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A Soyuz rocket with a Progress freighter on top is seen at the launch pad in Kazakhstan during January 2001.Click to enlarge.

The Russian space station Mir over Earth in 1997.

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The International Space Station as it appeared to Endeavour after undocking on STS-97 in Dec. 2000.

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   More Stories

Russians Continue to Debate Saving Mir


Despite Deorbit Plans, Can Part of Mir Be Saved?


Mir Deorbit May Be Delayed to March 10


Mir Almost at Point of No Return



Russians Protest Deorbiting of Mir
By Yuri Karash
Moscow Contributing Correspondent
posted: 02:30 pm ET
09 February 2001
ET

mir_moscow_rally_010209

Defenders of the Mir space station organized a protest rally in downtown Moscow, Thursday, not far from the mayors office. The event's organizers believe the destruction of the space station would leave the country lagging in the exploration of space.

The protesters demanded Mir be rescued and kept in orbit. The station is scheduled to be deorbited sometime around March 10. They suggested that the station should be financially supported by some of the companies in the Podmoskoviye -- the area around Russia's capital.

The area is Russia's second strongest financial region, as well as the home of key Russian space enterprises such as the Russian Aviation and Space Agency's Mission Control Center, spacecraft manufacturer RSC Energia and the Gagarin Cosmonauts Training Center.

Vitaly Sevastyanov, a veteran-cosmonaut and a Duma (the lower chamber of Russian parliament) leader, stated that Mir is perfectly operational and could fly at least through 2004.

"The Americans are pushing Russia [to deorbit its station] since they are interested in Mirs death and the uninterrupted assembly of the International Space Station (ISS)," Sevastyanov said. "[The United States] is the real owner of the ISS while Russia is just a driver hired to operate this American machine."

The protesters also collected signatures for a petition to keep Mir in orbit. They intend to submit the petition to Russian President Vladimir Putin.


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