More debris, human remains found from Titanic sub accident in which Pakistani business tycoon killed

This undated image courtesy of OceanGate Expeditions, shows their Titan submersible being towed to a dive location in Everett, Washington. (AFP/File)
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Updated 12 October 2023
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More debris, human remains found from Titanic sub accident in which Pakistani business tycoon killed

  • All five people on board recreational sub operated by OceanGate were killed when the vessel imploded in June
  • The Coast Guard has launched its highest level of probe, called a Marine Board of Investigation, into the accident

More debris and suspected human remains have been recovered from a privately owned submersible which failed catastrophically in June while on a mission to the Titanic, the US Coast Guard said.

All five people on board the recreational sub, named Titan and operated by US-based company OceanGate, were killed when the vessel imploded, which is believed to have occurred during its June 18 descent.

The sub’s failure was confirmed on June 22, ending a days-long rescue mission which captivated the world.

The Coast Guard has launched its highest level of probe, called a Marine Board of Investigation, into the accident.

“Marine safety engineers with the Coast Guard’s Marine Board of Investigation (MBI) recovered and transferred remaining Titan submersible debris and evidence from the North Atlantic Ocean seafloor” on October 4, the US Coast Guard said in a statement Tuesday.

“Additional presumed human remains were carefully recovered from within Titan’s debris and transported for analysis by US medical professionals,” it added.

Some wreckage and presumed human remains were also recovered in late June.

The Coast Guard said it was coordinating with the US National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) “and other international investigative agencies to schedule a joint evidence review of recovered Titan debris.”

The five men aboard the Titan were British explorer Hamish Harding, French submarine expert Paul-Henri Nargeolet, Pakistani-British tycoon Shahzada Dawood and his son Suleman, and Stockton Rush, CEO of the sub’s operator OceanGate Expeditions.

A debris field was found 1,600 feet (500 meters) from the bow of the Titanic, which sits 400 miles off the coast of Newfoundland.

The victims were presumed to have died instantly when the Titan, about the size of an SUV car, imploded under the crushing pressure of the North Atlantic at a depth of more than two miles (nearly four kilometers).

The US Coast Guard and Canadian authorities have launched probes into the cause of the tragedy, which occurred after the Titan lost contact about an hour and 45 minutes after plunging into the ocean.

The Titanic hit an iceberg and sank in 1912 during its maiden voyage from England to New York with 2,224 passengers and crew on board. More than 1,500 people died.

It was found in 1985 and has become a lure for nautical experts and underwater tourists.


In Karachi, a café where Ramadan means feeding anyone who arrives hungry

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In Karachi, a café where Ramadan means feeding anyone who arrives hungry

  • Karachi’s Cafe Mehmood has offered free meals to the needy for nearly four decades
  • Restaurant owners say paying customers and charity diners receive the same quality food

KARACHI: As the call to Maghrib prayer echoes through Karachi’s Sindhi Muslim Housing Society, long rows of people seated along a busy roadside begin to break their fast. Plates of fruit, samosas and glasses of the rose-flavored drink Rooh Afza move down the line as men, women and children share the evening meal after a long day of fasting in the city’s humid heat.

The gathering is a familiar Ramadan scene outside Cafe Mehmood, a modest restaurant in Pakistan’s largest city that has quietly sustained one of Karachi’s longest-running traditions of feeding the hungry.

Operating since the 1980s, the eatery is well known not only for its food but for a daily dastarkhwan, a communal meal spread laid out for anyone who arrives hungry. Donations collected from visitors and well-wishers help fund the initiative, allowing the restaurant to provide meals throughout the year to people who cannot afford to pay.

The tradition reflects a wider culture of charitable food distribution in Pakistan, particularly during Ramadan, when mosques, community groups and businesses organize iftar meals for fasting Muslims. In Karachi, a sprawling city of more than 20 million people, such initiatives often fill gaps in a fragile social safety net.

“Around 12,000 people come to this dastarkhwan daily and derive benefit from it,” said Imran Khan, the eldest son of one of the restaurant’s founders.

Pakistan, a country of more than 240 million people, has struggled with rising living costs in recent years following economic turmoil marked by inflation, currency depreciation and higher energy prices. For many families dependent on daily wages or informal employment, free community meals can provide an essential lifeline.

Cafe Mehmood’s story began in 1985, when three brothers opened the restaurant and named it after one of them, Mehmood. The charitable meals started modestly when the founders began serving food to a handful of people sitting on the footpath outside the restaurant.

Over time, word spread and more people began arriving. Donations from visitors and well-wishers helped expand the effort into a large-scale operation feeding thousands each day.

Communal meal spreads are common across Karachi, particularly during Ramadan, but the scale and schedule of the dastarkhwan outside Cafe Mehmood sets it apart.

“There are no specific [meal] timings,” Khan said. “It starts at seven in the morning and runs until 12 at midnight. During that period if anyone comes empty stomach, they are fed well.”

During Ramadan, however, the restaurant focuses its efforts on iftar and the meals that continue until the pre-dawn suhoor.

The service runs throughout the year, pausing only on three days annually: Eid Al-Fitr and the first two days of Eid Al-Adha. 

According to Khan, the restaurant prepares iftar for around 2,000 to 2,500 people each day, followed by dinner for roughly the same number.

To manage the demand, Cafe Mehmood operates a separate kitchen dedicated to preparing food for the charity meals. Inside the restaurant, customers who pay for their meals sit at tables, while outside, those who cannot afford to pay are served at long communal spreads laid out on the street.

Yet the owners say the difference is only in where the food is served, not in its quality.

“We make sure there is no compromise on quality while the taste, hygiene and service is similar to what we offer to our customers,” said Ismail Saeed, one of the founders’ grandsons who joined the family business five years ago.

Today, the restaurant and its charitable kitchen are run by the next generation: six members of the founding families and their nine sons.

Saeed said he had long wanted to take part in continuing the tradition.

“It has been a part of our genes since the beginning to help the needy, not just in terms of food but otherwise as well,” he said.

“We were provided with a platform through which we could do it, so I was always very keen about it.”

The charity meals are sustained through a combination of restaurant contributions and public donations. Visitors frequently stop by to give cash, while others transfer money online after learning about the initiative.

For those who cannot attend the communal meal spreads in person, the restaurant also distributes food parcels, particularly to women and people registered as deserving beneficiaries.

A typical meal served through the charity program includes chicken or beef gravy with two flatbreads, costing around Rs110 (about $0.39) per serving.

Despite its popularity, Cafe Mehmood historically avoided promoting its charitable work. For the family that runs the joint, the goal has remained simple: that no one who comes to their door leaves hungry.

“It was also the need of the hour,” Saeed said.