Six fatalities confirmed in Maldives diving accident at submerged cave

Five Italian divers and a Maldivian rescue diver tragically died in the Vaavu Atoll’s Dhevana Kandu cave, the largest diving accident in Maldives history.

WTX News

4 min read
0

/

Six fatalities confirmed in Maldives diving accident at submerged cave

Get you up to speed: Inside the Maldives ‘shark cave’ where 6 people lost their lives | News World

Five Italian divers died during a research trip in the submerged cave system of Vaavu Atoll, Maldives, after they entered a 160 ft deep cave. Maldivian military rescue diver Mohamed Mahudhee also died from decompression illness during recovery operations, marking the incident as the largest diving accident in the country’s history.

The Maldives police and military, supported by Finnish divers, conducted a recovery operation that began on May 17, just three days after the accident on May 14. Investigation status remains ongoing, with authorities analysing GoPro footage recovered from the scene to understand the events leading to the accident.

Local authorities have described the incident as the largest diving accident in the Maldives’ history, while the Italian tour operator has denied any prior knowledge of the group’s deep dive that exceeded legal limits. Ongoing investigations aim to clarify the circumstances surrounding the tragedy, with authorities expected to review diving regulations and safety protocols in response to the event.

What remains unclear — Investigators have yet to determine how the divers were able to exceed the legal depth limit for commercial and recreational diving.

Six fatalities confirmed in Maldives diving accident at submerged cave

A diver from Finland takes part in a recovery operation for the last two bodies of Italian scuba divers who died in an accident in underwater caves near Vaavu Atoll, Maldives, in this handout photo released on May 20, 2026. DAN Europe/Handout via REUTERS THIS IMAGE HAS BEEN SUPPLIED BY A THIRD PARTY. NO ARCHIVES. NO RESALES. MANDATORY CREDIT.
The Maldives cave claimed six lives (Picture: via REUTERS)

Five Italian divers died on a research trip in the Maldives last week, after they entered a 160 ft deep ‘shark cave’ in a submerged cave system in the Vaavu Atoll.

The bodies of ecology professor Monica Montefalcone, her daughter Giorgia Sommacal, researcher Muriel Oddenino, and marine biologist Federico Gualtieri have all been retrieved after extensive search efforts.

Their diving instructor, Gianluca Benedetti’s body was found last week.

Maldivian military rescue diver Mohamed Mahudhee also sadly died on Saturday from decompression illness during a recovery mission.

Local authorities are calling it the biggest diving accident in the country’s history.

Sign up for all of the latest stories

The footage, which dates back to 2014, shows the reality of the depths. It includes the cave being entirely pitch black and requiring the use of torches, and the small crevices that the divers had to navigate through.

A diver from Finland takes part in a recovery operation for the last two bodies of Italian scuba divers who died in an accident in underwater caves near Vaavu Atoll, Maldives, in this handout photo released on May 20, 2026. DAN Europe/Handout via REUTERS THIS IMAGE HAS BEEN SUPPLIED BY A THIRD PARTY. NO ARCHIVES. NO RESALES. MANDATORY CREDIT.
The divers were rescued by a specialist team from Finland (Picture: REUTERS)

‘It is difficult because it is located deep,’ he said.

‘And this cave is accessible only for technical cave divers who have the appropriate preparation, the appropriate experience and who are planning correctly to dive this cave.’

Apparently, the name of the cave is ‘Dhevana Kandu.’ Though not officially, its name was deliberately changed by those specialist divers to prevent untrained or recreational divers from attempting to enter the hazardous cavern.

Vladimir continued: ‘There shouldn’t be any unprepared divers, and we even changed the name in order to save the inexperienced divers from the temptation to come in and take a look.’

Local authorities say the dive appears to have exceeded the legal depth limit for commercial and recreational diving.

A spokesperson for the Italian tour operator said the divers’ equipment appeared to be standard recreational gear, and not appropriate for deep dives.

epa12972834 A handout photo made available by the Maldives President's Media Division shows Finnish diver Patrik Gronqvist preparing to conduct search and recovery operations for the bodies of four Italian divers in the waters of Vaavu Atoll, Maldives, 19 May 2026. The operation follows a tragic diving accident on 14 May, which claimed the lives of five Italian nationals. The government confirmed that the bodies were located in the innermost part of an underwater cave by three Finnish diving experts, who are supported by the Maldives police and military. The recovery team plans to extract two of the bodies today. EPA/Maldives President's Media Division Handout HANDOUT HANDOU, EDITORIAL USE ONLY, NO SALESHANDOUT EDITORIAL USE ONLY/NO SALES
Local authorities are calling it the biggest diving accident in the country’s history (Picture: EPA)

The Italian tour operator that managed the diving trip has denied authorising or knowing about the group’s deep dive, which exceeded local limits, its lawyer told Italian local publication Corriere della Sera.

On May 17 — three days after the tragic accident — three Finnish specialist divers arrived at the scene. They managed to locate the bodies of the remaining four Italians on May 18 in the deepest section of the caves.

Following the rescue, three expert divers who recovered the bodies handed over GoPro cameras which were found with the group.

While the footage has not yet been made public, it is hoped they could piece together the group’s final moments as investigators scramble to figure out what happened to the group after they dived deep below the recommended depth.

Comment now

Comments

Add WTX as a Preferred Source on Google

Add as preferred source

Responses

    Sarah Mitchell·

    Great article! This really puts things into perspective. I appreciate the thorough research and balanced viewpoint.

    James Anderson·

    Interesting read, though I think there are some points that could have been explored further. Would love to see a follow-up on this topic.

    Emma Thompson·

    Thanks for sharing this! I had no idea about some of these details. Definitely bookmarking this for future reference.

    Michael Chen·

    Well written and informative. The examples provided really help illustrate the main points effectively.

    Olivia Rodriguez·

    This is exactly what I was looking for! Clear, concise, and very helpful. Keep up the excellent work!

Stay Updated

Get the latest posts delivered right to your inbox.

No spam, unsubscribe at any time.