Very sad news for the Freediving community coming out of Dahab as Stephen Keenan, co-owner at Dahab Freedivers and Chief Of Safety for numerous Freediving competitions, died on Saturday whilst freediving at the Arch of the Dahab Blue Hole.

RELATED: In Pictures – Stephen Keenan Remembered

Whilst full details are still unknown at this stage, we understand that Keenan was providing safety cover for Italian Freediver Alessia Zecchini, who was attempting to complete a Constant Weight No Fins (CNF) dive of the Blue Hole Arch.

Keenan appears to have provided assistance to Zecchini at around 50m / 164ft after she got disorientated. Both divers ascended but a distance away from where the other safety divers were expecting. Keenan seems to have suffered an in-water blackout in the last 10m / 32ft of the ascent. Due to where Keenan and Zecchini surfaced, there was a short delay in rescuing Keenan. It is understood he died whilst in a taxi to the hospital.

The Arch is a 26m / 85ft long tunnel in the Dahab Blue Hole at a depth of 56m / 184ft and is often seen as quite a challenge due to its depth and requirement to swim for quite a distance through it.

Keenan, 39 from Dublin in Ireland, had been active in the Freediving community since 2009 when he discovered the sport in Dahab. He went on to co-own, along with Pascal Berger and Miguel Lozano, one of the world’s most dynamic Freedive schools – Dahab Freedivers – as well as set a number of Irish National Records.

RELATED: Tributes Pour In For “Hero” Freediver Stephen Keenan

He was an AIDA, PADI and EFR instructor trainer has taught and coached hundreds of divers in Dahab, Spain, and the Philippines.

He was probably best known for his role as Chief Of Safety for a number of the Vertical Blue Freediving Competitions, as well as regularly providing safety at Freediving competitions across the world.

Main photo – Jean-François Gosselin