After days of intensive searching, rescue teams in the Maldives have found the bodies of the missing Italian tourists in a cave system. Upon receiving this news, the victims’ families were overcome with grief. Notably, a site map shows the victims were found in the deepest chamber of the cave, a detail that is attracting significant attention and causing great concern among the public
In the remote waters of Vaavu Atoll, days of agonizing uncertainty for grieving families finally ended with devastating confirmation. The bodies of four Italian divers—Professor Monica Montefalcone, her daughter Giorgia Sommacal, and two young researchers—were located deep inside the third and final chamber of a complex underwater cave system. What began as a scientific outing on May 14, 2026, has become the deadliest single diving tragedy in Maldivian history, claiming six lives including a rescuer. A widely circulated diagram of the cave layout now haunts public discourse, vividly illustrating just how far the group penetrated into darkness.

For husband and father Carlo Sommacal, and the families of the other victims, the wait stretched across painful days filled with hope, dread, and limited information. Initial searches yielded only one body. Rough seas, technical challenges, and the inherent risks of the overhead environment delayed full recovery. When news finally broke that all had been located—clustered in the cave’s deepest, farthest section—the diagram accompanying reports brought a stark visual reality to the abstract horror.
The Victims and the Long Wait
Monica Montefalcone, 51–52, an associate professor of ecology and marine biology at the University of Genoa, was a passionate expert on seagrass, soft corals, and climate impacts. Her 20–23-year-old daughter Giorgia Sommacal, a biomedical engineering student, joined her. The group also included marine biologist Federico Gualtieri, 31, researcher Muriel Oddenino, and Gianluca Benedetti, 44, the experienced local diving instructor and boat operations manager.
Benedetti’s body was recovered on the day of the incident, found near the entrance or in an earlier section. The others remained missing for days. A Maldivian military diver, Sgt-Major Mohamed Mahudhee, died from decompression sickness during recovery efforts, elevating the toll to six.
Carlo Sommacal endured an unimaginable wait. In interviews, he repeatedly defended his wife’s expertise and caution: “My only certainty is that my wife is one of the best divers on the face of the earth… She would never have put the life of our daughter or any other young people at risk. Something must have happened down there.” His last message to Monica was a simple domestic note about their cats being fine. Hours later, the family was shattered.
The University of Genoa and Italian authorities worked to support the families while cooperating with Maldivian investigators. Weather delays and the cave’s complexity prolonged the ordeal before Finnish specialists from DAN Europe, alongside Maldivian teams, located the four in the third chamber.
The Haunting Diagram: Three Chambers, Extreme Depths
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Schematics of the Devana Kandu (Dhekunu Kandu / Thinwana Kandu, or “Shark Cave”) system near Alimathaa Island have circulated widely. The diagram typically shows:
Entrance: Approximately 50–60 meters (164–197 feet) depth on a steep reef wall.
Chamber 1: Receives some ambient light; coral formations and initial passages.
Bottlenecks: Narrow restrictions connecting chambers, increasing silt risk and navigation difficulty.
Chamber 2: Darker, transitional.
Chamber 3: The farthest and deepest section—pitch black, with maximum depths around 60 meters and total system extent up to 260 meters horizontally. Sandy/silty bottoms where visibility can drop to zero.
The four victims were found in this third section, the furthest from the entrance. This detail disturbs many because prudent cave diving protocol emphasizes conservative penetration, gas reserves, and turnaround points. Reaching the final chamber implies significant horizontal and depth commitment in an overhead environment with no direct ascent possible.
Local expert Shafraz Naeem, who has entered the system over 30 times under proper deep permits, noted the entrance at 55+ meters, light only in the first chamber, and pitch darkness beyond—conditions demanding full cave certification, technical decompression skills, and appropriate gas mixes.
Permit, Depth, and Planning Questions
Maldivian officials granted a permit for soft coral research but insist they did not authorize or know about extensive cave diving. Recreational diving is strictly limited to 30 meters; the cave mouth alone exceeds this substantially. The MV Duke of York’s license was suspended, as it reportedly lacked specific approvals for such operations.
Investigators are examining whether the group used suitable technical equipment and gases or operated beyond planned parameters. Reports suggest possible use of compressed air with single tanks in some accounts, which would be inadequate for the profile. The University has clarified that while some members were on a research mission, the fatal dive was private.
Montefalcone’s final message to a colleague reflected her ethos: the underwater world remains “far too unknown” and deserves observation. Her GoPro or dive computers may eventually provide clues.
Recovery Operation: High Risk from Start to Finish
Bad weather initially hampered searches. Early teams reached the first two chambers. After Mahudhee’s death, Finnish cave specialists (including veterans of complex recoveries) joined, using rebreathers for safer extended bottom times. The operation involved careful guideline laying, silt management, and staged recoveries—two bodies planned for one day, two the next.
The diagram’s visual of tight passages and progressive darkness underscores why recovery was so perilous for rescuers themselves.
Broader Implications and Lessons
This tragedy strikes at the heart of marine science and adventure diving in the Maldives, a UNESCO biosphere reserve reliant on tourism and research. It highlights regulatory gaps: how to accommodate experienced foreign scientists while enforcing safety in extreme environments. Calls grow for explicit depth and activity disclosures in permits, mandatory technical oversight, and clearer boundaries between recreational, technical, and cave diving.
In the global diving community, it reignites discussions on certification requirements, gas management, team protocols, and the limits of experience versus specialized overhead training. Even experts with thousands of dives can face chain-reaction failures in caves at 50–60 meters due to narcosis, oxygen toxicity, silt-outs, or equipment issues.
For the families, the diagram transforms statistics into a concrete image of where their loved ones spent their final moments—together in the deepest chamber. The wait is over, but the search for answers continues through ongoing joint investigations, forensic reviews, and analysis of any recorded data.
Monica Montefalcone dedicated her life to understanding and protecting fragile marine ecosystems. Her final expedition, however it unfolded, ended in the very unknown she sought to illuminate. As bodies are brought home and a full report prepared, the schematic of Devana Kandu serves as both map and memorial: a reminder of the ocean’s beauty, its dangers, and the profound responsibility that comes with venturing into its hidden realms.
The families’ long wait ended in sorrow, but their call for transparency may prevent future tragedies. In the crystal waters of paradise, six lives were lost—underscoring that even in exploration, some chambers demand the utmost respect and preparation.
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