A woman identified by sources as part of the broader diving group connected to the deadly Maldives cave-diving tragedy has reportedly spoken for the first time about the decision that caused her to cancel the fatal descent only hours before the expedition began.

Authorities have not publicly confirmed the existence of any anonymous warning letter, and investigators continue cautioning against online speculation surrounding the deaths of the five Italian divers who vanished during the deep underwater cave expedition near Vaavu Atoll.

However, according to individuals familiar with conversations surrounding the case, the survivor allegedly told friends she experienced intense unease before the dive and ultimately chose not to descend with the group.

What has now captured public attention are claims that she may also have received an unsettling anonymous message shortly beforehand — a detail investigators have not officially verified.

Survivor reportedly backed out shortly before the descent

People close to the diving community say the woman had originally planned to participate in the expedition alongside the others before abruptly changing her mind.

According to sources familiar with her account, she later described feeling “deeply uncomfortable” about conditions surrounding the dive preparation.

The exact reasons for her withdrawal remain unclear.

Some individuals connected to the expedition reportedly believe the decision may have been related to:

  • concerns about the cave depth,
  • gas-mixture preparation,
  • weather conditions,
  • or psychological pressure surrounding the technical dive.

Others point to alleged conversations suggesting she became disturbed after receiving a strange message before the group entered the water.

Authorities have not publicly authenticated those claims.

Investigators remain focused on technical causes

Despite growing online speculation, investigators continue focusing primarily on forensic and technical explanations behind the tragedy.

Experts reviewing the incident believe the divers may have encountered:

  • oxygen toxicity,
  • decompression complications,
  • gas-mixture failure,
  • disorientation inside the cave,
  • or a rapid underwater emergency at depths approaching 60 meters.

Dive computers, equipment logs, and recovered gear are reportedly being analyzed as authorities attempt to reconstruct the group’s final underwater movements.

Former technical divers caution that cave diving at those depths leaves extremely little room for error.

“Once something starts going wrong underwater in a cave, it escalates incredibly fast,” one former instructor said generally of similar incidents.

Rumors surrounding an alleged warning continue spreading online

The story involving the alleged anonymous letter has spread rapidly online partly because of one reported detail:
a brief message the survivor allegedly interpreted afterward as a warning.

No official source has released the wording publicly, and investigators have not confirmed whether the message even exists.

Still, social-media speculation has intensified because the timing of the woman’s withdrawal from the dive now appears deeply unsettling in hindsight.

Experts warn that after high-profile tragedies, emotionally charged rumors often emerge as people attempt to impose meaning or premonition onto events that may ultimately have technical explanations.

A tragedy still surrounded by unanswered questions

As recovery operations and forensic analysis continue, the Maldives diving disaster remains one of the most disturbing recent incidents in the international diving community.

The deaths of five experienced divers at extreme depth — followed by the death of a rescue diver during recovery operations — have already raised major concerns about technical cave-diving risks and safety oversight.

For many following the case, however, the most haunting aspect may now be the possibility that one member of the expedition walked away at the last possible moment —
while the others continued descending into the darkness beneath the reef.