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Australian boy gets stuck in first vending machine he's ever seen

Story highlights
  • It took rescuers nearly six hours to free boy, who'd never seen vending machine before
  • Child was distracted with a toy bear and cartoons played on smartphones
  • Boy's family comes from Australia's remote Northern Territory

(CNN) A 4-year old boy has been freed after his arm was stuck for hours in the first vending machine he'd ever seen.

The nearly six-hour ordeal began Sunday when the child tried to reach into the machine, located in a Melbourne hotel lobby, and became trapped by its anti-theft mechanism.

"We live up in Arnhem Land, Northern Territory, and I don't think he's seen a vending machine before so he saw the Oreos, and some biscuits and a few other things," his father Aaron Shorthouse told CNN affiliate 7 News.

Arnhem Land is a very remote, rural region located at the very northern tip of the country. It has a population of about 16,000 spread across 37,000 square miles.

Rescue workers distracted the child, Leo, by showing cartoons to him on their phones and giving him a stuffed toy as they worked to free him but he had to be sedated at times.

"It was (hard to watch), especially seeing a young fellow like this after five and a half hours," Aaron Shorthouse said.

"He was a bit inquisitive...but he's good now."

Metropolitan Fire Brigade's Steve Watts said , "Look, over the years I've attended to several children with their arms in vending machines. This particular one is actually quite heavy duty and a real challenge for us."

Leo was freed by early evening and sent to the Royal Children's Hospital in a stable condition.

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