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Fiji’s role in space

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Fiji’s role in space

June 11, 2012 | Filed under: Opinion | Posted by: 

BY GRAHAM  DAVIS

 (Fiji-born and educated Graham Davis is an award-winning journalist. He blogs at grubsheet.com.au)

Yuan Wang class space tracking ship of the type which operates from Suva. (Photo: PLA)

Fiji is playing an important but little known role in China’s latest and most ambitious space mission, which is scheduled within days.

For the first time – if all goes according to plan – a manned spacecraft will dock with an orbiting experimental module in a major advance for the Chinese space programme.

And its progress will be tracked by a highly-sophisticated ship operating out of Fiji.

Suva is a perennial base for China’s space and satellite tracking ships known as the Yuan Wang ( Long View) class.

The latest and most advanced, the Yuan Wang 6, has been docked in Suva in recent days as China prepares for its latest space foray. Built in 2008, it bristles with the latest technology and its dishes and domes are a familiar sight on the Suva waterfront. It will sail for open seas to play its part in a global link-up with its five sister ships as they track the manned spacecraft on its orbits of the earth.

An official spokesman quoted by the Xinhua News Agency was vague about the precise launch date but said it would take place in “mid-June”.

He said the rocket carrying the Shenzhou 9 spacecraft was moved on Saturday to a launch pad in China’s desert northwest.

The spokesman gave no further details but Xinhua said earlier that the flight would carry three crew members who would dock with and live in the Tiangong 1 orbital module. In 2003, China became only the third country to put a man in space with its own vehicle and is said to have made steady progress ever since.  In 2007, the astronaut Zhai Zhigang undertook the first Chinese spacewalk during Shenzhou 7, the third flight of the programme. Details of the Yuan Wang class ships are highly classified but they’re said to have a displacement of around 21,000 tonnes when fully loaded and carry a crew of about 470. Ready for the next mission ( Photo: PLA) Personally approved by Mao Zedong in 1968, the first went to sea in 1977 and they’ve been joined by others that have become increasingly sophisticated. During previous launches, they’ve been dotted around the globe, not just in the South Pacific but in the Yellow Sea, off the African coast of Namibia and off Western Australia. They’re a familiar sight in Suva and while there’s much informal muttering about “spook ships”, their crews are welcome visitors for local businesses. The Victoria Wine company, for instance, has supplied successive ships with up to two-thousand cases of wine per voyage. The crews are especially fond of Australian wines and their brand of choice is said to be Penfolds. So it’s a safebet that if the latest space mission succeeds, the toasts will include some of Australia’s finest reds.

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Posted by on June 15, 2012. Filed under Asia,Australia,Canada,Egypt,Fiji,India,Indonesia,Kashmir,Libya,Myanmar,Turkey. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback to this entry

2 Responses to Fiji’s role in space

  1. Mohammad Naseem.

    June 15, 2012 at 10:57 am

    Being an Asian would like to congrats to China and also happy to know the important role of Fiji.
    Now as an Indian awaiting our own mission in the space and hope we will also do some thing if we get out from the political web and corruption.
    MOHAMMAD NASEEM /BHOPAL.

  2. Koya

    June 15, 2012 at 3:35 pm

    Jazakallah for your nice thoughts. Let me know if you plan to visit Fiji.

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