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World / Europe

Soyuz spacecraft launches for ISS with American, two Russians

Published: 08 Apr 2025 - 11:16 am | Last Updated: 08 Apr 2025 - 11:18 am
This handout photograph taken and released by NASA on April 8, 2025, shows the Soyuz MS-27 space craft blasting off the launch pad to head to the International Space Station (ISS) at the Russian-leased Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. Photo by Joel KOWSKY / NASA / AFP.

This handout photograph taken and released by NASA on April 8, 2025, shows the Soyuz MS-27 space craft blasting off the launch pad to head to the International Space Station (ISS) at the Russian-leased Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. Photo by Joel KOWSKY / NASA / AFP.

AFP

Almaty, Kazakhstan: A Soyuz spacecraft carrying an American and two Russians on Tuesday launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan to head to the International Space Station.

The MS-27 craft, which was decorated to celebrate the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II, took off at 10:47 am (0547 GMT), according to televised images shown by the Russian Roscosmos space agency.

It entered orbit a few minutes later and is due to dock in the Russian segment of the ISS at 0904 GMT.

Onboard were Russian cosmonauts Sergey Ryzhikov and Alexey Zubritsky, as well as NASA astronaut Jonny Kim.

They are due to carry out 50 scientific experiments in space, Roscosmos said, before returning to Earth on December 9.

A record of around 2,500 tourists watched the launch from Baikonur, Roscosmos said.

Russia has been renting the site from Kazakhstan since the fall of the Soviet Union more than 43 years ago.

Moscow pays Almaty $115 million a year and has a contract until 2050.

Space is one of the few remaining areas of cooperation between Russia and the United States, whose relationship deteriorated significantly after Moscow sent troops into Ukraine in February 2022.

The return to the White House of US President Donald Trump, however, has sparked a thawing of tensions.

As part of the slew of sanctions imposed on Russia since its invasion, western countries ceased partnerships with Roscosmos, but the Soyuz craft remain one of the few outlets to reach the ISS.

Russia's space programme, which for decades has been a source of great pride for the country, has been suffering for years from a chronic lack of funding, corruption scandals and failures such as the Luna-25 lunar probe in August 2023.