While Canadian investigators investigating the Titan disaster collected voice recordings aboard the submarine to understand what happened after it plunged towards the Titanic wreckage, we learned that the US Coast Guard has also opened an investigation. And new details about the protagonists of the tragedy are brought to light.
While searching for the missing submarine, 19-year-old Suleman Dawood’s aunt said the boy was “terrified” of the voyage, leaving it only to please his father, billionaire Shahzada Dawood, the real “Titanic obsessed” in the family. Words very different from those spoken by the boy’s mother. Christine, that’s the woman’s name. He told the BBC that Dawood brought his Rubik’s Cube with him because he wanted to break a world record in the depths of the abyss. His father, Shahzada, however, brought a video camera aboard the Titan.
The woman said that along with her husband, they dreamed of seeing the wreck up close, but a previous trip had been canceled due to Covid. After the pandemic, her son took her place, who fell in love with the idea over the years. The boy wanted to take advantage of the trip to enter the Guinness Book of Records by solving the puzzle at a depth of 3,900 meters. The Dawoods are one of the wealthiest families in Pakistan. Father and son died in the Titan’s implosion along with Stockton Rush, the 61-year-old CEO of OceanGate who owned the Titan, British businessman Hamish Harding, 58, and Paul-Henry Nargeolet, 77, an explorer.
Source: IL Tempo

John Cameron is a journalist at The Nation View specializing in world news and current events, particularly in international politics and diplomacy. With expertise in international relations, he covers a range of topics including conflicts, politics and economic trends.