During the hunt for Abdul Azadi, the suspected perpetrator of the Clapman chemical attack, two unrelated bodies were discovered in the Thames. Although it may sound startling, a former police diver tells News that this is regrettably “not unusual,” which is why she isn’t jealous of those who are looking for Azadi.
Her mind playing games as she felt her way forward in the cold, dark water, waiting to touch a limb, was the most taxing aspect of her job as a police diver.
In her two and a half decades with Thames Valley Police, she claims that in hundreds of searches, remains were discovered the moment she stepped into the water.
Having resigned, she claims she has no envy for the naval unit’s work of searching the River Thames for 35-year-old Abdul Izadi.
A few hours after he is said to have thrown a strong alkali at his ex-partner and injured her two girls, ages three and eight, in Clapham, south London, on January 31, Ezedi is thought to have drowned after falling into the river near Chelsea Bridge.
Although the Metropolitan Police acknowledges that it might take up to a month to locate him, they also acknowledge that the circumstances in the river mean his body might never surface.
Two unrelated bodies that were found in the Thames during the hunt for Azadi were found.