Final Japanese diver found in Java waters

The body of a Japanese woman diver who went missing a month ago has been found off East Java; five of her fellow divers were rescued and a sixth died.

Indonesian volunteers continue to search for a missing diver

The body of a Japanese woman diver who went missing a month ago has been found off East Java. (AAP)

A body believed to be that of a Japanese diver who went missing with six others off Bali a month ago has been found far from where she disappeared, Indonesian police say.

The body, thought to be that of diving instructor Shoko Takahashi, was found at the weekend on Sempu island, East Java province, about 400 kilometres from where the divers went missing.

Five of the other female Japanese divers in the group were rescued days after they went missing on February 14 while the body of a sixth washed up on the Indonesian resort island.

The body found at the weekend was barely recognisable - the head was missing - but Takahashi's Balinese husband believes it is her because of the clothes inside the diving suit, police said.

"The body was found on Saturday on a beach on Sempu island in Malang district," Malang marine police chief Slamet Prayitno said on Monday.

"The husband, who came to the hospital last night, said he is 98 per cent sure that the body belongs to his missing Japanese wife."

The body was flown to a hospital in Bali late on Sunday, he said.

Takahashi was based on the resort island and with her Balinese husband ran Yellow Scuba that took the divers out on the ill-fated expedition.

The captain of the boat that took them out has been arrested and faces a charge of "negligence which caused the loss of life" after leaving the divers alone in the open seas during the trip.

The women, all experienced divers, went on the expedition off Nusa Lembongan island, just east of Bali, an area famed for its stunning underwater beauty but also strong, unpredictable currents.

The survivors have told how the weather suddenly turned stormy and huge waves pushed them for miles before they managed to clamber on to a rocky outcrop near neighbouring Nusa Penida island.

They were eventually spotted on the outcrop and plucked to safety. They suffered dehydration and sunburn but no life-threatening injuries.


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Source: AAP


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