabilizing him, with the crowd falling quiet in shock or as efforts turned frantic but hushed. However, one detail stands out and remains under discreet investigation: the possibility that Nico briefly regained consciousness amid the chaos. A family friend or witness close to the scene reportedly described a fleeting moment where Nico “woke up while he was bleeding,” looked around, and then went still—leading some to believe he lost consciousness again or that his heart faltered from blood loss. This account, shared in private tributes and echoed in online discussions, has prompted quiet inquiries into the exact sequence of his injuries, blood loss timeline, and medical response to determine if shock, exsanguination, or another factor caused the abrupt cessation of cries.

Nico fought valiantly in hospital for nearly a week. Doctors placed him on life support, but he was declared brain-dead early on, with no realistic chance of recovery. His parents confirmed his passing on January 24, 2026, just days before what would have been his 13th birthday. In a GoFundMe statement that raised nearly $240,000 (AUD), they expressed profound heartbreak while thanking first responders, hospital staff, and the community. “We are heartbroken to share that our son, Nico, has passed away,” they wrote. Tributes flooded in from schoolmates at Rose Bay Secondary College (which offered counseling), surf club members, and even the mother of another shark attack victim, highlighting the shared grief in Australia’s tight-knit coastal communities.
The incident marked the first in a alarming 48-hour spate of four shark encounters in New South Wales. Hours later, 27-year-old surfer Andre de Ruyter suffered life-changing injuries at Manly’s North Steyne Beach, requiring massive blood transfusions. An 11-year-old escaped unharmed when a shark took a chunk from his board at Dee Why, and another minor bite occurred at Point Plomer. Authorities closed multiple beaches and urged caution in harbours and rivers, citing the “perfect storm” of weather and human activity.
Nico’s bravery in the water—and that of his friends—has been widely praised. The boy who pulled him to safety remains anonymous in most reports, but Reddit threads and news comments express deep admiration for his courage in diving back toward danger. For the Antic family and those who witnessed the horror, the memory of those screams followed by eerie silence lingers as a stark reminder of nature’s unpredictability. Nico is remembered not for the tragedy, but as a vibrant, athletic boy who loved the beach, soccer, and his friends—a light extinguished far too soon.