
MALE — A complex international recovery operation in the Maldives has successfully retrieved the bodies of two Italian scientists from the depths of a notorious underwater cavern. The breakthrough follows a devastating diving accident last week that has claimed six lives, including a local military rescue diver.
On Tuesday, a specialized team of deep-sea divers from Finland successfully navigated the tight, pitch-black chambers of the Vaavu Atoll cave system—locally known as the “Shark Cave”—to bring two of the remaining victims to the surface.
The recovered bodies have been transported to a mortuary in the capital city, Malé, for formal forensic identification.
A Perilous Mission in the Deep
The tragedy began last Thursday afternoon when a group of elite marine researchers from the University of Genoa failed to resurface. The body of the group’s diving instructor and boat operations manager, Gianluca Benedetti, was discovered later that day near the mouth of the cavern.
However, the rescue mission was forced into a grim pause over the weekend when 43-year-old Sergeant Mohamed Mahudhee, a highly experienced Maldivian military diver, died from suspected decompression sickness while trying to locate the remaining tourists.
The extreme risks of the operation stem from the cave’s geography. The entrance sits at a depth of 47 meters (154 feet), plunging down to 70 meters (230 feet) at its deepest point—roughly equivalent to the height of a 20-story building. Government officials emphasized that the statutory legal limit for recreational diving in the Maldives is 30 meters.
To navigate the zero-visibility environment, the Italian government flew in specialist divers from the global scuba safety organization, Divers Alert Network (DAN), who discovered the four missing Italians clustered together in the third and deepest chamber of the cave on Monday.
Academic Controversy Erupts
As the recovery team prepares a final push on Wednesday to retrieve the final two bodies, a bitter dispute has erupted over the nature of the expedition.
The victims include prominent marine scientists mapping climate change impacts on tropical biodiversity:
- Monica Montefalcone, an Associate Professor of Ecology at the University of Genoa.
- Giorgia Sommacal, her daughter and a university student.
- Muriel Oddenino, a research fellow.
- Federico Gualtieri, a recent marine biology graduate.
The University of Genoa quickly distanced itself from the incident, issuing a public statement asserting that the deep-sea cave exploration was completely unauthorized and conducted entirely in a personal capacity. A Maldivian government spokesperson corroborated that while the team held a permit to dive up to 50 meters, their submitted research proposal made no mention of cave exploration.
However, the university’s defense has drawn fierce criticism from the victims’ families. Carlo Sommacal, husband of Professor Montefalcone and father of Giorgia, publicly blasted the institution’s stance in an interview with La Repubblica.
”Monica is the person who has the most scientific literature on those corals in the world,” Sommacal said. “There are hundreds of graduate students writing theses on the Maldives using the data they gather together with Monica. And no one knew anything? It makes me laugh.”
Investigating authorities hope that analyzing the diving equipment and computer logs retrieved from the bodies will shed light on exactly what went wrong in the depths of the Shark Cave.


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