By: Natasha Archary

The search and rescue mission for a missing submarine with five occupants continues, as oxygen supply on the vessel runs out.
This after OceanGate Expeditions launched an “exciting opportunity” for a limited number of people to explore the Titanic wreckage which lays at the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean.
On Sunday, 18 June, the Titan submarine went missing when it vanished of the radar, with an estimated 30-hours of oxygen supply.
However, search and rescue crews were still trying to locate the submarine on Wednesday morning, 21 June, there’s still no trace of the submarine.
OceanGate charged eager tourists $250 000 (R 4 582 020 million) to be the first few people in the world to visit the iconic Titanic wreckage.
The company says while the expedition into the depths of the icy Atlantic ocean was pitted as a tourist attraction, every OceanGate dive is for scientific purposes.
Aboard the submarine were a pilot, British adventurer, a Pakistani-British father and son, a French explorer and the CEO of OceanGate, Stockton Rush.
An international search for the Titan wielded “banging noises” near its last known location, which was discovered by a Canadian aircraft.
Search teams are now racing against the clock to locate the submarine.
Members of the Explorers Club who have been to the Titanic site many times are also part of the search and rescue mission.
They remain optimistic that they can help find the Titan submarine based on data from the field, and likely signs of life which was detected at the site.
Message from President Richard Garriott Regarding the Ongoing Titanic Search and Rescue Mission pic.twitter.com/ec7YX5VQCY
— The Explorers Club (@ExplorersClub) June 21, 2023
This is a developing story.
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