A man's body has been found in a car after it plunged into a marina in Swansea, police have said.
According to the Sun News, Emergency services raced to the scene just outside the National Waterfront Museum at around 10 a.m. An air ambulance attended, as well as paramedics, specialist divers, and a coastguard crew.
Officers said the vehicle was fully submerged when they arrived and that the death is currently being treated as unexplained. With the help of a commercial diver, firefighters lifted the victim from the submerged vehicle.
In a statement, Detective Inspector Chris Evans said: "Emergency services attended, and a car was found fully submerged in the water. "The body of a man was located in the car. The death is being treated as unexplained at this time, and inquiries are continuing to ascertain the full circumstances behind the incident. The incident is ongoing while the car is being recovered."
In a statement, South Wales Fire and Rescue Service confirmed that the car broke through a barrier, and one person was found inside. A spokesperson said: "One private motor vehicle had driven through a barrier and had entered the water with one person inside the vehicle.
"Crew members, with the assistance of a commercial diver, recovered the casualty from the submerged vehicle who was then put in the care of the Hazardous Area Response Team (HART)." The area has been cordoned off with police tape.
A nearby residents' association said access to the south dock of the marina was "severely restricted due to an ongoing serious incident". Pictures show broken metal barriers where the car entered the water.
The Welsh Ambulance Service sent four hazardous area response teams to the area. It was earlier confirmed that they were no longer on the scene. A spokesperson earlier said: "We were called today, at approximately 10:01 a.m., to reports of a vehicle entering the water at Swansea Marina.
"We sent four hazardous area response teams, one air ambulance, two Cymru high acuity response units, one duty operational manager, and one emergency ambulance to the scene, where we were assisted by colleagues from the Emergency Medical Retrieval and Transfer Service who traveled by air."