Post Magazine

Hong Kong man drowns during night dive off Po Toi island, in second such incident this year

A man died during a dive in Hong Kong's southern waters on Sunday night.

A friend found him unconscious shortly after he went into the water.

The diver was rushed back to shore at Blake Pier in Stanley.

The Hong Kong man, in his 40s, was taken to Pamela Youde Nethersole Eastern Hospital in Chai Wan by ambulance but later certified dead despite attempts at emergency resuscitation, according to police. He was suspected to have drowned.

Police received a report at around 8pm about the incident which happened in the waters off Po Toi, Hong Kong's southernmost island.

It was the second death involving a night dive this year.

Last month, a 37-year-old Hong Kong man drowned during a night dive in the waters off Bate Head, or Tuen Tsui, in Sai Kung.

The man, in full dive gear, was found unconscious and floating in the water by one of his friends.

He was certified dead after he was taken to Prince of Wales Hospital in Sha Tin.

This article originally appeared on the South China Morning Post (SCMP).

Copyright (c) 2019. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

More from Post Magazine

Post Magazine3 min readCrime & Violence
European Parliament Slams Hong Kong's Jailing Of EU National On Security Charges, Calls For Freeing Of Jimmy Lai
The European Parliament adopted a resolution on Thursday criticising the first jailing of a person with EU nationality under Hong Kong's national security law. Joseph John, a dual national of Hong Kong and Portugal living in Britain, was sentenced to
Post Magazine5 min readAmerican Government
US House Passes Bills To Aid Ukraine, Bolster Taiwan, Threaten TikTok Ban
Legislation that could ban TikTok in the US unless it cuts ties with its Chinese parent company cleared the House of Representatives, 360-58, on Saturday and is on a path to be quickly signed into law. The proposal, which was included in a package of
Post Magazine3 min readWorld
US Says China Shouldn't See Joe Biden's Meetings With Japanese, Filipino Leaders As A Threat
China has "no reason" to view the first-ever trilateral summit between the US, Japan and the Philippines as a threat, a top White House official said on Friday. "These meetings were not about any one other nation. This was about deepening and revital

Related Books & Audiobooks