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Man dies at diving centre
A MAN has died after falling ill at the National Diving and Activity Centre (NDAC) near Chepstow.
An air ambulance was called to the former quarry site in Tidenham on Monday morning around 11.25am, but the victim was later pronounced dead.
It is not known whether the man had been diving or the incident was diving related.
There have been several diving fatalities at the 260-ft deep lake, including one last October when 28-year-old trucker Wlodzimierz Jurasz, from Upminster, died from the bends.
Gloucestershire Police declined to give any details about Monday’s incident, apart from confirming that the man had died.
“We were called at 11.25am today (Monday March 26) following a report that a man had been taken ill at the National Diving Centre in Chepstow," a spokeswoman said.
“We can confirm that the man has since died but no further details are available at this time.”
A spokesman from South West Ambulance Service Foundation Trust added: "We attended an incident at this location with various resources, including three ambulances and a helicopter."
An inquest in Gloucester earlier this month heard that Mr Jurasz had dived solo 100ft deeper than he was qualified to, and ascended in minutes when he should have taken more than an hour.
The NDAC, which has sunken planes, helicopters, buses, armoured vehicles and a cruiser on the bed of the quarry, was the scene of another diver’s death in 2014.
Mary Restell, 54, from Tavistock in Devon was diving at a depth of 197ft with her husband Roy when she became unresponsive and was rushed to the surface.
An inquest later heard how under-performing breathing regulators and a dense gas mix with a high nitrogen content all contributed to her death.
In 2004, three divers died within six weeks of each other in two separate incidents at the site.