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Taiwan Welcome To Send Seeds Aboard 'Shenzhou V'

SPACER
translated by People's Daily
Beijing - Sep 30, 2003
China indicated Wednesday that if Taiwan wishes, it may send crop seeds for space experiments on the Shenzhou V spacecraft, expected to fulfill the nation's first manned space flight sometime later this year.

China indicated Wednesday that if Taiwan wishes, it may send crop seeds for space experiments on the Shenzhou V spacecraft, expected to fulfill the nation's first manned space flight sometime later this year.

"Crop seeds in Taiwan like rice may be carried on board the Shenzhou V if our counterparts in Taiwan wish," said Liu Luxiang, a researcher with the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences in an exclusive interview with Xinhua.

According to Liu, China's mainland, which is reaching maturity in space breeding of crop seeds, is willing to reinforce cooperation with Taiwan on agricultural sciences in a bid to promote the common development of agricultural technology on both sides of the Taiwan Strait.

Since 1987, Chinese scientists have sent more than 70 kinds of crop species on eight space missions and successfully cultivated a series of improved agricultural products with high-yield and high-quality, including rice, wheat, tomato, green pepper and sesame.

China's Science and Technology Minister Xu Guanhua said Tuesday that preparations for China's first manned space flight are moving ahead "smoothly".

A successful mission would make China the third country after Russia and the United States to launch a manned spacecraft.

Original source: People's Daily English online edition

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Chinese Yuhangyuan Could Reach Space In Fortnight
Hong Kong - Sep 30, 2003
Excitement and tension is mounting as the liftoff of the first ever Chinese manned spaceflight is rapidly approaching. Barring delaying from major technical issues and inclement weather, the historic Shenzhou-5 mission will likely be launched between Oct. 11 and 17, Wen Wei Po reports here. Unidentified sources told the newspaper that the Oct. 10 date was "a speculation [and] incorrect." Adding that based on the current status of launch preparation and seasonal weather conditions a the daytime liftoff would happen "within a week of Oct. 10."



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