Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Launch. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Launch. Mostrar todas las entradas

Iran likely suffered another failed launch of a satellite-carrying rocket in recent days, even as Tehran faces last-minute negotiations with world powers to save its tattered nuclear deal in Vienna.

Satellite images from Maxar Technologies seen by The Associated Press show scorch marks at a launch pad at Imam Khomeini Spaceport in Iran’s rural Semnan province on Sunday. A rocket stand on the pad appears scorched and damaged, with vehicles surrounding it. An object, possibly part of the gantry, sits near it.

Successful launches typically don’t damage rocket gantries because they are lowered before takeoff. Iran also usually trumpets launches that reach space on its state-run television channels, but it has a history of not acknowledging failed attempts.

Separate images from Planet Labs PBC suggest the attempted launch likely occurred sometime after Friday. Iran’s mission to the United Nations did not immediately respond to a request for comment, nor did the U.S. military.

The rocket involved appears to have been Iran’s Zuljanah satellite launch vehicle, said Jeffrey Lewis, an expert at the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies, who first noticed the attempted launch with colleagues.

It remains unclear what could have caused the blast. The first two stages of a Zuljanah are solid fuel, but its final stage is liquid and would have needed to be fueled on the launch pad, Lewis said.

“This just looks like it got interrupted, like something exploded,” Lewis told the AP.

Over the past decade, Iran has sent several short-lived satellites into orbit and in 2013 launched a monkey into space. The program has seen recent troubles, however. There have been five failed launches in a row for the Simorgh program, another satellite-carrying rocket. A separate fire at the Imam Khomeini Spaceport in February 2019 also killed three researchers, authorities said at the time.

The successive failures raised suspicion of outside interference in Iran’s program. There’s been no evidence offered, however, to show foul play in any of the failures, and space launches remain challenging even for the world’s most successful programs.

Meanwhile, Iran’s paramilitary Revolutionary Guard in April 2020 revealed its own secret space program by successfully launching a satellite into orbit. The head of the U.S. Space Command later dismissed the satellite as “a tumbling webcam in space” that wouldn’t provide Iran vital intelligence — though it showed Tehran’s ability to successfully get into orbit.

This launch, however, comes as Western diplomats warn time is ticking down to restore Iran’s nuclear deal with world powers, which saw Tehran drastically limit its enrichment of uranium in exchange for the lifting of economic sanctions. Former President Donald Trump unilaterally withdrew from the deal in 2018, setting the stage for years of tensions and mysterious attacks across the wider Mideast.

The U.S. has alleged such satellite launches defy a U.N. Security Council resolution and called on Iran to undertake no activity related to ballistic missiles capable of delivering nuclear weapons.

Iran, which long has said it does not seek nuclear weapons, previously maintained that its satellite launches and rocket tests do not have a military component. U.S. intelligence agencies and the International Atomic Energy Agency say Iran abandoned an organized military nuclear program in 2003.

Today, Tehran enriches uranium up to 60% purity — a short technical step from weapons-grade levels of 90% and far greater than the nuclear deal’s 3.67% cap. Its stockpile of enriched uranium also continues to grow and international inspectors face challenges in monitoring its advances.

While Iran’s former President Hassan Rouhani dialed back the country’s space program for fears of alienating the West, new hard-line President Ebrahim Raisi has focused on jumpstarting the program. Iran has a series of satellites it plans to launch, and Iran’s Supreme Council of Space recently met for the first time in 11 years.

As a strategy that “frees” the Atlantic people from the ‘daily payment’ and the high interest rates. This is how the ‘People’s Bank‘, a program of social transformation in the department.

(Also read: Students from Barranquilla and Atlántico ‘crack’ in English proficiency)

The initiative, led by the Government and Finsocial, seeks to promote financial education, savings and impact the lives of 4,500 Atlanteans, changing the financial reality of entrepreneurs, such as Yuris Sarabia.

For one, who lives from day to day, it is very difficult to be able to make plans for the future and even more so if you have to go to lenders

She is fish seller for 8 years and said he has great expectations with Banco de la Gente, because he will be able to make his dream come true of having the economic resources to be able to set up his own store and improve his income.

“For one, who lives from day to day, it is very difficult to be able to make plans for the future and even more so if you have to go to lenders who keep all your earnings. I believe that, with this Bank that came to help us, we have a new possibility that will ease our pockets,” said the 33-year-old woman.

Between 400 thousand and one million pesos

Sarabia and thousands of Atlantic entrepreneurs now dream of their economic freedom and to make their businesses prosper, through the access to collaborative credits between 400 thousand and one million pesos, provided by the program, as explained by Governor Elsa Noguera.

“In the campaign, when we toured the municipalities, we saw that there was great anguish over the ‘pagadiario’. No business in the world with credit at a rate of 20 percent per month can prosper, because the profits are taken by the financing,” said the president.

As she added, this motivated her to design a strategy to benefit entrepreneurs who have a business idea, but have not been able to develop it as it requires high financing, and also the anguish of debts that worries families.

The program allows them “to go from 20 percent monthly financing to less than 1 percent. In addition, they will be able to receive academic training in topics that will help them to do well with their businesses”, explained Noguera.

a savings account

It is the opportunity to socially, commercially and financially educate our entrepreneurs

Another component of the program is savings, because, as he indicated, a part of what they had to pay in interest to the daily payer will be deposited in a savings account and, after three months, when the credit ends, they will have that available resource.

Meanwhile, Finsocial pointed out that the participants will form ‘Circles of Prosperity‘, groups of between 15 and 20 people, neighbors and acquaintances who work or live nearby. For four weeks, the groups will be trained in entrepreneurship, leadership, teamwork and business development.

After acquiring the certificate of the first module of the program, they will be able to access the first reimbursable economic incentive. The groups will continue to have support for the next 12 weeks to continue with the return of the incentives and the training process of the entrepreneurs.

For the CEO of Finsocial, Santiago Botero, the Banco de la Gente is a project that seeks for entrepreneurs to receive resources through interest rates very economical to promote their ventures through a collaborative model.

“It is the opportunity to educate our entrepreneurs socially, commercially and financially. These people today are the engine of the economic reactivation of our country”, concluded Botero.

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How to access the collaborative incentive?

  1. Entering the website www.bancodelagente.co and filling in the required information. Those interested will be contacted by a counselor.
  2. In person, at the Banco de la Gente office, on the first floor of the Government of Atlántico.

Requirements to participate

  1. Be a Colombian citizen, be between 18 and 75 years of age and belong to strata 1,2 and 3.
  2. Present a photocopy of the identity card and public receipt of your place of residence.
  3. Have a formal or informal business running.
  4. Form a ‘Circle of Prosperity’ (groups of between 15 and 20 entrepreneurs).

BARRANQUILLA

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Nine U.N. Security Council members condemned North Korea’s January 30 launch of an intermediate-range ballistic missile Friday, saying it was “a significant escalation” in Pyongyang’s recent violations of council resolutions and was intended to further destabilize the region.

“We condemn this unlawful action in the strongest terms,” U.S. Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield told reporters after a 90-minute closed-door meeting of the 15-nation council. She spoke on behalf of and flanked by her council counterparts from Albania, Brazil, Britain, France, Ireland, Japan, Norway and the United Arab Emirates.

The launch, which took place on Sunday local time, was North Korea’s longest-range missile test in more than four years.

“It also marks a new and troubling record — the nine ballistic missiles launched in January is the largest number of launches the DPRK has conducted in a single month in the history of its WMD and ballistic missile programs,” Thomas-Greenfield said. DPRK stands for the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, North Korea’s official name.

North Korea is forbidden to conduct such launches under the provisions of several Security Council resolutions.

The council last met on January 20 to discuss the launch activity without a united public stance.

FILE - U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Linda Thomas-Greenfield speaks to reporters during a news conference at U.N. headquarters in New York, March 1, 2021.

FILE – U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Linda Thomas-Greenfield speaks to reporters during a news conference at U.N. headquarters in New York, March 1, 2021.

“The cost of the council’s ongoing silence is too high,” the U.S. envoy said on behalf of the group of nine council members. “It will embolden the DPRK to further defy the international community, to normalize its violations of Security Council resolutions, to further destabilize the region, and to continue to threaten international peace and security. This is an outcome that we should not accept.”

China’s U.N. ambassador told reporters on his way into Friday’s meeting that the solution “lies in dialogue” among the direct parties to the issue.

He appeared to put the responsibility on Washington to coax North Korea to the negotiating table, saying it has the key to solving the situation in its hands.

“They should come up with more attractive and more practical, more flexible approaches, policies and actions, and in accommodating the concerns of DPRK,” Ambassador Zhang Jun said of the United States. “We have all seen what happened in Singapore. We have all seen what happened in Hanoi. And we have seen suspension of the nuclear test, and we have seen suspension of the launch of ICBMs [intercontinental ballistic missiles].”

Former U.S. President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un held two summits, one in Singapore in 2018 and another in Vietnam the following year. They did not lead to denuclearization, but tensions cooled between the two nations, with Kim pausing his country’s nuclear and long-range missile tests.

The Biden administration has urged Pyongyang to meet without preconditions.

“We stand ready to engage in dialogue, and we will not waver in our pursuit of regional peace and stability and the complete denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula consistent with relevant Security Council resolutions,” Thomas-Greenfield reiterated Friday.

China’s envoy urged the parties and the council to be prudent in both their actions and their words to avoid a full escalation.

FILE - Zhang Jun, permanent representative of China to the United Nations, speaks during a meeting of the Security Council, Sept. 23, 2021, in New York.

FILE – Zhang Jun, permanent representative of China to the United Nations, speaks during a meeting of the Security Council, Sept. 23, 2021, in New York.

“We have seen a vicious circle: confrontation, condemnation, sanctions, and then coming back to confrontation, condemnation and sanctions again,” Zhang said. “So what will be the end?”

He said China’s “freeze for freeze” proposal remains on the table. That would have Pyongyang freeze its nuclear activity in exchange for partial sanctions relief.

Thomas-Greenfield said that would reward North Korea for bad behavior.

Earlier this week, U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres condemned Sunday’s ICBM launch.

“This is a breaking of the DPRK’s announced moratorium in 2018 on launches of this nature and a clear violation of Security Council resolutions,” Guterres’ spokesman said.

He urged Pyongyang to cease any “further counterproductive actions” and seek a diplomatic solution.

The Pentagon said Thursday U.S. special forces carried out a “successful” counterterrorism mission in northwestern Syria.

A statement from Pentagon spokesperson John Kirby did not give any specifics about the mission or its target, only saying that there were no U.S. casualties and that the military would later provide more information.

Residents told reporters the roughly two-hour operation included helicopters, gunfire and explosions, and that several civilians were killed.

The nighttime raid took place in Idlib province, the last rebel-held part of Syria, near the border with Turkey. The area is also home to several top operatives from al-Qaida and other militant groups.

The U.S. military has previously targeted high-ranking al-Qaida leaders in the region, often relying on airstrikes from armed drones.

In October 2019, U.S. special forces carried out a raid in Idlib that killed former Islamic State group leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.

VOA National Security Correspondent Jeff Seldin contributed to this story. Some information for this report came from the Associated Press and Reuters.

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