Sources confirm that a great white shark, a species all but extinct in the Mediterranean for decades, has been detected off the coast of Cyprus. The sighting, verified by sonar data and eyewitness accounts, has triggered an urgent security review by UK marine authorities. While officials downplay the threat, internal documents reveal growing concern about the ecological and strategic implications.
The shark's appearance coincides with increased naval activity in the region, raising questions about whether environmental shifts or human activity are to blame. One marine biologist, speaking on condition of anonymity, said: 'This is not just a fish story. Something is changing in our waters, and we are not prepared.
' The Ministry of Defence declined to comment on any potential link to national security. But the timing is unsettling: a creature that should not be there, a system that failed to predict it, and a government scrambling for answers. The hunt for the shark continues, but the real questions lie deeper.
Who is watching our waters? And what else might they be missing?










