BEIJING, Oct. 25 (Xinhua) -- A senior Chinese space
program official said here on Wednesday development of the Shenzhou VII manned
spacecraft is proceeding smoothly, but declined to give a timetable for its
launch.
"The Shenzhou VII project is going smoothly. The next step of the manned space flight program involves allowing the
taikonaut to walk out of the spacecraft and dock the spacecraft with another
target object," said Sun Laiyan, head of China National Space Administration, in
an interview at www.gov.cn, a Chinese central government website that covers the
application of military technology for civilian use.
He said the taikonaut will walk out of the spacecraft
wearing a space suit. The technology is complex and risks are high.
"We do have a timetable for the manned spaceflight
program, but our foremost concern is safety and reliability," said Sun, who is
also deputy head of the Commission of Science Technology and Industry for
National Defense.
"We will announce the timetable on this website when
we believe the time is ripe and conditions are mature," he said.
He did not rule out the possibility of sending female
taikonauts, female scientists, engineers and even philosophers into space in the
future.
"A space flight will help philosophers develop new
philosophic views. That's good for human society," said Sun.
China successfully launched its Shenzhou VI
spacecraft carrying two taikonauts into space on Oct. 12, 2005. It returned to
earth safely after 115 hours and 32 minutes of flight.
Previous news reports predicted the Shenzhou VII
would be launched around 2007 and space docking would take place between 2009
and 2012. Enditem