Labuan Bajo – To understand the story of the KM Putri Sakinah, you must first look at a map. This is not a tale confined to a single, tragic point in the ocean, but a saga written across miles of one of the world’s most formidable seascapes. The locations of discovery tell a story of powerful natural forces, immense human effort, and a family’s heartbreak plotted in precise geographic coordinates.
📍 Ground Zero: The Sinking in Padar Strait

The story began at the coordinates 8°36’35.26″ S, 119°36’42.84″ E—the location where the pinisi schooner succumbed to bad weather and high waves in the Padar Strait on December 26, 2025. This is the epicenter.
The Padar Strait, the scenic corridor between Komodo and Rinca Islands, is notorious among mariners for its violently strong and complex underwater currents. This was the “battlefield” for the rescuers from day one, a churning, unpredictable arena that would dictate everything that followed.
📍 The First Recovery: A Daughter Carried South

The first recovery came not from a high-tech sonar sweep, but from the sharp eyes of a local fisherman. On the fourth day, December 29, the coach’s 12-year-old daughter was found near Serai Island at 8°37’30.78″ S, 119°36’52.398″ E. She had been carried roughly half a nautical mile south by the relentless current, a small, tragic data point illustrating the sea’s indifferent power.
📍 The “Impossible” Find: The Father Near Rinca

The most significant discovery, the one the family had begun to believe was impossible, came ten days into the search. On January 4, the body of coach Fernando Martín Carreras was recovered near Rinca Island at 8°36’32.58″ S, 119°36’32.22″ E. Found over a nautical mile from the wreck site, his journey, like his daughter’s, was charted by the same implacable currents. It was following this recovery that the family, in a moment captured on video, moved down a line of weary rescuers on the Labuan Bajo dock, offering handshakes of profound thanks—a human connection amidst the cold calculus of coordinates and nautical miles.
This map of points—the sinking, the first child, the father—creates a heartbreaking triangle in the Komodo Sea. It reveals not a static event, but a dynamic scattering by a force more powerful than any vessel. For the global reader, the expat, or the traveler who has sailed these waters for their beauty, this adds a sobering layer of understanding. The famous Komodo currents, which create rich marine life and dramatic landscapes, also presented the rescuers with their greatest foe and tragically dispersed a family.

The map, for now, remains incomplete. Two points are missing: the final locations of the coach’s young sons. As the search continues for them, each coordinate plotted is more than a geographic fact; it is a testament to a search team’s refusal to yield to the sea’s vastness and a family’s enduring hope to complete this most sorrowful of maps.
The geographic coordinates referenced in this article are provided for contextual and illustrative purposes only. They reflect the approximate locations within the primary search and recovery zones as described in official statements and public reports. These coordinates do not represent final navigational data or legally binding determinations, and are intended to help readers better understand the geographic scope and challenges of the search operation.
#heybalinews | Giostanovlatto, Founder Hey Bali News















































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