LABUAN BAJO, Indonesia — A morning steeped in spiritual solemnity and sorrow in the waters of Komodo National Park ended in tragic discovery on Sunday, January 4, 2026. A body believed to be that of Valencia CF coach Fernando Martín Carreras was found floating in the Padar Strait, shortly after elders of the indigenous Suku Bajo community performed a traditional maritime ritual at dawn.
The sequence of events, captured in a series of poignant photographs, illustrates a profound narrative where deep-seated cultural reverence met a large-scale, modern search operation.
The Ritual: A Dialogue with the Sea
As first light broke over the iconic silhouette of Padar Island, Suku Bajo elders gathered on the rocky shoreline. In a moving ceremony, they spoke to the sea they have lived with for centuries, respectfully asking it to release the bodies of the missing family, whom they referred to as saudara (kin or siblings). This act of spiritual appeal, a cornerstone of their maritime culture, set a solemn tone for the day—the final scheduled day of the search.
The Discovery and Recovery
Heeding the call of tradition and technology, the joint search fleet continued its sweep. Not long after the ritual concluded, a body was sighted on the surface. What followed was a coordinated and dignified recovery operation. Personnel from the National Search and Rescue Agency (Basarnas), the Water Police (Polairud), the Indonesian Navy (TNI AL), and civilian volunteers worked in seamless unison. The photographic record shows the careful, respectful retrieval from the water, the secure transfer onto a rescue vessel, and the somber convoy back to Marina Labuan Bajo port.
The Aftermath and Unanswered Questions
The recovered body was taken to the Labuan Bajo Regional General Hospital for formal identification. A family member at the command post confirmed the grim find, stating, “Father is found.” This discovery brings a heartbreaking closure to the ten-day search for the coach but leaves a gaping void: his two young sons remain missing, their fate still held by the powerful currents of the Flores Sea.
This gallery documents more than a recovery; it captures a moment where Indonesia’s rich cultural heritage and its coordinated emergency response intertwined in the search for answers amidst one of the region’s most poignant maritime tragedies.























































Comments 1