Space tourists to make first spacewalk in history

Russian private space corporation announced that it will take tourists to International Space Station (ISS) in 2023

Though the late Mufti of the Kingdom Sheikh Abdulaziz bin Baz in a fatwa had exempted him from fasting during his space journey, he went ahead to experience the fast in an unchartered territory. PHOTO: AA

MOSCOW:
A Russian private space corporation announced on Thursday that it would take two tourists to the International Space Station (ISS) in 2023, with one for the first time in history to perform a spacewalk with a trained cosmonaut.

Energia will prepare and carry the tourists to the Russian sector of the ISS on a Soyuz MS spacecraft under an agreement signed between the firm and the US' Space Adventures, Energia's press service said in a statement on its official website.

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"Earlier, in the period from 2001 to 2009, RSC Energia and Roscosmos successfully completed eight short-term commercial flights to the Russian segment of the ISS on Soyuz spacecraft under contracts with Space Adventures. Space tourists were: Dennis Tito (USA, 2001), Mark Shuttleworth (UK, 2002), Greg Olsen (USA, 2006), Anousheh Ansari (USA, 2006), Richard Garriott (USA, 2008), Charles Simoni (USA, 2007, 2009) and Guy Laliberte (Canada, 2009)," it said.

The cost of space travel rose from $20 million in 2001 to $35 million in 2009, when the last commercial flight was launched.


Space Adventures has called tenders for potential space travelers to become "the first private citizen to walk in space" on its website, meaning that though the contracts may already have been sealed, the tourists have not yet been chosen.

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In 2010, Russia suspended commercial flights to the ISS due to an increase in the station's crew size, using the seats for expedition crews that would previously have been sold to paying spaceflight participants.

In 2011, Soyuz spacecraft became the only mean of transporting manned missions to the ISS when the US abandoned the state program of crewed flights

The US last year announced that it would not extend the contract on the delivery to the ISS of its astronauts, who are expected to be delivered by the US-based SpaceX corporation's Crew Dragon spacecraft.
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