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 |  | China to achieve spacewalk in 5 years(Xinhua)Updated: 2006-10-12 15:50
 China aims to enable its astronauts to spacewalk in the 
next five years, according to a white paper [full text] 
   on China's space activities issued in Beijing on Thursday. 
 The white paper, released by the Information Office of the State 
Council, says China will conduct experiments on spacecraft rendezvous and 
docking.
 
 
 
 
 Sun Laiyan, administrator of China 
National Space Administration, said on Thursday that the launching date of 
"Shenzhou VII" would be decided by the progress of the project.
 |  Sun Laiyan, head of 
 China National Space Administration, speaks during a news conference on 
 the nation's space plans in Beijing October 12, 2006. 
 Xinhua]
 |  
 Shenzhou 
VII would probably be launched in 2008, said Sun, adding that the astronauts 
would conduct extravehicular operations at that time.
 
 "The candidate 
astronauts for Shenzhou VII are receiving training, and the final selection will 
be made shortly before the launch," Sun said.
 
 With the development of 
its space technology, China would be able to send female astronauts, as well as 
scientists, philosophers and even journalists into space in the future.
 
 He said China's manned space activities were still at the experimental 
stage. When the technologies matured, space tourism might begin.
 
 China 
would develop and launch its first lunar probe satellite "Chang'e I" for lunar 
science and lunar resources exploration, said Sun.
 
 "The project is 
progressing smoothly, and the final assembly of Chang'e I has been completed. 
The satellite is expected to be launched in 2007," Sun said.
 
 He said 
China had no plans yet to probe Mars, but preliminary ground research had been 
conducted by scientists and engineers.
 
 "We hope to conduct a Mars probe 
and other deep space exploration through international cooperation," Sun said.
 
 The 8,500-character white paper, the second of its kind since 2000, 
outlines the development of China's space industry over the past five years and 
its plans for the near future.
 
 Introducing the major tasks of China's 
space industry in the coming five years, the white paper describes research on 
short-term manned and long-term autonomously orbiting space laboratories and 
follow-ups to manned spaceflight.
 
 On November 20 and 21, 1999, China 
launched and retrieved the first Shenzhou unmanned experimental spacecraft. It 
then launched three more Shenzhou unmanned experimental spacecraft not long 
afterwards.
 
 On October 15 and 16, 2003, China launched and retrieved 
Shenzhou V, China's first manned spacecraft.
 
 Having mastered the basic 
technologies of manned spacecraft, China became the third country in the world 
to develop manned spaceflight independently.
 
 From October 12 to 17, 
2005, the Shenzhou VI manned spacecraft completed a five-day flight with two 
astronauts on board carrying out the country's for space-based 
experiments.
 
 
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