An eight-year-old Australian boy has died from suspected electrocution while on holiday in Fiji.
The boy, identified by family as Cairo Winitana from Sydney, was staying with his parents at the Club Wyndham Denarau Island Resort on the west coast of Fiji's main island.
Fiji police said he was found lying "motionless" near a flower garden at the hotel last Thursday.
He was taken to hospital in the nearby city of Nadi, but could not be revived.
"Initial information gathered is that the child was allegedly electrocuted however the post-mortem will have to confirm that," Fiji police said.
The boy was a New Zealand citizen but resident of Australia, they added. New Zealand's Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade is providing assistance to the family, a spokeswoman said.
In a Facebook post, his mother Amber de Thierry said: "I loved you my son from the moment I found out I was carrying you and will love you forever more".
The family now faced "the heart breaking job" of bringing their son back to Australia, an online fundraiser set up by a relative said.
"As you could all imagine this is a very devastating loss for our family".
Cairo would be remembered as "a shy, tough little kid who loved his footy", the club where he played – the Milperra Colts – wrote in a tribute on Facebook.
A spokesperson for the resort described the death as a "tragic accident" and expressed "heartfelt condolences" to the family.
The resort would conduct a full investigation and fully cooperate with police and local authorities, the spokesperson said.
Known for its luxury resorts and hotels, Denarau Island is about 5km (3.1 miles) north-west of Nadi, Fiji's third-largest city.
Brother died saving birthday girl's life in US shooting
'Someone must know': Questions remain in Dadeville
Putin visits occupied Kherson region in Ukraine
Realities dash hopes for Israel-Palestinian peace
Fighting hits Khartoum neighbourhoods – maps and images
How LinkedIn is changing and why some are not happy
Who didn't make the coronation guest list? Take our quiz
‘We'll find you and we won't let you live’ – a team’s fight to exist
When a biryani flies hundreds of miles to reach Indians
The two generals fighting over Sudan's future
The man hunting down dead celebrities
'I thought we'd die' – Sudan patients cry for help
The WW1 game that's eerily accurate
Why Gen Z workers are starting on the back foot
How dinosaurs reached 'titanic' sizes
© 2023 BBC. The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read about our approach to external linking.