What we know about the missing Titanic sub
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[June 20, 2023]
(Reuters) -A five-person submersible vessel taking wealthy
adventurers on a $250,000 trip to see the wreckage of the 1912 Titanic
disaster 12,500 feet (3,800m) undersea is missing in the Atlantic off
Canada.
Following is what we know so far:
WHO IS ON BOARD?
* HAMISH HARDING. The British billionaire and chairman of aviation
consultancy Action Aviation is among those missing, according to his
stepson. Dubai-based Harding had posted on social media that he was
proud to be heading to the Titanic as a "mission specialist", adding:
"Due to the worst winter in Newfoundland in 40 years, this mission is
likely to be the first and only manned mission to the Titanic in 2023. A
weather window has just opened up and we are going to attempt a dive
tomorrow."
In 2016, Harding accompanied former astronaut Buzz Aldrin to the South
Pole, when Aldrin became the oldest person ever to reach the Antarctic
region, at 86. Harding was also on board the 2019 "One More Orbit"
flight mission that set a record for the fastest circumnavigation of
earth by aircraft over both geographic poles.
* SHAHZADA DAWOOD and his son SULEMAN. Their family have confirmed they
are on board. Shahzada is vice chairman of one of Pakistan's largest
conglomerates, Engro Corporation, with investments in fertilisers,
vehicle manufacturing, energy and digital technologies. According to the
website of SETI, a California-based research institute of which he is a
trustee, he lives in Britain with his wife and two children.
* PAUL-HENRI NARGEOLET. The 77-year-old French explorer, whom media say
is one of the five on board, is director of underwater research at a
company that owns the rights to the Titanic wreck. A former commander in
the French Navy, he was both a deep diver and a mine sweeper. After
retiring from the navy, he led the first recovery expedition to the
Titanic in 1987 and is a leading authority on the wreck site. In a 2020
interview with France Bleu radio, he spoke of the dangers of deep
diving, saying: "I am not afraid to die, I think it will happen one
day."
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Stockton Rush, CEO of OceanGate
exhibitions, poses at Times Square in New York, U.S. April 12, 2017.
Picture taken April 12, 2017. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton/File Photo
* STOCKTON RUSH. The founder and CEO of the vessel's U.S.-based
operating company OceanGate is also on the submersible, according to
media reports. "It is an amazingly beautiful wreck," Rush told
Britain's Sky news of the Titanic earlier this year. "You can see
inside, we dipped down and saw the grand staircase and saw some of
the chandeliers still hanging."
* According to his biography on OceanGate's website, Rush became the
youngest jet transport-rated pilot in the world in 1981 at the age
of 19.
WHAT'S THE FIRM BEHIND THIS?
* Based in Everett in Washington State, OceanGate says it uses next
generation crewed submersibles and launch platforms to increase deep
ocean access as far as 4,000 metres.
* "OceanGate has successfully completed over 14 expeditions and over
200 dives in the Pacific, Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico," its website
says. "Following every mission, the team evaluates and updates the
procedures as part of a continued commitment to evolve and ensure
operational safety."
WHAT IS THE VESSEL?
* Although popularly called a submarine, in marine terminology the
"Titan" vessel carrying the five is a submersible. While a submarine
can launch itself from a port independently, a submersible goes down
off a support ship.
(Reporting by Ariba Shahid in Karachi, Kate Holton in London,
Dominique Vidalon in Paris, Yousef Saba in Dubai;Writing by Andrew
Cawthorne;Editing by Christina Fincher, Alexandra Hudson)
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