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Launch of US satellite from Baikonur postponed 24 hours
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  • BAIKONUR, Kazakhstan (AFP) Aug 13, 2005
    The launch of a Russian Soyuz rocket carrying US telecommunications satellite Galaxy-14 from Russia's Baikonur space centre in Kazakhstan was postponed for 24 hours, officials said Saturday.

    The postponement was decided upon just 30 seconds before the scheduled launch at 5:28 am (2328 GMT Friday) due to difficulties in transmitting information about the parameters of the launcher, said Jean-Yves Le Gall, general director of Starsem, the Euro-Russian subsidiary of Arianespace.

    The two-tonne Galaxy-14 is to be placed in orbit for American operator PanAmsat. The launch, initially scheduled for August 5, was already put off to enable extra checks to be made on the satellite.

    Starsem is in charge of selling and exploiting Soyuz on the international market. It is owned by European company Arianespace (15 percent), European aeronautics group EADS (35 percent), Russian federal space agency Roscosmos (25 percent) and Russia's Samara space centre (25 percent).




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