An elderly Pakistani (according to his profile on the Community Mars One website) is among the hundred candidates from 200,000 hopefuls who have been chosen to train for a one-way trip to Mars.
Sixty-year old Reginald Foulds is (Dubbed, Reggie the Martian by the media) one of the final contenders for the ambitious mission, served as a helicopter pilot in the Pakistani air force before retiring in 1992. Foulds moved to Canada with his wife at the age of 42, according to a report published in the Business Insider.
“With my 22 years of military background as an infantry officer and a helicopter pilot, I am capable of surviving in any conditions. I have been trained to stand against any odds and in any conditions. I have learnt to be adaptable, determined, curious and courageous; I am very focused in what I get out to do. I am a very reliable and a trustworthy person,” says his profile.
It also adds: “I have the curiosity to explore having no fears whatsoever; to me death only comes once. I have a will to go beyond the skies to seek and discover. To me there is no such word as impossible or I can’t. I, like the Mars-One team, have a vision to leave a legacy for this world to remember for thousands of years to come. I am determined to do something literally out of this world and be one of the first human[s] for the dawn of a new era – human life on Mars.”
The 100 candidates will be further short listed down to 24 to make up groups of four which Mars One, a Dutch not-for-profit company, is going to send on a one-way journey to the Red Planet, which lies a minimum 55 million kilometres — six months’ travel — from Earth.
The group behind the endeavour hopes to use existing technology to fulfill the mission.
The mission is expected to take approximately seven months and a recent MIT study found that even if the space explorers succeeded in landing, they would only survive for 68 days using current technology.