Acclaimed Swedish diver Volker Bassen on Friday 11am joined a multi-agency team to search for the bodies of Mariam Kigenda and her daughter, Amanda Mutheu, who drowned in the Indian Ocean on Sunday.
Volker Bassen, accompanied by three members of his team, mapped the briny water body a better part of the morning.
The 4-man group scanned several blocks within the waters of the Likoni channel in a bid to locate Mariam’s Toyota Isis.
The team used a four-seater motorboat fitted with screens to monitor echo signals.
At around 1pm, Bassen took a lunch break, and resumed the search operation at 3pm.
A few minutes past 5pm, Bassen wore his underwater gear, and dived into the ocean alongside a support diver.
After 45 minutes, he emerged out of the water.
Volker Bassen said they identified one spot within the sea that they suspect Mariam’s vehicle could have been deposited.
The spot, he stated, was 60 meters deep.
The diver said he wishes the State can suspend ferry operations for an hour Friday night so that they can dive and get to the “exact spot”.
“Tomorrow [Saturday, October 5], I will be travelling out of Kenya hence I won’t be able to take part in the subsequent search operation,” he said.
His request to have ferry services temporarily suspended Friday night was not granted.
Volker Bassen said the Kenya Navy officers also helped him in identifying the spot, though the ocean currents were “too strong at the time”.
Volker Bassen had, in an interview with KTN News on Thursday, October 3, said if given the chance, he could remove Mariam’s vehicle from the sea in 2 hours’ time.
But on Friday, he told the media that he had “under-estimated the task that lay ahead”.