Horror moment Sindbad tourist submarine disaster unfolds as vessel plunges ‘with hatches STILL OPEN’ leaving six dead

THIS is the moment the doomed Sindbad submarine disaster unfolds as the vessel plunges beneath the waves with the hatches still open.

Footage shows the sub beginning its dive beneath the Red Sea while tourists are still boarding it leaving them screaming in panic.

Boat deck railing over water with "SHOT" watermark.
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Footage shows water rising around the submarine as it descendsCredit: East2West
Person holding colorful fidget toy.
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Tourists standing on top of the vessel quickly have water around their feetCredit: East2West
Sunken tourist submarine in the Red Sea.
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Six were killed after the submarine dived with the hatches openCredit: Eyevine
Illustration of a timeline showing the moments before a tourist submarine sank in the Red Sea.
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Six Russians would be killed on Thursday in the Egyptian holiday disaster - including two children.

Video caught by one of the tourists boarding the submarine shows the moment their jaunt turned into a nightmare.

Water quickly starts to rise around tourists' feet as the craft begins to dive.

The topside Russian woman notices the rising water and remarks to her phone: "That's it the dive has begun, we are already descending slowly."

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Panicked children then begin to scream as the submarine descends fast and within seconds the holidaymakers are left swimming for their lives.

The phone is in the water for several seconds before it cuts out.

The hatch of the craft can still be seen open in the clip, suggesting that seawater would have rushed into the vessel.

Tourist Regina told Russian media that she was on top of the craft with her two children, aged nine and ten, when the disaster happened.

She said: “We were queuing at the boarding, when the submarine began to sink into the water.

“The Egyptian who was responsible for loading shouted ‘Stop, stop!’.

Red Sea Tragedies

“But naturally no one inside heard him.

“He shouted to us ‘Faster, faster, go to the pontoon’ from which people were boarding."

The woman then had to swim for her life away from the sub as she feared she would be sucked beneath the waves before managing to get onto the pontoon.

She said: “There was not a single life preserver, no lifebuoys, no vests, nothing at all on the pontoon itself."

Blurry close-up video of a person wearing glasses; text overlay says "Come quickly".
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One tourist can be seen trying to get off the boatCredit: East2West
Rescue site of a sunken tourist submarine in the Red Sea.
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Tourists boarded the submarine from a pontoon in the seaCredit: Eyevine
Tourist submarine in the Red Sea.
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The Sindbad claimed to be one of only 14 real pleasure submarines in the worldCredit: Unpixs

Survivors were then rescued by boats which quickly picked them up and delivered them to shore.

It's not know how many people were already aboard the submarine but 29 were pulled from the shark-infested waters.

Six people died while 39 were miraculously rescued after the Sindbad pleasure submarine sank off the Egyptian resort city of Hurghada.

Nine other people were injured in the disaster, including four said to have been critically hurt.

The crew of the sub are now being questioned by Egyptian officials.

Red Sea Governor Amr Hanafy confirmed yesterday the submarine had a valid licence and the crew had all obtained the correct certificates.

A blurry image of a person using a fishing net.
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An open hatch can be seen as the tourists board the boat
Close-up of bubbling water.
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One tourist was still recording as they plunged into the waterCredit: East2West
Map showing location of tourist submarine sinking off Hurghada, Egypt.
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One survivor had claimed the vessel submerged with its hatches still open which allowed water to quickly flood in.

The Russian survivor - who escaped the horror with her husband - said: “Some managed to swim out, some didn’t".

Some of those who escaped were able to climb through the open holes to safety.

The first victim was named yesterday as a Russian doctor anaesthetist Ravil Valiullin, 40.

Most of the tourists were Russians, but there were also some from India, Norway and Sweden, officials said. There were also five Egyptians on board.

Holidaymakers have left eerie reviews of the Sindbad submarine tour just months before a survivor said staff forgot to close the hatch.

Diver preparing scuba gear on a boat.
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As tourists board the submarine everything appears normalCredit: East2West
Dive beginning from a boat.
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The filming tourist catches the water coming up the submarine and says the dive has begunCredit: East2West

In a Tripadvisor review from a holiday in October, 'stubbyd' from Bridgend said: "they also 'big up' the qualifications of the captain.

"But constantly bumping the sub on the sea floor is not good for the sea life, sea floor, my sanity of ultimately I'd say the sub!"

The pleasure sub was operated by Sindbad Submarines which takes tourists up to 85 feet below the balmy waters of the Red Sea for 40 minutes.

An adult ticket costs £53 while a child's ticket costs £25 for the three-hour journey which includes a boat ride out to the waiting to submersible.

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Those on board will get to enjoy seeing coral and fish as well as a show performed by divers outside the boat.

Hurghada is a popular tourist destination for Brits and Germans and a number of nautical jaunts operate from the resort.

Brit's near-miss with doomed sub

A BRIT on holiday was inside the doomed Sindbad submarine just three days before the deadly disaster.

Kelly Collins, 32, descended 85ft below the surface of the Red Sea in the fated sub on Monday.

The HGV driver dodged death by a whisker with six killed on Thursday when the vessel sank carrying Russian tourists.

She said: "I'm shocked, saddened and in disbelief to hear the news about the poor people on the submarine.

"I think this has put me off submarines."

Kelly said the trip lasted about 40 minutes, with a 30 minute trip to and from shore before and after the sailing.

Fellow Brit Tom McDowell, 63, travelled on the sub with his daughter last year.

The food manufacturer from Carrickfergus, in Northern Ireland, said he was "nervous" at the thought of getting into the submarine but said he felt at "ease" as the set up was "all very professional".

He said: "I was shocked when I read the news that it has sunk - my heart goes out to the victims.

"When i was onboard I was surprised with how safety focused the crew were.

"The boat felt sturdy and the staff and the captain we very friendly and professional.