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SCUBA DIVING PAGE ONE :: WORLD NEWS :: SAFETY

Sydney Project divers tell why they left mate behind to die

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by DAVID BARRETT

Despite attempts to reestablish positive buoyancy and make an emergency ascent, Sydney Project divers Frits Breuseker and Paul Garske failed and left Sven Paepke behind to die at a depth of 125 meters...

BERMAGUI, Australia (4 Nov 2007) — Two deep-sea divers have told how they were forced to leave the body of their buddy at the bottom of the ocean after a tragic scuba diving accident.

Sven Paepke has been lying on the sea floor off Bermagui, on the NSW south coast, for the past week after he lost consciousness and died during the 125m descent.

Police have been unable to recover the 42-year-old Gymea man's body because no police diver is qualified to dive to that depth.

A search for Mr Paepke bytwo Victorian deep-sea divers was unsuccessful yesterday but another attempt will be made today.

Mr Paepke died during an ill-fated expedition to identify a shipwreck believed to be the merchant vessel Iron Knight, sunk by a Japanese submarine in 1943.

He was diving with six other members of the deep-sea diving club Sydney Project about 14km off Bermagui.

The tragic accident has devastated Mr Paepke's wife, Pat. She said that although her husband of six years loved a challenge, safety came first.

"He was so thorough - you should have seen his preparation,'' Mrs Paepke said yesterday. "There is no way he would do anything stupid.''

Frits Breuseker, 53, was in the water beside Mr Paepke about 10.30am last Saturday when he discovered that his diving buddy was unconscious.

"Sven lost consciousness at 90m or 100m. I tapped him onthe back, and he didn't respond,'' Mr Breuseker told The Sunday Telegraph.

"I swung him around and immediately saw that his eyes were closed and his mouthpiece wasn't in his mouth.

"I tried to push his mouthpiece back in and inflate his dry suit, but I couldn't achieve any change in buoyancy.''

Despite desperate attempts to stop their descent to the sea bed, Mr Breuseker and Mr Paepke, who was weighted down, reached the ocean floor just six minutes after entering the water.

Mr Breuseker - a veteran of more than 50 dives alongside Mr Paepke - said he tried to save his friend for as long as he could despite knowing he had died.

 

"It's a difficult thing. Subconsciously, I knew what had happened but I didn't want to accept it.

"You say to yourself there's a chance in a million that you can do something, but you really know it is over. It's a tragedy.''

Diver Paul Garske, 43, described how attempts to force a regulator into Mr Paepke's mouth and stop the descent failed.

"We had one hand on the shot line and one on Sven trying to work on him,'' Mr Garske said.

Both men were forced to make a heart-breaking decision to leave Mr Paepke's body at the bottom of the ocean. Because of the depth, the divers could spend only 15 minutes on the sea floor.

It took them three and a half hours, including decompression stops, to return to the surface.

"We knew we had to make a decision. I knew he was dead at that point,'' Mr Garske said.

On Friday, Victorian divers Craig Howell, 42, and John Dalla-Zuanna, 51, arrived at Bermagui to try to locate and retrieve Mr Paepke's body.

Although the men were unable to find him yesterday, Mr Howell said he was hopeful, if conditions remained good, that he could be found today.

Sergeant James Hinckley, of the Eden water police, said the two divers made the right decision by choosing to leave their mate at the bottom of the ocean and save their own lives.

SOURCE - PDN

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