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Haignere Becomes First European Woman To Visit Space Station

French cosmonaut Claudie Haignere (R) waves as she and her Russian colleagues Viktor Afanasyev (C) and Konstantin Kozeyev march prior to getting into the Soyuz TM rocket at Baikonur cosmodrome, 21 October 2001. Haignere, Kozeyev and Afanasyev are scheduled to fly to the International Space Station aboard the Soyuz TM space rocket on Sunday. AFP PHOTO

Baikonur (AFP) Oct 23, 2001
French cosmonaut Claudie Haignere became the first European woman to visit the International Space Station on Tuesday when a Russian Soyuz vessel successfully docked with the ISS.

The space craft carrying Haignere, a 44-year-old space biologist, and two Russian cosmonauts, Viktor Afanasiev and Konstantin Kozeyev, reached the ISS at 2:44 pm Moscow time (1044 GMT).

She became the second EU citizen to visit the ISS, after Italian Umberto Guidoni who undertook a mission aboard a US spaceship last April, and only the second woman after US cosmonaut Susan Helms.

Haignere's arrival at the space station was witnessed by French Prime Minister Lionel Jospin, who visited the mission control centre, outside Moscow, during an official visit to Russia.

"I want to warmly congratulate you on the part of President Vladimir Putin and the government members accompanying me," Jospin told Haignere during a brief audio-video linkup with the ISS.

The docking of the Soyuz, which blasted off Sunday from the Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, as part of a 10-day Franco-Russian mission, took place without a hitch, mission control officials told AFP.

The Soyuz will return to Earth on October 31.

Haignere, 44, and the two Russians are expected to deliver a new emergency capsule to the ISS, which is currently manned by a US-Russian team.

A Soyuz emergency capsule is permanently docked to the ISS, but has to be replaced every six months.

The team is also due to carry out a variety of scientific experiments aboard the orbiting platform under the auspices of the Andromeda programme developed by the French space agency.


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Canadian experiment keeps astronauts safe
St. Hubert - Oct 22, 2001
The Canadian Space Agency (CSA) today announced Canada's latest space life science initiative, the Extra-Vehicular Activity Radiation Monitor (EVARM) experiment. Developed by Ottawa's Thomson Nielsen with funding from the CSA, EVARM will be used to measure the amount of radiation that astronauts receive while on a spacewalk, or extravehicular activity (EVA).

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