Five Italians die in scuba accident in Maldives

On Thursday, Italy’s foreign ministry confirmed a tragic deep-sea diving accident in the Maldives that claimed the lives of five Italian nationals, marking the deadliest single diving incident the Indian Ocean archipelago has recorded in modern memory. As of Thursday’s initial search operation, local security forces had recovered one body from the deep cave system where the group was exploring.

World-renowned for its powdery white sandbanks, crystal-clear turquoise waters and pristine coral reef systems, the Maldives has long held top rank as a luxury bucket-list destination for scuba diving enthusiasts. Travelers from across the globe flock to the island nation to explore remote dive sites, often basing their trips on isolated island resorts or purpose-built liveaboard dive vessels that access less crowded, more challenging dive spots.

In an official brief confirmation of the incident, Italy’s foreign ministry stated that the fatal accident unfolded on a diving expedition in Vaavu Atoll, a remote diving region located south of the Maldivian capital, Male. Initial investigations indicate the group was attempting to navigate submerged cave systems at a depth of approximately 50 meters when the incident occurred. After the team failed to return to the surface from their expedition, local authorities were alerted to the emergency.

Local Maldivian officials emphasized that this accident is the worst single diving fatality event in the history of the nation, which is made up of 1,192 small coral islands spread across 800 kilometers of the Indian Ocean along the equator. Immediately after the five divers were reported missing Thursday afternoon, the Maldives National Defence Force (MNDF) launched a large-scale multi-asset search operation, deploying both fixed-wing aircraft and high-speed search speedboats to the area.

In an update on the search, the MNDF confirmed that the first recovered body was found inside the target cave system. Authorities currently believe the remaining four missing divers are also trapped within the same cave system, which extends to a maximum depth of roughly 60 meters. In a further detail that may shed light on the accident, local police confirmed that Vaavu Atoll was under a yellow weather warning Thursday, with rough sea conditions reported across the region that posed risks to small passenger vessels and fishing craft.

As of Thursday night, a MNDF coastguard vessel remained on site coordinating search efforts around the clock, with additional specialist coastguard dive teams dispatched to the area to assist with the challenging deep-cave recovery operation.

While diving and water activity-related fatalities are statistically rare in the South Asian island nation, public records show a steady stream of fatal incidents over recent years. In December of last year, a British female tourist died during a recreational dive, and her 71-year-old husband suffered a fatal illness just days later, grief-stricken after the incident. In June the previous year, a 26-year-old Japanese tourist disappeared after a diving trip near the capital Male. Local Maldivian media analysis of public safety data shows that over the past six years, at least 112 tourists have died in marine-related incidents across the archipelago, with 42 of those fatalities linked directly to diving or snorkeling activities.