HomeUS News“I WANNA MEET MY MOM AGAIN” 💔 FINAL WORDS OF ITALIAN MARINE...
“I WANNA MEET MY MOM AGAIN” 💔 FINAL WORDS OF ITALIAN MARINE BIOLOGIST IN MALDIVES SCUBA TRAGEDY REVEALED 😢 The heartbreaking Maldives scuba disaster that claimed multiple lives is becoming even more emotional after the final reported words of an Italian marine biologist were revealed. Friends say the experienced diver had been excited for the underwater excursion, never imagining the trip would end in unimaginable tragedy beneath the surface. But as investigators continue piecing together the terrifying final moments, a chilling detail has now emerged — the marine biologist’s alleged last message before disaster struck. Loved ones say the words now carry a devastating weight, transforming what once sounded like an ordinary comment into something painfully haunting in hindsight. As tributes continue pouring in online, the emotional final exchange is leaving people around the world in tears….
Last words of Italian marine biologist who died in Maldives scuba tragedy revealed
The last words of one of the marine biologists who died in a scuba diving accident in the Maldives were a tribute to the lifelong passion that ultimately cost her life.
Monica Montefalcone was among the five Italians vanished during a deep-water dive and presumed trapped inside a cave 200 feet underwater in the Indian Ocean island nation Thursday — in what officials called the single worst diving accident the idyllic nation has ever seen.
“It is fundamental to observe the underwater environment — which remains far too unknown to the general public — whether with our own eyes or through the lens of a robot,” Montefalcone wrote to a colleague Wednesday night around 10:15 pm, a few hours before the fatal dive.
Montefalcone had 20 years of experience diving in the Maldvives and more than 5,000 dives under her belt.Greenpeace via AP
Montefalcone, 51, an award-winning researcher from the University of Genoa in Italy, was on a work trip to the Maldives to monitor the effects of climate change on tropical biodiversity.
An experienced diver, she travelled with her daughter, Giorgia Sommacal, 22, a student at the university, and research fellow Muriel Oddenino, 31 — who both died in the dive.