Who are the five people aboard the missing Titanic sub?

The five people aboard a missing submersible that toured the ruins of the Titanic include a space-traveling British billionaire, one of Pakistan’s wealthiest men and a retired commander in the French Navy who led the first expedition to the site of the “unsinkable” ship.

The vessel lost contact with its support ship Sunday about an hour and 45 minutes after descending to the wreckage of the 1912 disaster, 12,500 feet under water some 370 miles off the coast of Newfoundland.

Hamish Harding

Airplane sales executive and Guinness World Records holder Hamish Harding, 58, is among the missing, according to family members and social media posts made by the British billionaire.

Harding had previously flown to space on a Blue Origin mission, accompanied former astronaut Buzz Aldrin to the South Pole and was on a flight mission that visited both of the Earth’s poles in record time.

The Dubai-based explorer wrote on Instagram Sunday that he was on the third OceanGate Expeditions tour to the famous ill-fated ship as a “mission specialist.” He and other guests had paid $250,000 each for the privilege.

“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,” his post read.

“A weather window has just opened up and we are going to attempt a dive tomorrow.”


Hamish Harding
Harding has set multiple world records for his adventurous exploits and recently went to space on a Blue Origin flight.
Blue Origin

Shanzada and Sulaiman Dawood

Also aboard the five-person vessel were Shanzada Dawood, 48 and his son Sulaiman, 19, according to family members.

Dawood is the vice chairman of the Pakistani energy manufacturing and tech conglomerate Engro Corporation and sits on the Global Advisory Board for King Charles’ Charity, Prince’s Trust International

He is also a trustee of California-based research institute SETI, whose website states that he lives in the UK with Suleman and his wife and daughter.


Shahzada
Shahzada Dawood, 48, (pictured) and his son Sulaiman Dawood, 19, are two of the paying tourists who embarked on the 12,500-foot dive to view the famous shipwreck on OceanGate Expeditions sub
Courtesy of family

Paul-Henri Nargeolet

Experienced deep diver Paul-Henri Nargeolet, 77, is also aboard the vessel.

Nargeolet led the first expedition to the Titanic wreckage in 1987 after retiring from the French Navy, where he served as a commander.

He serves as the director of RMS Titanic, Inc., an underwater research company that owns the rights to the Titanic wreck, and has appeared in several films and programs about the disaster, including “Titanic: The Final Word with James Cameron.”

Nargeolet, who is known as “Mr. Titanic,” made a foreboding remark about his many journeys to the site in 2019 when asked by the Irish Examiner if he ever got scared.

“When you’re in very deep water, you’re dead before you realize that something is happening, so it’s just not a problem,” Nargeolet said.

A year later he told France Bleu radio: “I am not afraid to die, I think it will happen one day.”


Paul-Henri Nargeolet is pictured in 2013.
Leading Titanic explorer Paul-Henri Nargeolet is pictured in 2013 examining a model of the famous sunken ship.
AFP via Getty Images

Stockton Rush

Rounding out the missing team is Stockton Rush, 61, the founder and CEO of OceanGate, based in Everett, Wa., according to media reports.

Rush became the youngest jet transport-rated pilot in the world in 1981, when he was just 19, according to his biography.

“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.”


Stockton Rush, CEO of OceanGate exhibitions, poses at Times Square in New York, U.S. April 12, 2017
Stockton Rush, CEO of OceanGate exhibitions, poses at Times Square in 2017.
REUTERS

A frantic Coast Guard search is underway for the missing 22-foot “Titan” submersible — which unlike a submarine cannot launch itself from a port and must depend on a support ship.

Officials said Monday night they have just 70 to 96 hours to locate the vessel and rescue the five men before they run out of oxygen.

With Post wires