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Six killed in tourist submarine sinking off Egypt: What we know

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Six killed in tourist submarine sinking off Egypt: What we know

A tourist submarine sank on Thursday during a routine underwater sightseeing tour off the coast of Hurghada, a popular Red Sea resort city in Egypt, killing at least six Russian nationals on board.

The vessel, which is owned by a private tourism company, Sindbad Submarines, was designed to take tourists underwater to view coral reefs and marine life – a major attraction in the area.

​According to reports, the vessel sank approximately 1 kilometre (0.6 miles) offshore from Hurghada, Egypt.

Despite efforts by the crew to surface and evacuate passengers, the vessel quickly sank at about 10am local time (08:00 GMT).

Who was on board?

The submarine was carrying a total of 50 people – 45 tourists and 5 Egyptian crew members – at the time of the incident, Red Sea Governor Amr Hanafi said in a statement.

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Russia’s consulate in Hurghada also confirmed the submarine was carrying 45 tourists.

Among the tourists were nationals from Russia, Norway, Sweden and India.

Who died in the incident and are people missing?

Six people died, including four adults and two children, all of whom were identified as Russian nationals by Hanafi.

Authorities have not released all of their names pending notification of relatives, but Russian media confirmed that the victims included members of the same family who had been holidaying in Egypt.

Egyptian officials suggested a married doctor couple were also among those who died.

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All of the remaining 39 tourists and five crew members have been rescued – no one is missing.

But among them, 29 individuals sustained injuries. While most injuries were categorised as nonlife-threatening, such as bruises, cuts, and mild hypothermia, four individuals remain in critical condition and are in the intensive care unit, according to Hanafi.

Why did the submarine sink?

Neither Egyptian nor Russian officials have attributed any specific reason for the vessel’s sinking, and investigations are continuing.

But the Association of Tour Operators of Russia posted on Telegram that the submarine had struck a reef while about 20m (65 feet) below the surface of the sea and that it then began to lose pressure.

Water pushes from high pressure to low-pressure regions, so if the inside of the vessel lost pressure, the likelihood of the seawater flooding in would have risen.

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What are survivors saying?

According to survivors, that’s exactly what happened. As water flooded the vessel, passengers scrambled to reach the surface.

Elena Boldareva said the submarine began to dive with hatches open, according to Britain’s Daily Mirror newspaper.

People saved themselves as best they could, Boldareva said, adding: “Some managed to swim out, some didn’t.”

Boldareva and her husband managed to swim out, but her daughter and mother were taken to the hospital in a serious condition.

They were among the dozens transferred to Hurghada General Hospital for treatment and further observation.

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How have authorities responded?

Egyptian authorities responded quickly to the incident, launching an emergency search and rescue operation led by the Red Sea governorate and the Egyptian coastguard. Divers were dispatched to the site within the hour, and several boats assisted in bringing survivors to shore.

Hanafi said the submarine had all the required licences and had passed technical inspections, and that investigations with crew members were under way to determine the cause of the sinking.

Is underwater tourism rising?

Sindbad Submarines is part of a rapidly expanding underwater tourism industry across the world. The industry, which focuses on scuba diving and undersea reef exploration – including in submarines and submersibles – was estimated to be worth $36bn in 2017, and is believed to have only grown since then.

A series of companies today advertise underwater tours in submarines and submersibles – underwater vessels that need a larger platform to transport them.

But some experts have warned that regulations for the industry are struggling to keep up with its growth.

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In June 2023, the Titan, a privately owned submersible went missing off the coast of Newfoundland, Canada, with five people on board. They included four tourists and the founder of OceanGate, the company that owned the vessel. Debris from the submersible was found four days later, and investigators concluded that the vessel had imploded, killing all five people.

What happens next?

The incident has sparked concerns about tourism safety standards in Egypt, especially for popular Red Sea excursions like diving, snorkelling and underwater tours.

Many tourist companies have either halted or limited travelling on the Red Sea due to the dangers from conflicts in the region.

Sindbad Submarines, which operates two tourist submarines out of Hurghada, has not yet made a statement on the incident. The website was temporarily down but appears to be up and running again.

According to the website, the submarines are engineered in Finland to sustain underwater pressure up to 75 metres (246 feet), “ensuring safety and reliability”.

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“In an emergency, oxygen masks are located overhead and life vests under the seats,” the website reads.

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Photos: Thousands march in Brazil town hosting COP30 for climate justice

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Photos: Thousands march in Brazil town hosting COP30 for climate justice
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Tens of thousands of people have thronged the streets of an Amazonian city hosting the COP30 talks, dancing to pounding speakers in the first large-scale protest at a United Nations climate summit in years.

As the first week of climate negotiations limped to a close with nations deadlocked, Indigenous people and activists sang, chanted, and rolled a giant beach ball of Earth through Belem under a searing sun.

Others held a mock funeral procession for fossil fuels, dressed in black and posing as grieving widows as they carried three coffins marked with the words “coal”, “oil” and “gas”.

It was the first major protest outside the annual climate talks since COP26 four years ago in Glasgow, as the last three gatherings had been held in locations with little tolerance for demonstrations – Egypt, the United Arab Emirates, and Azerbaijan.

Called the “Great People’s March” by the organisers, the Belem rally came at the halfway point of difficult negotiations and followed two Indigenous-led protests that disrupted proceedings earlier in the week.

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“Today we are witnessing a massacre as our forest is being destroyed,” said Benedito Huni Kuin, a 50-year-old member of the Huni Kuin Indigenous group from western Brazil.

“We want to make our voices heard from the Amazon and demand results,” he added. “We need more Indigenous representatives at COP to defend our rights.”

Their demands include “reparations” for damages caused by corporations and governments, particularly to marginalised communities.

After a 4.5km (2.8-mile) march through the city, the demonstration halted a few blocks from the COP30 venue, where authorities deployed soldiers to protect the site.

Inside the venue, COP30 President Andre Correa do Lago admitted that the first exhaustive week of negotiations had failed to yield a breakthrough and urged diplomats not to run down the clock with time-wasting manoeuvres.

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Countries remained at odds over trade measures and weak climate targets, while a showdown looms over demands that wealthy nations triple the finance they provide to poorer states to adapt to a warming world.

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Video: Torrential Rain Floods Tent Camps in Gaza, Bringing More Devastation

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Video: Torrential Rain Floods Tent Camps in Gaza, Bringing More Devastation

new video loaded: Torrential Rain Floods Tent Camps in Gaza, Bringing More Devastation

Heavy rain and chilling winds have swept through Gaza since Friday, exacerbating the challenges facing people who have been forced to live in tents in the war-torn area.

By Chevaz Clarke

November 15, 2025

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Former Zelenskyy associate accused in $100 million embezzlement scheme

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Former Zelenskyy associate accused in 0 million embezzlement scheme

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A former associate of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has been accused of being the mastermind behind a $100 million embezzlement scheme.

Tymur Mindich, who was once Zelenskyy’s business partner, was identified by Ukraine’s anti-corruption watchdogs as being the orchestrator of a scheme involving top officials and Ukraine’s state nuclear power company. Prior to the scandal, some feared Mindich’s growing influence over Ukraine’s lucrative industries that he had access to because of his ties to Zelenskyy.

Mindich allegedly exerted control over loyalists who then pressured contractors for Energoatom, Ukraine’s state-owned nuclear power company, demanding kickbacks to bypass bureaucratic obstacles. The requested kickbacks were reportedly as high as 15%.

Despite his history with Mindich, Zelenskyy was not implicated in the investigation. The Ukrainian president also issued sanctions against his former business partner once the anti-corruption findings were revealed.

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TRUMP ADMINISTRATION STAYS SILENT AS MASSIVE UKRAINE CORRUPTION SCANDAL ROCKS ZELENSKYY’S INNER CIRCLE

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy participates in a briefing at the Office of the President following a staff meeting in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Nov. 7, 2025. (Pavlo Bahmut/Ukrinform/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

On Nov. 11, Ukraine’s National Anti-Corruption Bureau (NABU) said that a group of individuals, including Mindich, “set up a major corruption scheme to control key state-owned enterprises,” including the country’s state-owned nuclear agency, the Kyiv Independent reported. The Ukrainian news outlet said that sources confirmed law enforcement searched properties tied to Mindich on Nov. 10, but he was tipped off and fled.

Mindich remains at large, with Politico reporting that he fled to Israel as the scheme unraveled and law enforcement zeroed in on him.

“Any effective actions against corruption are very needed. The inevitability of punishment is necessary,” Zelenskyy said in an evening address, according to the Kyiv Independent.

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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy during a Coalition of the Willing meeting in London on Friday, Oct. 24, 2025. (Chris J. Ratcliffe/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

TOP UKRAINIAN OFFICIALS IN ZELENSKYY GOVERNMENT SUBMIT RESIGNATIONS AMID $100 MILLION CORRUPTION SCANDAL

The NABU’s 15-month investigation allegedly involved 1,000 hours of wiretapping and resulted in 70 raids, the Kyiv Independent reported, citing the agency.

“What we were hearing only as rumors now has some evidence,” activist Tetiana Shevchuk of Ukraine’s Anti-Corruption Action Center told The Associated Press. “For a long time we have heard that Tymur Mindich is a shadow controller of the energy sector.”

In addition to Mindrich, Justice Minister Herman Halushchenko, who was Energy Minister from 2021 to 2025, was also raided, according to the Kyiv Independent, which cited sources.

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Flamingo missiles are seen at Fire Point’s secret factory in Ukraine on Aug. 18, 2025. (Efrem Lukatsky, File/AP Photo)

Mindich was co-owner of Zelenskyy’s production company Kvartal 95, something that Shevchuk believes pushed him toward politics. The activist told the AP that Mindich “would have never been in politics, never been in a position of power or business without his connection to Zelenskyy, and this magnitude is worse because it’s happening during war time, and it is related to energy infrastructure at a time when Ukrainians don’t have electricity in their homes.”

This isn’t the only NABU investigation centered on Mindich. The anti-corruption agency is allegedly working on a probe into the former Zelenskyy associate’s dealings with Ukraine’s top drone manufacturer, Fire Point. However, NABU has yet to release its findings in that investigation.

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Fox News Digital reached out to Zelenskyy’s office for comment.

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The Associated Press contributed to this article.

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