A near-death landing
ASTRONAUT, COSMONAUT RESCUED WITHOUT INJURIES
The two-man crew of a Soyuz rocket made a successful emergency landing yesterday after an engine problem on liftoff to the International Space Station, in a major setback for the beleaguered Russian space industry.
US astronaut Nick Hague and Russian cosmonaut Aleksey Ovchinin were rescued without injuries in Kazakhstan.
“The emergency rescue system worked, the vessel was able to land in Kazakhstan ... the crew are alive,” the Russian space agency, Roscosmos, said in a tweet. The pair are in contact with ground control, the space agency said.
Over the past few years, the Russian space industry has suffered a series of problems including the loss of a number of satellites and other spacecraft.
The rocket was launched from the Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.
“The launch had a problem with the booster [rocket] a few seconds after the first stage of separation and we can confirm now that the crew has started to go into ballistic descent mode,” the voiceover on a National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Nasa) livestream from mission control in Houston, the US, said.
The Nasa commentator later said the crew were in good condition and communicating with rescue workers after landing east of the Kazakh city of Zhezkazgan.
The descent was sharper than usual, meaning the crew was subjected to a greater G-force but they have been prepared for this scenario in training, the commentator said.
A source in the Russian space agency said that rescue workers had reached the crew.
The Kremlin confirmed the men had survived. Russian presidential spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told journalists: “Thank God the cosmonauts are alive”.
Roscosmos’s online stream of the launch cut out shortly after liftoff.
Former military pilots Hague and Ovchinin were set to join Alexander Gerst of the European Space Agency, Nasa’s Serena Aunon-Chancellor and Sergey Prokopyev of Roscosmos following a six-hour flight.
The International Space Station – a rare point of cooperation between Moscow and Washington – has been orbiting the Earth at about 28 000km per hour since 1998 and will mark its 20th birthday in November.
Hague was born the same year the US and the Soviet Union launched their first joint space mission, the Apollo-Soyuz, in 1975.
Dmitry Rogozin, a firebrand nationalist politician who this year was appointed by President Vladimir Putin to head Roscosmos, said on Twitter he had ordered a state commission to probe the accident. – AFP