Divers looking for the remaining two bodies of victims of the Lake Nakuru chopper crash on Tuesday recovered clothes and the plane's door.
The recovery team drew out a t-shirt and a jacket believed to be belonging to one of the missing persons.
Jonathan Kertich of the National Disaster Operation Centre said the door was recovered from the point where the plane's main body was recovered on Friday.
The helicopter crashed into the waters last month killing five people on board.
The wreckage, which was 70 per cent intact, was found 2.44km from the western end of the lake and was about 5.4m deep.
The bodies of pilot Apollo Malowa and blogger Antony Kipyegon were retrieved on October 23.
Veronica Muthoni's body was also retrieved on Friday. It was found strapped with the safety belt in the copter wreck.
This rekindled hopes that the remaining two will also be found. Families and friends of Sam Gitau and John Mapozi are still camping at lake.
"We have been camping at the lake shore since the crash happened, hoping our loved ones will be rescued," William Mwangi, Gitau’s father, said.
"We are helpless. We can only wait and see if the recovery will be successful."
Kertich promised the families they will not stop the search until all the bodies are retrieved.
On Monday, the wreck was transported by road to Nairobi for investigation into the cause of the crash.
"We have the flight data recorders for further investigations," Mathias Ombasa of the Aircraft Investigations Department said.
"We have not found the chopper’s tail boom yet, but we have a strong rescue team and pray the recovery mission will be successful."
The search has involved more than 40 divers, including the Sonko Rescue Team, the Kenya Navy, Kenya Police, Kenya Wildlife Service, Kenya Forest Service and divers from Naivasha.
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