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Russian MP to become 'space tourist' in 2008: report

On approach to the ISS
by Staff Writers
Moscow (AFP) Oct 5, 2007
A Russian member of parliament is to become the next space tourist in 2008, replacing a US computer game developer scheduled to fly at the same time, the Kommersant daily reported on Friday.

Vladimir Gruzdev, a member of the ruling United Russia party and a wealthy businessman with a taste for adventure, is scheduled to fly to the International Space Station in October 2008.

"Gruzdev has already undergone all the necessary medical tests. He is currently in the group of test astronauts and will definitely fly into space," Boris Gryzlov, head of United Russia, was quoted as saying.

The bill for the flight, which has averaged around 20 million dollars (14 million euros) for previous space tourists, will be picked up by United Russia as "our budget contribution to the space programme," Gryzlov said.

An official from Roskosmos, Russia's space agency, told Kommersant that Gruzdev would "take priority" over US computer game developer Richard Garriott, who is also scheduled to fly as a space tourist in October 2008.

Gruzdev, who took part in an expedition earlier this year to plant a flag on the North Pole seabed as a symbol of Russia's territorial claims in the Arctic, would be the world's sixth space tourist.

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European Agency Offers To Take Indians For A Space Ride
New Delhi, India (DPA) Oct 03, 2007
Any Indian who can cough up about 283,881 dollars can button up for a sub-orbital ride around the Earth 2012 onwards, the European space company, EADS Astrium, said Friday at the International Astronautical Congress in India's southern city Hyderabad. EADS Astrium is the space subsidiary of the French-Spanish-German consortium EADS.







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