Rescued Japanese divers heading home

Rescued Japanese scuba divers have bowed deeply to reporters and apologised for causing any trouble during their three days adrift at sea.

Four Japanese scuba divers who went missing off Bali for three days have left hospital and are preparing to return home, revealing they were "swallowed by big waves" during a terrifying ordeal at sea.

The women, among seven who disappeared after setting off for a diving expedition Friday, bowed deeply to reporters and apologised for causing any trouble as they were discharged from hospital on Thursday in the Balinese capital Denpasar.

Rescuers were scouring the coast of the resort island for one last day to find a diver who is still missing.

Five of the Japanese divers have so far been rescued while the body of a sixth was found floating near a beach.

The rescued divers suffered sunburn and dehydration but no serious injuries, although they have been left mentally "devastated", according to a Japanese official on Bali.

In a joint statement, the four women discharged Thursday said they worked hard to keep each others' spirits up after huge waves and storms pushed them onto rocks, kilometres from where they had set off.

"We told each other that we will go home alive. We encouraged each other by saying we could keep going because we had already survived drifting in the water for 28 hours," they said.

They set off Friday from Nusa Lembongan island, just east of Bali, but soon got lost. After drifting for a long time, they were slammed against rocks near the coast and were "swallowed by big waves three to four times".

Four of them managed to clamber onto some rocks in a remote area off Nusa Penida island, which is next to Nusa Lembongan, on Saturday.

They sheltered themselves from the harsh sun during the day and climbed up to the highest point to flash distress lights at night, fighting all the time against exhaustion and thirst.

"We were exhausted. We couldn't get any water on the first day as it was sunny. On the second day, we collected rain water in our fins to quench our thirst. We also collected rain water in plastic bottles picked up from garbage," they said.

They were rescued by boat Monday in the Manta Point area off Nusa Penida, some 20 kilometres from where they set off.

A fifth diver, Bali-based instructor Saori Furukawa, was picked up by helicopter nearby and has already been discharged from hospital.

The four women who left hospital Thursday would board a flight back to Japan later in the day, Japanese consular official Kenichi Takeyama told AFP.

"They are physically well but mentally, they are devastated," he added.

Japan's Kyodo news agency named the women discharged as: Emi Yamamoto; Atsumi Yoshidome; Aya Morizono; and Nahomi Tomita.

According to the agency, the dead woman is Ritsuko Miyata and the missing diver is Shoko Takahashi.


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Source: AAP


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