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BEIJING, Nov. 28 -- Fresh from its second manned
space mission, China's space program wants to be able to put a
man on the moon and build a space station in 15 years, an
official said
Sunday. "I
think in about 10 to 15 years, we will have the ability to
build our own space station and to carry out a manned moon
landing," said Hu Shixiang, deputy commander of China's manned
space flight
program. But the
goal is subject to getting enough funds from the government,
Hu said, explaining that the space program must fit in the
larger scheme of the country's overall
development. Hu was in
Hong Kong with the two astronauts who conducted China's second
successful manned space mission in October. He spoke during a
televised question-and-answer session with executives from
various television stations and
newspapers. Nie
Haisheng and Fei Junlong circled Earth for five days aboard
the Shenzhou 6 capsule, traveling 2 million miles in 115
hours, 32 minutes. China's first manned mission was in 2003,
when astronaut Yang Liwei orbited for 21 1/2
hours. China
wants to master the technology for a space walk and docking in
space by 2012, Hu said. He said China was developing its space
program at its own pace, not in competition with the United
States. "It's not the competition of the Cold War era," he
said. Hu stressed
China's intention to use space exploration for peaceful ends,
saying the government "is willing to work hard with people
around the world for the peaceful use of
space." He said Chinese
space officials want to study the possibility of making
rockets with the capacity to carry spacecraft weighing 27.5
tons - three times the capacity of their existing rockets -
but the government hasn't approved the
funding. Hu dismissed
suggestions the space program is too costly for a country
that, despite rapid economic growth, is still struggling to
eradicate rural
poverty. He noted
the recent space mission cost $111.4 million, compared to the
$23.5 billion that China spent on combating pollution last
year. Hong Kong fetes
space heroes A day after they were declared heroes in Beijing,
the special administrative region (SAR) yesterday gave Fei
Junlong and Nie Haisheng a rousing welcome as they arrived for
a 3-day visit. The two
astronauts who successfully piloted last month's Shenzhou VI
space mission came to Hong Kong at the invitation of Chief
Executive Donald
Tsang. The space heroes
attended a variety show at the Hong Kong Stadium where they
were welcomed by Tsang and some 40,000
people. Tsang said the
delegation's visit has enhanced Hongkongers' sense of pride in
being Chinese. Speaking at
the show, delegation leader Hu Shixiang told Hongkongers that
they could compete to become national astronauts and
scientists here could also join in space
projects. The day's
activities for the delegation ended with a welcome banquet at
Government House hosted by the Chief
Executive. This
morning, they will be at Chinese University of Hong Kong to
talk about the space mission; and the afternoon will see them
at Hong Kong Disneyland. In the evening, they are expected to
visit Santa's Town at Statue
Square. The delegation
will leave Hong Kong for Macao on
Wednesday. On Saturday,
the two astronauts were awarded the title of "Hero Astronaut"
and the medal of "Space Flight Achievement" by President Hu
Jintao in Beijing. Last
month's triumphant Shenzhou VI mission is another important
contribution by the Chinese people to the peaceful use of
outer space, the president told a gathering of 3,000 at the
Great Hall of the
People. "The fact that
China had realized the great jump from one-person-one-day
space flight to multi-person-multi-day space mission within
two years has marked a new landmark victory in China's manned
space technology," Hu said.
(Source: Reuters/China
Daily) |