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Kenya to launch first operational satellite next week

Kenya will launch its first operational satellite next week in a landmark achievement for the country’s space programme, the govern­ment said on Monday.

Taifa-1, or one nation in Swahili, is scheduled to be launched on April 10 on board the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from the Vandenberg Space Force Base in Califor­nia.

“The mission is an important milestone,” the defence minis­try and Kenya Space Agency said in a joint statement, adding that it would contribute significantly to the country’s “budding space economy”.

The observation sat­ellite is “fully designed and developed” by Ken­yan engineers and will be used to provide data on agriculture and food security, among other areas, the statement said.

Testing and manu­facturing of the parts were done in collabo­ration with a Bulgarian aerospace manufacturer, it added.

Kenya, East Africa’s economic powerhouse, is suffering its worst drought in decades after five failed rainy seasons.

The satellite launch will add to a push by African nations for scientific innovation and the development of space programmes. Egypt was the first African country to send a satellite into space in 1998.

In 2018, Kenya launched its first exper­imental Nano satellite from the International Space Station.

As of 2022, at least 13 African countries had manufactured 48 satellites, according to Space in Africa, a Nigeria-based firm that tracks African space programmes. They in­clude Ethiopia, Angola, South Africa, Sudan and others.

More than 50 African satellites have been launched as of Novem­ber 2022, according to Space in Africa, although none from African soil.

In January, the Djibouti government announced a Memoran­dum of Understanding with a Hong Kong-based company to build a $1bn commercial spaceport that is expect­ed to take five years to complete.

The United States space agency (NASA) has unveiled the four-member crew for its moon voyage, a team that includes the first woman, the first person of colour and the first Canadian assigned to a lunar mission.

At a ceremony on Monday in Hous­ton, Texas, NASA announced that Reid Wiseman, Victor Glov­er, Christina Hammock Koch and Jeremy Han­sen would crew a 10-day flight, marking the agency’s first manned moon voyage in over half a century. —Aljazeera

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