Body of international student recovered in Kamloops, B.C., river

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An international student’s body has been recovered in a Kamloops, B.C., river, a little over a week after he went missing.

Kamloops RCMP confirmed the body’s discovery in a statement on Tuesday, saying it was recovered near McArthur Island Park, a few kilometres northwest of Overlander Park.

That was where the young man was playing volleyball in the evening of July 6, and rescuers say he got caught in the current as he attempted to retrieve the ball from the Thompson River.

RCMP said they would not be releasing the victim’s name to protect his privacy, and his family had been informed of his recovery.

A river is seen cutting through a sandy beach surrounded by leafy hills.
The Thompson River in Kamloops, B.C., on July 7, 2025. (Jenifer Norwell/CBC )

Sgt. Chris Kienzle, a spokesperson for the Kamloops RCMP, said that the man’s body was found Tuesday morning by a search-and-rescue volunteer who was kayaking the river.

“Family has been updated,” he told CBC News.

“We hope that our contact with them, and the location of their deceased loved one, at least brings some closure to the family and friends.”

A sign that says, 'Danger - Swim at Your Own Risk' is seen on a walking path.
Kamloops Search and Rescue had warned that the Thompson River is ‘very dangerous’ at this time of year due to its current. (Jenifer Norwell/CBC)

Paula Davis, search manager with Kamloops Search and Rescue, previously told CBC News that after the man went to retrieve the ball in the river, he began to struggle. 

“Friends jumped in to try to help him, but they were also … struggling as well,” Davis told host Shelley Joyce on CBC’s Daybreak Kamloops last week.

“The friends were able to get themselves to safety, but unfortunately, the young man wasn’t able to.”

WATCH | Calls for more safety after TRU student’s presumed drowning: 

Presumed drowning reignites calls for river safety in Kamloops

Despite calls for action following the presumed drowning of an international student last Sunday, the city of Kamloops says it has no plans to add additional safety equipment to local beaches. CBC’s Jenifer Norwell explains why.

Kamloops RCMP said in a statement that they were called around 5:15 p.m. that day to assist with a possible drowning.

Overlander Park is located in the city’s North Shore neighbourhood, right by the confluence of the North and South Thompson rivers. 


Davis had warned the river is “very dangerous this time of year” due to its currents. 

The only designated river swimming beach in Kamloops is Riverside Park, across the river from Overlander Park. 

A few days after the man went missing, rescuers told CBC News that the nature of their mission had changed to a recovery mission, instead of a rescue mission.

The presumed drowning prompted calls for more river safety in the B.C. Interior city. Officials urged caution and asked people to obey signs that warn swimming is dangerous.

WATCH | TRU student goes missing trying to retrieve volleyball: 

Man missing after trying to retrieve a volleyball from Kamloops river

Search crews are still out along the Thompson River in Kamloops looking for a man who got swept away Sunday evening. A Thompson Rivers University international student was playing volleyball with friends when the ball went into the water. As Jenifer Norwell reports, when he went in to retrieve it, he ran into issues. While two of his friends tried to help, the man in his 20s was not able to be pulled from the water.

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