The Philippine Star

NoKor plans to plant flag on the moon

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PYONGYANG ( AP) — North Korean space officials are hard at work on a fiveyear plan to put more advanced satellites into orbit by 2020, and don’t intend to stop there: they’re also aiming for the moon, and beyond. In an interview with The

Associated Press, a senior official at the North’s version of NASA said internatio­nal sanctions won’t stop Pyongyang from launching more satellites by 2020, and that he hopes to see the North Korean flag on the moon within the next 10 years.

“Even though the US and its allies try to block our space developmen­t, our aerospace scientists will conquer space and definitely plant the flag of the DPRK on the moon,” said Hyon Kwang Il, director of the scientific research department of North Korea’s National Aerospace Developmen­t Administra­tion.

The North’s official name is the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

An unmanned, no- frills North Korean moon mission in the not-too-distant future isn’t as far-fetched as it might seem. Outside experts say it’s ambitious, but conceivabl­e. While the US is the only country to have conducted manned lunar missions, other nations have sent unmanned spacecraft there and have in that sense planted their flags.

“It would be a significan­t increase in technology, not one that is beyond them, but you have to debug each bit,” Jonathan McDowell, an astrophysi­cist at the HarvardSmi­thsonian Center for Astrophysi­cs who maintains an exhaustive blog on internatio­nal satellites and satellite launches, said in an email to the

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