The three-year-old's parents say the boy is making progress after seven operations in a month.

The crocodiles have not been seized or put down by the authorities (picture from 2025) The parents of a three-year-old boy who was attacked in a crocodile enclosure say they are "amazed" at the progress he is making and that he is "smiling again". The boy was visiting Johnsons of Old Hurst near Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire, on 18 June when he was attacked by at least one of the animals. In a post on a fundraising page, his parents said: "Four weeks later and the cheeky little boy that we love so much is talking to the nurses, playing using his feet and smiling again." Police arrested and bailed a 30-year-old man from Norfolk on suspicion of attempted murder after the incident. The boy's parents recalled arriving at Addenbrooke's Hospital and experiencing "the worst 12 hours" of their lives after the attack, "signing consent forms involving resuscitation and amputation". They said he received injuries to his arms, neck, head, face and suffered broken bones. The boy has since had seven surgeries, with the latest being surgeons completing "a nerve graft on his arm".