2 European Divers Rescued in Indonesia however Dutch Teenager Dead

Indonesia – Two European divers were rescued by fishermen on Saturday but a third, a 14-year-old Dutch, had died, four days after they disappeared off a southern Malaysian island border with Indonesia and drifted some 70 nautical miles (100 kilometers), authorities said.

Mersing district police chief Supt Cyril Edward Nuing said this was following the information and investigations findings that the British diver Adrian Peter Chesters and French national Alexia Alexandra Molina were at a position of 16 nautical miles north of Bintan Island, Indonesia, when they were found safe early this morning.

Alexia Alexandra Molina, 18, of France and Adrian Peter Chesters, 46, of Britain were found early Saturday in neighboring Indonesian waters and taken to a hospital, the Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency said.

Chesters’ Dutch son, Nathen Renze Chesters, remained missing but Chesters told police that he had died because he was too weak, the agency said in a statement.

The agency said it notified Indonesian authorities to continue searching for the body. The search operation in Malaysia has been called off.

Molina and Chesters were found 16 nautical miles (30 kilometers) north of Indonesia’s Bintan Island, which is about 70 nautical miles (100 kilometers) from the location they were reported missing on Wednesday, according to Mersing police chief Cyril Edward Nuing.

The three were diving with their Norwegian instructor, Kristine Grodem, about 15 meters (50 feet) deep at an island off Mersing town in Malaysia’s southern Johor state. Grodem, 35, was rescued Thursday by a tugboat. She said the four of them surfaced safely Wednesday afternoon but later drifted away from the boat and were separated by a strong current.

Grodem was training for the other three, who were seeking to obtain advanced diving licenses, maritime officials said.

The boat skipper was detained for further investigation, and diving activities off Mersing were suspended. There are several islands off the town that are popular dive spots.

Malaysia’s borders reopened to foreigners on April 1 after being closed for more than two years during the COVID-19 pandemic.                                                                                     

Noto

Jakarta-based Newswriter for The Asian Affairs. A budding newswriter that always keep track of the latest trends and news that are happening in my country Indonesia.

Recent Posts

Rocket Festivals (Bun Bang Fai) Soon: A Survival Guide for Isaan’s Wildest Weekend

The May 2026 event will see the skies above Northeast Thailand bursting forth with the annual Bun Bang Fai Festival…

May 2, 2026

Scooter Braun vs Sydney Sweeney Net Worth: Who Is Richer as the ‘Euphoria’ Star Goes Instagram Official?

It is especially evident that Sydney Sweeney and Scooter Braun are in the spotlight since the couple officially announced their…

May 2, 2026

Is Girigo App Safe? Why Cyber Experts are Warning You to Delete This Viral App Immediately

The Girigo App is the latest buzz app that has caught on in social media today (April 30, 2026). It…

April 30, 2026

How to Claim the New ‘Anime Apocalypse’ Soul Shards Before May 1?

Roblox's virtual world is currently experiencing an "End of the World" event, but for the players of the wildly popular…

April 30, 2026

Friendster is Back? The Original Social Media Giant Returns After Years; Can You Still See Your 2005 Testimonials?

The internet has been caught unawares with the re-entry of Friendster. By April 30, 2026, the formerly-legendary social networking platform…

April 30, 2026

Let Your Bot Do the Shopping: Visa Launches ‘Agentic Ready’ Program in Asia Pacific Today; When Your AI Will Start Paying Your Bills for You

Visa has just initiated a significant change to digital payments with Visa officially launching its Agentic Ready program in the…

April 30, 2026

This website uses cookies.

Read More