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Chinese
celebrate space mission success
From Max Lee
The Daily Mail’s
Special Correspondent in Beijing
BEIJING—China’s second manned space flight ended successfully as the
Shenzhou VI craft returned to Earth, leading to patriotic celebrations
and plans for an ambitious new mission in 2007. The capsule carrying
astronauts Fei Junlong and Nie Haisheng parachuted softly onto a field
in the northern Chinese region of Inner Mongolia to bring their five-day
mission to a close, Xinhua news agency said.
“Our journey in space was very smooth. The living and working conditions
inside the cabin were very good. Our health is okay, thanks,” Fei said
on state television, with a radiant smile. Emerging from the module, the
two took a few seconds to adjust to the Earth’s gravity, before being
presented with bouquets of flowers and waving to assembled recovery
teams and ground control staff.
The successful mission, followed for the past 115 hours by millions of
people across the country, boosted the nation’s prestige and marked
another step in China’s progress towards becoming a space power. Soon
after the astronauts touched down, Tang Xianming, director of the China
Manned Space Engineering Office, announced that the next manned mission
would take place in 2007 and would include a spacewalk.
“Now I can tell you all that around 2007, astronauts would walk out of
the cabin and walk in space,” he told a press conference. Two spacecraft
would dock in orbit some time in the period between 2009 and 2012 in
preparation for establishing a permanent space station, he said.
China’s top legislator Wu Bangguo, who watched the return of Shenzhou VI
from the Beijing Aerospace Command and Control Center, hailed the
mission as a milestone. “It is of great significance in elevating
China’s prestige in the world and promoting China’s economic, scientific
and national defense capabilities, and its national cohesiveness,” he
was quoted saying by the People’s Daily website.
Xinhua reported that the capsule landed upright after touching down at
4:33 am (2033 GMT Sunday), just one kilometer (1,100 yards) from the
intended landing site. Shenzhou VI orbited around the earth at a speed
of 7.9 kilometers (4.9 miles) per second and travelled 3.25 million
kilometers during the five-day journey, it said.
“It was, as far as we know, what I’m sure they’d like to refer to as a
picture-perfect mission,” said Joan Johnson-Freese, an expert on China’s
space program at the US Naval War College. Fei and Nie were taken by
special plane to a military airport on the outskirts of Beijing,
saluting briskly and shaking hands with Defense Minister Cao Gangchuan.
“I can feel that lots of people are thinking about us. We’re very
grateful for all the love and concern from our motherland and its
people,” Nie said. In his hometown in Zaoyang county of northern Hebei
province, hundreds of proud residents hit the streets from before
sunrise to mark the spacecraft’s safe return.
State television showed footage of the town celebrating its most famous
son with firecrackers and dragon dances. The flight was China’s second
manned space mission after Shenzhou V in October 2003, which made China
the third nation after the former Soviet Union and the United States to
put a man into space.
The spacecraft blasted off from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center on
Inner Mongolia’s border with Gansu province on Wednesday. The flight was
in many ways a leap forward compared with China’s maiden space voyage,
when lone astronaut Yang Liwei spent 21 hours orbiting the Earth without
leaving his seat or taking off his space suit.
In contrast, Fei and Nie conducted a series of experiments and
maneuvers, including leaving the re-entry capsule and entering the
orbital capsule at the nose of the craft, taking off their bulky suits.
“The views that we had showed that the foward section was quite crammed
with equipment, and what appeared to be observation cameras,” said James
Oberg, a US-based aerospace consultant. “They were clearly busy”.
Chinese decries
Koizumi’s shrine visit
Bureau Report
BEIJING—The Chinese Foreign Ministry issued a statement on Monday to
condemn Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi’s visit to the
Yasukuni Shrine, a place where World War II criminals were honored.
Chinese Foreign Minister Li Zhaoxing urgently summoned Japanese
Ambassador to China Koreshige Anami and seriously read the statement,
expressing strong condemnation for Koizumi’s visit.
Regardless the strong opposition from China and other Asian countries
and their peoples, Koizumi again visited Yasukuni Shrine, the statement
said. Such a move ¡°randomly hurt the feeling and dignity” of the
countries and their peoples falling victim during the WWII and
“seriously undermined Sino-Japanese relations”, it said.
The Chinese government and people expressed strong indignation over
Koizumi’s wrongdoing and lodged a strong protest to the Japanese side,
it said. China and Japan are neighbors and they should co-exist in peace
and friendship and seek for a common development, which constitutes an
important revelation shown by the positive and negative aspects of the
history of bilateral relations and is where the common aspiration and
the greatest common interests of the two peoples rest, the statement
said.
In recent years, the Chinese government and leaders, taking into
consideration of the general situation of safeguarding Sino-Japanese
relations and peace and prosperity in the Asia-Pacific region and world
at large, have repeatedly made clear to the Japanese side the
righteousness and consequences with the hope that Prime Minister Koizumi
will wake up to his errors, consider the situation as a whole and not
insist on having his own way, it said. “All of these have fully revealed
the political will and sincerity of the Chinese government and people
who attach importance to Sino-Japanese relations,” it stressed.
However, the document said, the Chinese side’s sincerity and efforts did
not win due responses, while right on the contrary, Prime Minister
Koizumi, regardless of the achievements made by many ancestors and
personages of insight from both countries in the past years for
bilateral friendship, obstinately sticks to a wrong and dangerous
course,” which cannot but outrage us,” it said. “Prime Minister Koizumi
must shoulder all responsibilities for the severe political consequences
resulting from his wrongdoing,” it said.
“The will of the people cannot be insulted,” the statement quoted a
Chinese saying, adding that “anybody that goes against the trend of the
times will let down both ancestors and descendants, and will finally’
lift a rock only to drop it on his own toes’, it said. Also on Monday,
Chinese Ambassador to Japan Wang Yi lodged a strong protest to Japanese
Foreign Minister Machimura Nobutaka for Koizumi’s visit. “Koizumi must
shoulder the historic responsibility for undermining Sino-Japanese
relations,” Wang said.
Koizumi visited Yasukuni Shrine, where 14 WWII war criminals were
enshrined, Monday morning. The visit was the fifth since he took office
in 2001. Koizumi’s previous visits triggered waves of protest from
Japan’s neighboring countries, especially China and the Republic of
Korea, making the issue the major barrier for developing relations
between Japan and the two countries. |