In a Quiet Act of Grief, Family Inscribes Names of Missing Valencia Coach and Children on Komodo’s Pink Sand

In a Quiet Act of Grief, Family Inscribes Names of Missing Valencia Coach and Children on Komodo’s Pink Sand

The family wrote the names of the four victims of the sinking of the Pinisi Putri Sakinah on the pink sand of Padar Island, Komodo National Park, Thursday (January 1, 2026). (Photo: Ambrosius Ardin/detikBali)

PADAR ISLAND, Indonesia – In a moment of profound, silent sorrow amidst the ongoing search operation, the family of missing Valencia CF coach Martin Carreras Fernando found a fleeting way to memorialize their loved ones on Thursday. As reported by Detik.com, a relative visited the very shores near where the Putri Sakinah schooner sank and wrote the names of the four missing family members in the famous pink sand of Padar Island.

The simple, powerful gesture was performed by Alvaro Ortunoripoll, the brother-in-law of the coach. He inscribed the names—the coach and his three children—on a beach approximately one kilometer west of the estimated sinking point in the Padar Island strait. The family had traveled by police vessel to a nearby search and rescue command post operated by Komodo National Park authorities.

Stepping away from the group, Mr. Ortunoripoll crouched with his back to the open sea. Using his right index finger, he carefully wrote the familiar names into the colored sand. The writing included the coach, Fernando, referred to by his initial ‘F’, and his three children: a 12-year-old daughter, L, whose body was recovered earlier in the week, and his two sons, M (9) and K (10), who remain missing along with their father.

After a moment of quiet contemplation, he stood, facing the ocean that now holds his family, and captured the ephemeral tribute on his phone. Soon after, small waves gently washed over the shore, erasing the words as seamlessly as they were written—a poignant metaphor for the fragile and transient nature of the search itself.

When later asked about his act, Mr. Ortunoripoll confirmed it with a single, weighted word: “Yes.”

The family’s visit to the operational post included conversations with returning SAR personnel and a shared meal before they departed to observe the search zone up close. The scene encapsulated the harrowing duality of the crisis: the high-tech, large-scale search involving sonar and international coordination exists alongside these raw, intimate human rituals of love, memory, and an unwavering hope for closure.

The family wrote the names of the four victims of the sinking of the Pinisi Putri Sakinah on the pink sand of Padar Island, Komodo National Park, Thursday (January 1, 2026). Photo: Ambrosius Ardin/detikBali

For the global community following this tragedy from Bali and beyond, the image of names written in sand on a remote Komodo beach serves as a stark, beautiful reminder of the personal stories at the heart of every headline.

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