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03 чэрвеня 2025, 10:19
Baikonur Cosmodrome celebrates its 70th anniversary
Photo: Roscosmos
MOSCOW, 3 June (BelTA - TV BRICS) - Yesterday marked the 70th anniversary
of the founding of Baikonur, the world's first and largest spaceport,
which played a key role in the development of manned spaceflight and
became a symbol of international cooperation in space exploration.
It
was on 2 June 1955 that the organisational and staffing structure of
the research and testing site was approved. Just two years later, the
first R-7 rocket was launched from Baikonur, followed by the launch of
the world’s first artificial satellite on October 4, 1957. On 12 April
1961, Yuri Gagarin made his historic journey into space from this very
site.
Today, large-scale celebrations are being held in honour of
the cosmodrome's anniversary. The Roscosmos delegation is headed by
Director General Dmitry Bakanov. An open-air museum has opened in the
city of Baikonur, featuring legendary examples of rocket and space
technology, including the Vostok, Proton-M, Cyclone and N-1 launch
vehicles, the Almaz space station and the Foton-M4 descent module.
Russian
President Vladimir Putin congratulated the employees and veterans of
the cosmodrome on the anniversary, noting that its creation was a feat, a
symbol of unity and a scientific breakthrough. He emphasised the
international significance of the site, calling it one of the brightest
pillars of the Russian-Kazakh partnership.
"In short, it is
symbolic that the cosmodrome was named Baikonur, which translates from
Kazakh as 'rich land’. The cosmodrome's contribution to international
scientific and technological progress is truly immense and cannot be
overestimated," the President said.
Over the past 70 years,
Baikonur’s launch pads have sent astronauts from dozens of countries
into space, including Cuba, India, Vietnam, Brazil, and the United Arab
Emirates (UAE).
In 1980, Cuban Arnaldo Tamayo Mendez became the
first cosmonaut from Latin America, launching from Baikonur aboard
Soyuz-38 crew. In 1984, Rakesh Sharma became the first Indian in space,
also departing from this cosmodrome.
In 2006, Brazil's first
cosmonaut, Marcos Pontes, went into space from Baikonur, completing an
eight-day mission to the International Space Station. This is according
to data from the Brazilian newspaper O Globo. In 2019, according to TV
BRICS partner Emirates News Agency (WAM), the first representative of
the UAE, Hazza Al Mansoori, took off from there.
According to
another media network partner, Vietnam News Agency, the first Vietnamese
cosmonaut, Pham Tuan, also began his flight from here in 1980, which
was an important milestone in the development of space science in
Vietnam.
Baikonur continues to be a magnet for international
scientific cooperation. Work is underway to prepare an application for
the inclusion of its launch complex in the UNESCO World Heritage List.