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You are here: Home / Archives for Uncategorized

S America: Over 160,000 flee worst floods in 50 years

December 31, 2015 by Nasheman

Paraguay, Argentina, Uruguay, Brazil and Bolivia have been battered by heavy rains blamed on the El Nino phenomenon.

Authorities estimated that it could take months for some affected areas to recover from the floods [AP]

Authorities estimated that it could take months for some affected areas to recover from the floods [AP]

by Al Jazeera

More than 160,000 people have been displaced over the past several days by the heaviest floods to hit South America in 50 years.

At least 144,000 were evacuated from flooded areas near the Paraguay River in Paraguay, the hardest-hit country. About 20,000 were displaced in Argentina and several thousand in Uruguay and Brazil.

Bolivia has also been battered by severe floods.

The floods, caused by overflowing rivers and torrential rains blamed on the El Nino phenomenon, have been responsible for at least eight deaths: six in Paraguay and two in Uruguay.

The causes of the deaths have ranged from falling trees to electrocution.

Al Jazeera’s Teresa Bo, reporting from the Argentine capital of Buenos Aires after visiting the city of Concordia – one of the cities particularly badly hit by the disaster – said that thousands of residents were forced to take refuge in shelters.

“We visited shelters in Concordia that were packed with mostly poor people who had lost everything they owned,” she said.

“The government is struggling to provide people with food and other basic needs … It has set up a commission to deal with the crisis that will last for at least a couple of months.”

Authorities are preparing to cope with the possibility of diseases spreading – heightened by the fact that mosquitos and snakes thrive in swamp-like conditions, she added.

Some houses in Concordia had water nearly up to their roofs and people made their way around town in canoes.

Overflowing sewers have also caused homes there to have dirty running water.

“The water [from sinks] is contaminated and bugs are everywhere,” said Josefina Monson, 33, who has been in the shelter with her husband and young daughters since Christmas Eve. “I’m not sure when we’ll be able to go home.”

Over the weekend, both Argentine President Mauricio Macri and Dilma Rousseff, the Brazilian president, toured affected areas and announced measures to help people recover and rebuild their homes.

“The Latin American governments are investing millions of dollars” to help contain the crisis, Bo said.

Meteorologists attribute the heavy rains to the El Nino weather phenomenon, which happens every few years when the Pacific Ocean warms up around the equator.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: El Nino

Accosted for her hijab, Muslim woman now teaches self-defense and empowerment

December 31, 2015 by Nasheman

In this Dec. 14, 2015 photo, Rana Abdelhamid speaks during an interview in New York. Abdelhamid was attacked in New York when she was 16. She soon started teaching martial arts techniques to other girls. Now that has grown into the Women’s Initiative for Self-Empowerment, or WISE, which also teaches leadership and social entrepreneurial skills. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

In this Dec. 14, 2015 photo, Rana Abdelhamid speaks during an interview in New York. Abdelhamid was attacked in New York when she was 16. She soon started teaching martial arts techniques to other girls. Now that has grown into the Women’s Initiative for Self-Empowerment, or WISE, which also teaches leadership and social entrepreneurial skills. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

by Wilson Ring, AP

When she was 16, Rana Abdelhamid was accosted on the streets of New York by a man who tried to pull off the head scarf she wears as a symbol of her commitment to her Muslim faith.

Rather than withdraw, as she’d seen other Muslim women do, she turned her anger into a program that is now working with young Muslim women to teach them self-defense while encouraging them to become leaders and role models for others in their communities.

Abdelhamid, a graduate of Vermont’s Middlebury College who is now a student at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government, says the challenge facing Muslims in general and Muslim women in particular has been getting worse, especially since the attacks in Paris and San Bernardino, California.

“It’s unfortunate that it’s becoming more needed and we’re getting so many calls,” said Abdelhamid, 22, who grew up in the Queens borough of New York.

Robina Niaz, the executive director of the group Turning Point for Women and Families, an organization that works to end domestic violence in New York’s Muslim community, said she first met Abdelhamid when she was in high school and participating in programs at the center.

“Rana is a living example of what one can accomplish when we invest in these young girls,” Niaz said. “If we believe in them, if we support them, watch their back — they need just a little bit of nudging and mentoring and they are ready.”

Muslim women in several cities across the country are organizing or taking self-defense classes, but Abdelhamid’s organization, the Women’s Initiative for Self-Empowerment, or WISE, goes beyond the physical self-defense skills to encourage the young women to become leaders and social entrepreneurs. The empowerment lessons can be as simple as showing the young women how to rent or reserve a room in a community center to tips on becoming a confident public speaker.

Abdelhamid said her efforts have not been universally well received by the Muslim community.

“We have had some challenges and pushback from more traditionalist members of our community who don’t necessarily see space for women in leadership, unfortunately,” she said. “It’s really, really disheartening because you want your allies to be within the community.”

The program has grown since the first class was offered to about a dozen girls in the basement of a community center in Brooklyn. The basic program, called Mentee Muslimah (an Arabic word for Muslim women), is a 13-session summer camp attended in New York by about 50 young women of high-school age that follows a 100-page course outline Abdelhamid developed during an independent study course at Middlebury.

The organization relies heavily on donated space and volunteers, but it’s also received donations and in some cases fees are charged to people taking the program to help defray expenses. She’s in the process of setting up a formal non-profit group so WISE can have a permanent home and a budget. While an undergraduate at Vermont’s Middlebury College, Abdelhamid used a grant from the school’s Center for Social Entrepreneurship to expand her organization.

“What makes Rana really unique that we saw in her is that this is an issue that is connected to her identity and it drives her all the time,” said Heather Neuwirth, the associate director of Middlebury’s Entrepreneurship Center. “She took what could have been an experience that could have shut her down, she really realized the power in that and I think the way that she connects to others is deeply caring.”

Abdelhamid sometimes travels to lead programs outside New York, but most are led by people who have taken the program and then been trained to teach it. The summer programs outside New York are held in Union City, New Jersey, Washington, Dallas, Madrid, and Edinburg, Scotland. She’s working on setting up programs in Chicago, Dublin and Istanbul. Next month WISE also is planning a three-day program in Boston for Jewish women.

Nitasha Siddique, a 19-year-old student at Princeton, said she got involved with WISE after her junior year in high school when she was accepted into the New York summer programs.

“There were a lot of really important conversations I’d never had before, but had the opportunity to have these conversations and have them with a group of girls who were close to me in age,” she said.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Rana Abdelhamid

Pentagon: Paris attacks suspects killed in air strikes

December 30, 2015 by Nasheman

Two ISIL fighters with ties to Paris assault among 10 “leaders” killed in recent air attacks.

The Pentagon said most ISIL leaders were killed in drone strikes in Syria and Iraq [US military/Reuters]

The Pentagon said most ISIL leaders were killed in drone strikes in Syria and Iraq [US military/Reuters]

by Al Jazeera

Two suspects in the deadly Paris attacks claimed by ISIL were killed this month by coalition air strikes in Syria and Iraq, the US military said on Tuesday.

French national Charaffe al-Mouadan, 27, a native of the St Denis suburb of Paris, was among 10 Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant leaders killed in air raids targeting its leadership, Colonel Steve Warren, a Pentagon spokesman, said.

“Over the past month, we’ve killed 10 ISIL leadership figures with targeted air strikes, including several external attack planners, some of whom are linked to the Paris attacks,” Warren said.

Mouadan is believed to have fled to Syria in November 2015. It was unclear if he travelled there before or after the November 13 Paris attacks that killed 130 people and wounded hundreds of others.

“Charaffe al-Mouadan – a Syrian-based ISIL member with a direct link to Abdel Hamid Abaaoud, the Paris attack cell leader – was killed on December 24,” said Warren.

“Al-Mouadan was actively planning additional attacks against the West.”

Warren said that the 10 ISIL leaders were mainly killed by drones in Iraq and Syria.

The other dead suspect involved in the Paris attacks was identified as Abdel Kader Hakim who was killed in Mosul, Iraq on Saturday.

“He was part of ISIL’s external operations group who enabled attacks against Western targets,” said Warren. “His death removes an important facilitator with many connections in Europe.

Most of the 10 killed appeared to be mid-level ISIL leaders, Warren said.

Another was from Bangladesh but spent time in Britain and was a hacker who coordinated anti-surveillance technology, he said.

Teams of gunmen armed with Kalashnikovs and wearing suicide vests hit public targets throughout Paris on Friday November 13. French President Francois Hollande called the brazen assault an “act of war” and deployed an aircraft carrier to the Middle East after ISIL claimed responsibility.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Pentagon

Germany: Town bans fireworks at refugee hostels

December 30, 2015 by Nasheman

Fire brigade also recommends locals don’t use fireworks as it may awaken memories in people who have fled war.

Firecrackers and rockets are huge business in Germany [EPA]

Firecrackers and rockets are huge business in Germany [EPA]

by Al Jazeera

Refugees in a German town have been banned from setting off fireworks to mark the New Year, apparently out of concern that loud blasts could traumatise people who have fled war zones.

The town of Arnsberg in North Rhine-Westphalia has issued directives in several languages banning the sale of rockets and firecrackers to residents of refugee shelters, a spokesman told the Neue Westfaelische daily.

The Arnsberg fire brigade also recommended that townspeople consider not launching any fireworks “to avoid reawakening memories in people who have fled war and conflict of the horrors that threatened them”.

Setting off fireworks at midnight to welcome the start of the new year on January 1 is traditional and a spectacular show at Berlin’s Brandenburg Gate is broadcast live on television.

Last year, Germans spent 120 million euros ($130 million) on New Year’s Eve fireworks, according to the pyrotechnics industry.

However, “people who come from a war zone connect loud bangs more with shots and bombs than with New Year’s Eve fireworks”, the spokesman was quoted as saying.

No one was immediately available in Arnsberg to comment to the Reuters news agency, which carried the story.

Posters in refugee homes have been put up explaining the ban, imposed partly for fear of fires breaking out in buildings used to house refugees.

Gymnasiums, unused hotels and empty buildings such as Berlin’s defunct Tempelhof airport have been turned into shelters for some of the million people who have sought asylum in Germany this year, many fleeing conflict in the Middle East and Africa.

Temporary buildings have also been erected.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Germany, Refugees

Guinea declared free from Ebola after 2,500 deaths

December 29, 2015 by Nasheman

Liberia remains only country still battling the disease after Sierre Leone was declared free of virus in November.

Almost all cases of Ebola and related deaths were in Guinea and its neighbours Liberia and Sierra Leone [EPA]

Almost all cases of Ebola and related deaths were in Guinea and its neighbours Liberia and Sierra Leone [EPA]

by Al Jazeera

Guinea has been declared Ebola free after more than 2,500 people died from the virus in the West African nation, leaving Liberia the only country still counting down for an end to the ruinous epidemic.

People in the capital, Conakry, on Tuesday greeted the declaration by authorities and the UN World Health Organization with mixed emotions given the huge number of deaths, and the damage the virus did to the economy and the country’s health and education sectors.

On Wednesday, the government, together with representatives of donor nations and NGOs, will hold an official ceremony to mark the declaration.

They will also pay tribute to the 115 health workers who died fighting Ebola and eight members of an Ebola awareness team who were killed by hostile locals in Womey, in the country’s forested southeast.

“Several of my family are dead. This situation has shown us how much we must fight for those who are survivors,” Fanta Oulen Camara, who works for Medecins Sans Frontieres Belgium (Doctors Without Borders), told the Reuters news agency.

“After I got better, the hardest thing was to make people welcome me. Most people that normally supported me abandoned me. Even the school where I was an instructor dropped me. It was very hard,” said Camara, 26, who fell ill in March 2014.

Ebola has orphaned about 6,200 children in Guinea, said Rene Migliani, an official at the national coordination centre for the fight against Ebola.

There were more than 3,800 Ebola cases in Guinea out of the more than 28,600 cases during the epidemic.

A total of about 11,300 people died, according to figures from the WHO.

Ebola has been combatted by a classic health strategy of identifying people with the virus, containing those who were in close proximity to them, and ensuring that health workers rigorously follow a strict protocol on wearing protective clothing to prevent direct contact with the patient.

A country is declared Ebola free 42 days after the recovery or death of the final patient and if there are no new infections.

Liberia has lost more than 4,800 people to the haemorrhagic fever, but is now set to be declared virus-free in January. It was declared Ebola free in May and September, but each time new cases emerged.

Sierra Leone officially ended its epidemic in November.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Ebola, Guinea, Sierra Leone

More than 100,000 flee devastating floods in South America

December 28, 2015 by Nasheman

Up to 160,000 displaced following El Niño pummels Uruguay, Paraguay, Argentina, Brazil for nearly 10 days

A man wades through floodwater in Paraguay. (Photo: AP)

A man wades through floodwater in Paraguay. (Photo: AP)

by Nadia Prupis, Common Dreams

More than 100,000 people have been evacuated throughout the bordering areas of Paraguay, Uruguay, Argentina, and Brazil as severe flooding continued to batter the South American region this weekend.

According to new figures released Sunday by the Municipal Emergencies office, as many as 160,000 people have had to flee their homes due to the flooding that began December 18—a devastating result of this season’s El Niño storms.

Many of those impacted are low-income families living along the River Paraguay.

“[The flooding] was directly influenced by the El Niño phenomenon which has intensified the frequency and intensity of rains,” the office said.

As the United Nations weather agency, the World Meteorological Organization, warned last month, this year’s storm season is the worst in more than 15 years, and is likely to bring yet more flooding and droughts to the tropics and subtropics.

The flooding in South America follows recent severe storms in Yemen andMexico. In October, after Hurricane Patricia made landfall in Puerto Vallarta and Manzanillo and forced the evacuation of 50,000 people, meteorologist Eric Holthaus wrote at Slate that, due to climate change, it was “exactly the kind of terrifying storm we can expect to see more frequently in the decades to come.”

Paraguay has been the hardest hit, with an estimated 100,000 displaced, while 20,000 have been left homeless in Argentina and 9,000 in Uruguay. At least eight people have been killed across the region, according to local media.

Paraguay’s emergencies office also said the river is likely to rise in the coming days and may not subside until January.

Paraguay has reportedly declared a state of emergency in Asuncion. In Argentina on Sunday, Corrientes governor Ricardo Colombi said “the consequences [of the flooding] will be serious.”

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: El Nino

Raging Australian bushfire destroys more than 100 homes

December 26, 2015 by Nasheman

Firefighters battle blaze as it tracks along the coastline of the southern Australian state of Victoria.

The homes were destroyed in small holiday communities on Australia's picturesque Great Ocean Road [Reuters]

The homes were destroyed in small holiday communities on Australia’s picturesque Great Ocean Road [Reuters]

by Al Jazeera

At least 116 homes have been destroyed in a bushfire that continues to rage along the coast of Australia’s southeastern state of Victoria, but so far no deaths have been reported.

The majority of the homes were lost at Wye River and Separation Creek, small holiday communities about 160km southwest of Melbourne on the picturesque Great Ocean Road, officials said on Saturday.

Victorian state Premier Daniel Andrews said the property losses “confirmed for us just how hot, just how volatile, just how intense this fire was, burning right to the water’s edge”, the ABC reported.

Hundreds of families were evacuated from their homes and an emergency warning remained in place in Wye River and Separation Creek on Saturday afternoon local time.

Firefighters are continuing to battle the blaze.

A lightning strike is believed to have sparked the fires in Victoria about a week ago. They have since burned more than 2,000 hectares.

Authorities warned on Saturday that the fire risk in Victoria would continue over the next two months, as southern Australia bakes in summer heat.

“This fire doesn’t go away. This fire is a fire that will remain with potential to burn in January and February this year,” Victorian emergency services commissioner Craig Lapsley said.

“We will be back into hot, windy weather in January without a doubt. Everything’s available to burn.”

Southern and western Australia suffers from severe summer bushfires on a yearly basis.

In February 2009, Victoria suffered the worst bushfires in the country’s history when 173 people were killed and hundreds were injured in multiple blazes across rural areas of the state.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Australia

Mosque ransacked and copies of Quran burnt in Corsica

December 26, 2015 by Nasheman

Prayer hall vandalised amid heightened security as tensions rise in French island that recently voted in far-right.

Corsica recently voted for the far-right, anti-immigrant Front National in regional elections [Pierre-Antoine Fournil/AFP]

Corsica recently voted for the far-right, anti-immigrant Front National in regional elections [Pierre-Antoine Fournil/AFP]

by Al Jazeera

A crowd vandalised a Muslim prayer hall and set fire to copies of the Quran on the French island of Corsica, police said, in an attack condemned by the government.

The violence came on Friday amid heightened security measures for the Christmas holiday, and nationwide fears after the November 13 attacks in Paris killed 130 people.

French Prime Minister Manuel Valls wrote on Twitter that the break-in in the city of Ajaccio was “an unacceptable desecration”.

Tensions had mounted in Ajaccio Friday after two firefighters and a police officer were injured overnight in a low-income neighbourhood of the city when they were “ambushed” by “several hooded youths”, authorities said.

On Friday afternoon around 150 people had gathered in front of the prefecture in a show of support for the police and firefighters, officials said in a statement.

But some in that crowd broke away and headed for the low-income housing estate where the violence took place the night before.

They shouted slogans in Corsican meaning “Arabs get out!” and “This is our home!”, an AFP correspondent reported.

Nearby, a small group smashed the glass door to the mosque, ransacked the prayer hall and partially burned books including copies of the Quran, said regional official Francois Lalanne.

“Fifty prayer books were thrown out on the street,” Lalanne said, adding that some of the pages were burnt.

The French Council of the Muslim Faith denounced the violence and pointed to the timing of the attack on Friday “on a day of prayer for both Muslims and Christians”.

This year Christmas falls just after the Muslim feast day commemorating the birth of the Prophet Muhammad.

French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said the attack showed signs of “racism and xenophobia”.

He also condemned the assault on law enforcement and safety officers in Corsica.

Corsica is a department of France which held regional elections earlier this month, which saw the far-right, anti-immigrant Front National make unprecedented gains in the first round of the vote.

On Corsica, nationalists won the regional election there taking power for the first time.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Corsica

Zimbabwe to adopt China’s currency the yuan

December 23, 2015 by Nasheman

Questions raised with plan to make the yuan legal tender in exchange for debt cancellation worth about $40m.

Zimbabwe

by Al Jazeera

Zimbabwe plans to adopt the Chinese yuan as legal tender in return for debt cancellation worth about $40m – a move one economist predicted “has no future at all”.

China has become the largest investor in Zimbabwe, which has been shunned by the West over its human rights record and is struggling to emerge from a deep 1999-2008 recession that forced the government to ditch its own currency in 2009.

Zimbabwe’s Finance Minister Patrick Chinamasa announced the plan in a statement on Monday and said the use of the yuan “will be a function of trade between China and Zimbabwe and acceptability with customers in Zimbabwe”.

In the last five years, Zimbabwe has received more than $1bn in low-interest loans from China, which is Harare’s second largest trading partner after South Africa.

“They [China] said they are cancelling our debts that are maturing this year and we are in the process of finalising the debt instruments and calculating the debts,” Chinamasa said.

However, according to one Zimbabwean analyst, the yuan has already been a legal tender for the past two years and Chinamasa’s comments are rather puzzling.

“Nothing looks to change from this latest move,” economist John Roberston told Al Jazeera.

“Yuan was included in the so-called multi-currency system a couple of years ago. It’s nothing new. What is different is the attachment to debts. It seems that the government is trying to pass this on as a concession by China.

“But they don’t need to make concessions. This is pretty meaningless as it stands.”

China has been accused of exploiting the continent’s vast mineral and energy resources at the expense of local people.

On a rare visit to Harare by a Chinese leader, President Xi Jinping witnessed the signing of 10 economic agreements earlier this month, including a $1bn loan to expand Zimbabwe’s largest thermal power plant.

“There is no yuan circulating in the country,” said Robertson. “South African rand and the US dollar have been the dominant currencies. So it’s a strange situation now as the yuan has no future at all.”

Zimbabwe’s central bank chief John Mangudya was in negotiations with the People’s Bank of China “to see whether we can enhance its usage here”, according to the finance minister.

But Robertson suggested although China is active in Zimbabwe’s markets and economy, it does not want to sell goods there in return for Chinese currency.

“Nearly everything Zimbabwe can make it imports for a lot of money, and China wants to be a main supplier of these imported goods and would want to take the US dollar in return,” he said.

China-Zimbabwe relations date back to 1979 and the African country’s “Look East” policy has made China a strong ally in the market.

Relations were further improved when President Robert Mugabe was awarded China’s alternative to the Nobel Peace Prize in October for what the committee called his inspired national leadership and service to pan-Africanism.

Mugabe has placed great importance on Zimbabwe’s relations with China, especially after the 2003 standoff with the EU that resulted in the economic depression when the interest rate shot up to almost 600 percent.

“China is desperate for the consumer goods market, basically whatever anyone with the buying power can pay for.

“We can see evidence of that in the country all the time. But people accepting payment will want it in dollars – as opposed to yuan – and that will be very damaging to China’s interest here in Zimbabwe,” said Robertson.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Zimbabwe

In historic first, SpaceX lands first reusable rocket

December 22, 2015 by Nasheman

Upright rocket landing by private firm seen as a major milestone in the drive to cut costs by making rockets reusable.

A nine-minute exposure picture of the launch, re-entry, and landing burns of SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket [EPA/SpaceX]

A nine-minute exposure picture of the launch, re-entry, and landing burns of SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket [EPA/SpaceX]

by Al Jazeera

US space company SpaceX has successfully landed a rocket upright for the first time, a major milestone in the drive to cut costs by making rockets reusable.

The Falcon 9 rocket made a graceful arc back to Earth and touched down vertically at Cape Canaveral, Florida, on Monday, minutes after launching a payload of satellites to orbit.

“The Falcon has landed,” a commentator said above the screams and cheers of people gathered at SpaceX headquarters in Hawthorne, California.

SpaceX, headed by the internet tycoon Elon Musk, is striving to revolutionise the rocket industry, which currently loses many millions of dollars in jettisoned machinery and sophisticated rocket components after each launch.

“I still can’t quite believe it,” Musk said in a teleconference after the landing. “I think this is a revolutionary moment. No one has ever brought an orbital-class booster back intact.”

Previous attempts to land the Falcon 9’s first stage on a floating ocean platform had failed – with the rocket either colliding with the autonomous drone ship or tipping over.

But this time, video images on SpaceX’s live webcast showed the tall, white portion of the rocket – known as the first stage – appearing to settle down firmly and stick to the landing.

The rocket reached a height of 200 kilometres before heading back to Earth and touching down at a former US Air Force rocket and missile-testing range that was last used in 1978.

Video images were cut off within seconds of the landing, and the SpaceX live webcast returned to its commentators, who described the successful deployment of the rocket’s payload of 11 satellites for ORBCOMM, a global communications company.

The US space agency NASA applauded the feat.

Congratulations @SpaceX on your successful vertical landing of the first stage back on Earth! https://t.co/Zw3LR8fPTI

— NASA (@NASA) December 22, 2015

High stakes

The stakes were high for SpaceX, which has a $1.6bn contract with NASA to supply the astronauts living at the International Space Station over numerous back-and-forth trips with its Dragon cargo ship.

Only six months ago, a devastating explosion – caused by a faulty strut – destroyed the Falcon 9 about two minutes after launch, along with hundreds of millions of dollars in cargo and equipment bound for the space station.

The company fixed that problem and made the newest version of the Falcon 9 about 30 percent more powerful than previous iterations, Musk said.

Adding to the competitive nature of the commercial space industry, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos’s rocket company Blue Origin announced last month that it had successfully landed its New Shepard rocket after a suborbital flight.

Congrats @SpaceX on landing Falcon’s suborbital booster stage. Welcome to the club!

— Jeff Bezos (@JeffBezos) December 22, 2015

Analysts have pointed out that although New Shepard was first, SpaceX’s feat would be harder to accomplish because the Falcon 9 flies higher in altitude.

“Because SpaceX’s vehicle was designed to place a constellation of satellites in orbit, the Falcon 9’s first stage flew at significantly greater speeds and more than double the altitude of what New Shepherd reached last month,” the Commercial Spaceflight Federation said in a statement.

It called the landing an “incredible achievement” in an industry that is seeking to drive down costs and make spaceflight cheaper and more accessible to tourists and adventurers.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Falcon 9, SpaceX

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