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No room for nationalism in space says China by Staff Writers Beijing (XNA) Jul 29, 2022
Unreasonable queries are being raised online ever since Wentian, the first lab module of China's space station, successfully docked with the core module, Tianhe, on Sunday. On Quora, someone said that only the Chinese language is used on the spaceship and asked if the country is "super-sealed", and if they are getting rid of scientists from other countries by using a non-international language. That's an illogical surmise, given that any emergency in space would require the astronauts to make quick responses, preferably in their mother tongue. Even the International Space Station uses English and Russian in its operating systems. So why should the use of Chinese by Chinese astronauts in the Chinese space station raise eyebrows? Besides, how can one say that Chinese-the language that has the most native speakers in the world-is not an international language? According to the Ministry of Education, in September 2020 the number of people learning Chinese outside China had reached 200 million, with over 4,000 colleges, 30,000 primary and secondary schools, and 45,000 training agencies having opened Chinese language courses. Also, anybody who has visited China or has a Chinese friend will disagree that China is "super-sealed", even more so if the comment is limited to the space exploration sector. After all, China has been calling for international cooperation in space. In June 2019, China accepted applications from 17 countries and 23 entities for carrying out experiments at its space station. There will be more such candidates as construction of the space station surges ahead. Therefore, referring to China as "super-sealed" is a typical example of Western bias, which they would do well to give up. Source: Xinhua News Agency
Russia says it will abandon ISS in 2024, build its own space station Washington DC (UPI) Jul 26, 2021 The new head of Russia's space agency announced on Tuesday that Moscow will abandon the International Space Station in about two years when it completes its obligations - ending a 23-year collaboration with U.S., European and other partners. Yury Borisov, the newly installed chief of Roscosmos, made the remarks during a meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin and described the space program as the country's main "priority." After 2024, Borisov said that Russia would build its own ... read more
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