China's Space Program: Five Things to Know

Chang'e-3, which carried a robotic rover, was China's first landing on the Moon. CCTV / CCTV/AFP/File
Chang'e-3, which carried a robotic rover, was China's first landing on the Moon. CCTV / CCTV/AFP/File
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China's Space Program: Five Things to Know

Chang'e-3, which carried a robotic rover, was China's first landing on the Moon. CCTV / CCTV/AFP/File
Chang'e-3, which carried a robotic rover, was China's first landing on the Moon. CCTV / CCTV/AFP/File

When Chang'e-3 became the first Chinese craft to land on the Moon 10 years ago, it kicked off nationwide celebrations -- and a decade of major successes for a rapidly accelerating space program.
Since the December 14, 2013 landing, China has built a crewed space station, sent a robotic rover to Mars and become the first nation to make a controlled landing on the far side of the Moon, AFP reported.
President Xi Jinping has described building China into a space power as "our eternal dream".
Here are five things to know about this space program:
A slow start
Chinese leader Mao Zedong declared his nation's space ambitions soon after the Soviet Union launched the world's first satellite, Sputnik 1, in 1957.
It took 13 years for China to launch its first satellite Dong Fang Hong, or "The East is Red" -- named after the famous Communist revolutionary song it broadcast from orbit.
It was not until the late 1980s that the program began to pick up pace, alongside China's ascent into the world's richest and most powerful nations.
Overseen by the military, its secretive space program's goals became more ambitious. In 1992, it formally began a project to send humans into space.
'Taikonauts'
More than three decades after its first satellite launch, on October 15, 2003, Yang Liwei became the first Chinese to travel into space, and an instant national hero.
With the success of his Shenzhou 5 mission, China became only the third nation after the United States and Russia to demonstrate the ability to launch humans into space.
In total, 20 Chinese astronauts have made the journey into space, including two women. State media have used the term "taikonaut" to describe China's spacefarers.
Many of them have journeyed to Tiangong, China's first long-term space station whose construction was completed last year.
Though much smaller than the International Space Station, it contains living quarters for a rotating crew, robotic arms and airlocks for conducting spacewalks.
To the Moon
China has also sent exploration missions to the Moon.
Named after the Moon goddess in Chinese folklore, Chang'e-3 touched down on the surface in 2013, making China only the third nation to successfully land there.
Two other milestones followed. In 2019, China became the first nation to make a controlled landing on the far side of the Moon with Chang'e-4.
A year later, Chang'e-5 brought the first lunar samples to Earth in more than 40 years.
Chinese space authorities have said they plan to land humans on the Moon by 2030, as well as build a lunar base.
Mars and deep space
One of the most spectacular successes of the Chinese space program came in 2021 when its Tianwen-1 mission landed a rover named Zhurong on the surface of Mars.
China is only the second nation after the United States to put a robotic rover on the Red Planet.
Officials have said they aim to send a crewed mission there by 2033.
Aside from landers and orbiters, China is soon expected to launch a space telescope named Xuntian.
Orbiting close to the Tiangong space station, with which it can dock, Xuntian is expected to have a field of view far greater than NASA's Hubble telescope.
Defense and prestige
While China says it opposes the weaponization of space, its policy makers have also identified space as critical to national defense and security.
Its military is a core player in the national space program, and China is developing spy satellites, anti-satellite missiles and electronic warfare capabilities, according to the US military.
China "sees counterspace operations as a means to deter and counter a US intervention during a regional military conflict", the Pentagon said in a report to Congress this year.
And beyond the direct applications of these technologies, China considers success in space as a major driver of its image as a global power at home and abroad.
"National prestige is perhaps one of the most important, if not the most important, motives driving Chinese space ambitions," said R. Lincoln Hines, an assistant professor at the Georgia Institute of Technology in the United States.
"These symbols of increasing international status provide a powerful form of domestic propaganda."



New Zealand Braces for More Flooding After Road Collapses, One Death

Vehicles drive through flood waters during a downpour in Lincoln at the Selwyn district in the Canterbury Region of New Zealand's South Island, May 1, 2025. (AFP)
Vehicles drive through flood waters during a downpour in Lincoln at the Selwyn district in the Canterbury Region of New Zealand's South Island, May 1, 2025. (AFP)
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New Zealand Braces for More Flooding After Road Collapses, One Death

Vehicles drive through flood waters during a downpour in Lincoln at the Selwyn district in the Canterbury Region of New Zealand's South Island, May 1, 2025. (AFP)
Vehicles drive through flood waters during a downpour in Lincoln at the Selwyn district in the Canterbury Region of New Zealand's South Island, May 1, 2025. (AFP)

New Zealand's weather forecaster on Sunday warned more flooding could hit the country's North Island, a day after floods caused power outages, road collapses, home evacuations and was linked to the death of a man whose vehicle was submerged on a highway.

There was "threat to life from dangerous ‌river conditions, significant ‌flooding and slips" as a deepening ‌low-pressure system ⁠east of the ⁠North Island brought heavy rain and severe gales to several regions, the weather bureau said.

The worst weather was forecast to hit late on Sunday, followed by a slow easing of conditions on Monday, it said on its website, after heavy rain began battering large ⁠swaths of the country on Friday, sparking the ‌floods.

Authorities on Sunday had ‌a state of emergency in place for the districts of ‌Waipa and Otorohanga, an agricultural region home to about ‌10,000 people that is 180 km (112 miles) south of the country's most populous city, Auckland.

The Otorohanga District Council said on Facebook that geotechnical teams "spent the night assessing slips and checking the ‌structural stability of roads" in the area. Some 4,291 properties remained without power ⁠on the ⁠North Island, energy company Powerco said on its website.

On Saturday, a man apparently died in his car in floodwaters, authorities said, adding that about 80 people were evacuated to an emergency center. Images shared on social media showed vast semirural neighborhoods submerged and collapsed sections of road where floodwaters had receded.

Six people were killed in January after heavy rains triggered a landslide at Mount Maunganui on the North Island's east coast, bringing down soil and rubble on a site crowded with families on summer holidays.


‘First Feline’ Larry Marks 15 Years as Britain’s Political Top Cat

Larry, the official 10 Downing Street cat walks outside 10 Downing Street before the nationwide Clap for Carers to recognise and support National Health Service (NHS) workers and carers fighting the coronavirus pandemic, in London, Thursday, May 21, 2020. (AP)
Larry, the official 10 Downing Street cat walks outside 10 Downing Street before the nationwide Clap for Carers to recognise and support National Health Service (NHS) workers and carers fighting the coronavirus pandemic, in London, Thursday, May 21, 2020. (AP)
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‘First Feline’ Larry Marks 15 Years as Britain’s Political Top Cat

Larry, the official 10 Downing Street cat walks outside 10 Downing Street before the nationwide Clap for Carers to recognise and support National Health Service (NHS) workers and carers fighting the coronavirus pandemic, in London, Thursday, May 21, 2020. (AP)
Larry, the official 10 Downing Street cat walks outside 10 Downing Street before the nationwide Clap for Carers to recognise and support National Health Service (NHS) workers and carers fighting the coronavirus pandemic, in London, Thursday, May 21, 2020. (AP)

In turbulent political times, stability comes with four legs, whiskers and a fondness for napping.

Larry the cat celebrates 15 years on Sunday as the British government’s official rodent-catcher and unofficial first feline, a reassuring presence who has served under six prime ministers. Sometimes it seems like they have served under him.

“Larry the cat’s approval ratings will be very high,” said Philip Howell, a Cambridge University professor who has studied the history of human-animal relations. “And prime ministers tend not to hit those numbers.

"He represents stability, and that’s at a premium."

The gray-and-white tabby’s rags-to-riches story has taken him from stray on the streets to Britain’s seat of power, 10 Downing St., where he bears the official title Chief Mouser to the Cabinet Office.

Adopted from London’s Battersea Dogs and Cats Home by then-Prime Minister David Cameron, Larry entered Downing Street on Feb. 15, 2011. According to a profile on the UK government website, his duties include “greeting guests to the house, inspecting security defenses and testing antique furniture for napping quality.”

Larry roams freely and has a knack for upstaging world leaders arriving at 10 Downing St.’s famous black door, to the delight of news photographers.

“He’s great at photo-bombing,” said Justin Ng, a freelance photographer who has come to know Larry well over the years. “If there’s a foreign leader that’s about to visit then we know he’ll just come out at the exact moment that meet-and-greet is about to happen.”

Larry has met many world leaders, who sometimes have to step around or over him. It has been observed that he is largely unfriendly to men, though he took a liking to former US President Barack Obama, and he drew a smile from President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on one of the Ukrainian leader’s visits to London.

When US President Donald Trump visited in 2019, Larry crashed the official doorstep photo and then took a nap under the Beast, the president’s armored car.

Reports of Larry’s rodent-catching skills vary, though he has been photographed snagging the occasional mouse — and, once, a pigeon, which escaped.

“He’s more of a lover than a fighter,” Ng said. “He’s very good at what he does: lounging around and basically showing people that he’s very nonchalant.”

Larry has cohabited, sometimes uneasily, with prime ministerial pets including Boris Johnson’s Jack Russell cross Dilyn and Rishi Sunak’s Labrador retriever Nova. He is kept well away from current Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s family cats, JoJo and Prince, who inhabit the private family quarters while Larry rules the working areas of Downing Street.

He had a volatile relationship with Palmerston, diplomatic top cat at the Foreign Office across the street from No. 10. The pair were caught tussling several times before Palmerston retired in 2020. Palmerston died this month in Bermuda, where he was serving as “feline relations consultant” to the governor.

Meanwhile, Larry abides. He is 18 or 19, and has slowed down a bit, but continues to patrol his turf and to sleep on a window ledge above a radiator just inside the No. 10 door.

He is British soft power in feline form, and woe betide any prime minister who got rid of him.

“A cat-hating PM, that seems to me to be political suicide,” said Howell.

He said Larry’s status as nonpartisan “official pet” sets him apart from the American presidential pets – most often dogs – that US leaders have sometimes deployed to soften their image.

“The fact that cats are less tractable is part of the charm, too,” Howell said. “He’s sort of whimsically not partisan in a political sense, but he tends to take to some people and not to others and he won’t necessarily sit where you want him to sit and pose where you want him to pose.

“There is a certain kind of unruliness about Larry which I think would endear him, certainly, to Brits.”


International Crew Set to Dock at Space Station

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket with the company's Dragon spacecraft on top launches from Cape Canaveral, en route to the International Space Station © Jim WATSON / AFP
A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket with the company's Dragon spacecraft on top launches from Cape Canaveral, en route to the International Space Station © Jim WATSON / AFP
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International Crew Set to Dock at Space Station

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket with the company's Dragon spacecraft on top launches from Cape Canaveral, en route to the International Space Station © Jim WATSON / AFP
A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket with the company's Dragon spacecraft on top launches from Cape Canaveral, en route to the International Space Station © Jim WATSON / AFP

Four astronauts are set to dock at the International Space Station on Saturday for a months-long research mission, replacing a crew forced to return to Earth early over a medical issue.

The US space agency's international Crew-12 blasted off early Friday aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from the Cape Canaveral launch site in Florida.

After more than 30 hours in flight, the astronauts are expected to arrive at the ISS and dock by about 3:15 pm Eastern (2015 GMT).

Crew-12 is composed of Americans Jessica Meir and Jack Hathaway, along with French astronaut Sophie Adenot and Russian cosmonaut Andrey Fedyaev, AFP reported.

"We have left the Earth, but the Earth has not left us," Meir said as the astronauts ventured into space. "When we gaze on our planet from above, it is immediately clear that everything is interconnected."

"We are one humankind."

The travelers are replacing Crew-11, which returned to Earth in January a month earlier than planned in the first medical evacuation in the space station's history.

The ISS, which orbits 250 miles (400 kilometers) above Earth, has since been staffed by a skeleton crew of three.

NASA declined to disclose any details about the health issue that cut the previous mission short.

Once the astronauts arrive, they will be one of the last crews to live aboard the football field-sized space station.

Continuously inhabited for the last quarter-century, the aging ISS is scheduled to be pushed into Earth's orbit before crashing into an isolated spot in the Pacific Ocean in 2030.

- Microgravity and the human body -

During their eight months on the outpost, the astronauts will conduct many experiments, including research into the effects of microgravity on their bodies.

Meir, who previously worked as a marine biologist studying animals in extreme environments, will serve as the crew's commander.

Adenot has become the second French woman to fly into space, following in the footsteps of Claudie Haignere, who spent time on the Mir space station.

Among other research, she will test a system that uses artificial intelligence and augmented reality to allow astronauts to carry out their own medical ultrasounds.

The ISS, once a symbol of warming post-Cold War relations, has been a rare area of continued cooperation between the West and Russia since Moscow invaded Ukraine in 2022.

However, the space station has not entirely avoided the tensions back on Earth.

In November, Russian cosmonaut Oleg Artemyev -- who had long been planned to be a member of Crew-12 -- was suddenly taken off the mission.

Reports from independent media in Russia suggested he had been photographing and sending classified information with his phone while training at a SpaceX facility. Russian space agency Roscosmos merely said he had been transferred to a different job.

His replacement, Fedyaev, has already spent some time on the ISS as part of Crew-6 in 2023.