Updated
Updated · DIVE Magazine · May 22
Italy Seizes 5 Divers' Devices in Maldives Death Probe as Evidence Points to Navigational Error
Updated
Updated · DIVE Magazine · May 22

Italy Seizes 5 Divers' Devices in Maldives Death Probe as Evidence Points to Navigational Error

6 articles · Updated · DIVE Magazine · May 22
  • Italian investigators seized phones, computers and storage devices from the five divers who died in the Vaavu Atoll cave on May 14, widening a manslaughter probe and seeking access to GoPros and dive computers held in Malé.
  • Interviews with the Finnish recovery team and local divers increasingly point to a fatal navigation mistake: the group likely entered the cave deliberately, then mistook a dead-end tunnel for the exit from the deeper chamber.
  • The cave's layout may have contributed — a 30-meter S-shaped passage opens into a second chamber, where a sandbank can obscure the true exit, while the wrong left-hand corridor leads to a third chamber and dead end where four bodies were found.
  • Equipment and gas choices are also under scrutiny: reports say the team used standard 12-liter tanks for a 50-60 meter dive, with no guideline, leaving only minutes of bottom time and raising the risk of narcosis and panic.
  • Autopsies in Italy and data from recovered cameras and dive computers are expected to clarify the final sequence in a disaster that also killed Maldivian rescue diver Mohamed Mahudhee.
What secrets do the divers' recovered GoPros hold about their final, fatal moments?
Beyond a tragic mistake, who is criminally responsible for the six deaths in the Maldives cave?
Why did experienced research divers ignore the most basic safety rules of cave exploration?