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World cruiserweight champion Ramirez undergoes surgery
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Pope calls Buzz Aldrin to mark 1969 moon landing
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New clashes outside London hotel housing migrants
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Japan PM's future in doubt after election debacle
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Tiger comparisons 'silly' for dominant Scheffler
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Clark feels 'terrible' for US Open incident after Oakmont ban
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Venus Williams, 45, to end 16-month layoff in Washington
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McIlroy got everything but the win out of Northern Ireland homecoming
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Calm returns to south Syria after violence that killed over 1,100: monitor
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Mexico's O'Ward wins Toronto Indy to gain in title chase
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British Open win 'special feeling' for dominant Scheffler
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Scheffler ticks off British Open in pursuit of perfection
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Brilliant Scheffler cruises to fourth major title at British Open
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French petition against return of bee-killing pesticide passes 1mn
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'Superman' triumphs once again at N.American box office
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A million people sign French petition against bringing back bee-killing pesticide
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European powers plan fresh nuclear talks with Iran
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Pope urges immediate end to 'barbarity' of Gaza war
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Arrested Kenyan activist faces terror charges
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Gaza civil defence says Israeli fire kills 73 aid seekers
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Wellens wins stage as Pogacar maintains Tour de France stranglehold
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Scheffler 'in a league of his own', says inspired DeChambeau
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Injured Draper takes time out as he targets US Open
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Clinical Bangladesh thump sloppy Pakistan in first T20I
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England's Carter suffers racist abuse at Euro 2025
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Wellens wins stage as Pogacar keeps Tour de France lead
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Gaza civil defence says Israeli fire kills 67 aid seekers
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Martin Solveig bids goodbye to DJing at retirement gig
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France's Boisson wins maiden WTA title in Hamburg
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England to host next three World Test Championship finals
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Shigeru Ishiba, Japan's rapidly diminishing PM
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Pakistani camel relearns to walk with prosthetic leg
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Lesotho's jockeys saddle up for mountain horse racing
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Texas flood missing toll revised sharply down to three
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South Korea rain death toll hits 17, with 11 missing
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Dominant Marquez cruises to Czech MotoGP win
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Bublik wins first clay title in Gstaad
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Western aid cuts cede ground to China in Southeast Asia: study
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Fury targets third fight against undisputed heavyweight champion Usyk
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Coach Erasmus calls time on mass Springbok experiments
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Solberg secures first WRC win in Estonia
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Calm returns to south Syria after violence that killed 1,000: monitor
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Election drubbing projected for Japan PM
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Hong Kong hit by strong winds, heavy rain as Typhoon Wipha skirts past
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Shi beats Lanier to win Japan Open badminton title
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Manila crowd cheers Pacquiao comeback, draw and all
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South Korea rain death toll rises to 14: government
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Pacquiao held to draw by Barrios in world title return
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Tearful relatives await news from Vietnam wreck rescue
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Anxious relatives await news from Vietnam wreck rescue
SpaceX crew launch to ISS postponed
A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launch to the International Space Station was postponed on Monday, with officials citing problems with ground systems.
The SpaceX Dragon Crew-6 mission was scheduled to depart the Kennedy Space Center in Florida at 1:45 am (0645 GMT), carrying two NASA astronauts, a Russian cosmonaut and the second Emirati to voyage to space.
But just two minutes before lift-off, the launch was called off, or "scrubbed".
"Today's #Crew6 launch has been scrubbed due to an issue with ground systems," NASA posted on Twitter.
SpaceX said shortly after that it had begun unloading fuel from the rocket and the crew would disembark.
The launch will be rescheduled for a later date.
NASA's Stephen Bowen and Warren Hoburg, Russia's Andrey Fedyaev and Sultan al-Neyadi of the United Arab Emirates are to spend six months on the orbiting station.
Neyadi, 41, will be the fourth astronaut from an Arab country and the second from the oil-rich UAE to journey to space; his compatriot Hazzaa al-Mansoori flew an eight-day mission in 2019.
Neyadi described the upcoming mission as a "great honor."
Hoburg, the Endeavour pilot, and Fedyaev, the Russian mission specialist, will also be making their first space flights.
Fedyaev is the second Russian cosmonaut to fly to the ISS aboard a SpaceX rocket. NASA astronauts fly regularly to the station on Russian Soyuz craft.
Space has remained a rare venue of cooperation between Moscow and Washington since the Russian offensive in Ukraine placed the two in sharp opposition.
Such exchanges have continued despite those tensions.
Bowen, a veteran of three space shuttle missions, said politics rarely come up while in space.
"We're all professionals. We keep focused on the mission itself," the commander said. "It's always been a great relationship we've had with cosmonauts once we get to space."
While aboard the ISS, the Crew-6 members will conduct dozens of experiments including studying how materials burn in microgravity and researching heart, brain and cartilage functions.
The current crew is the sixth to be transported by a SpaceX rocket to the ISS. The Endeavour capsule has flown into space three times.
NASA pays SpaceX to ferry astronauts to the ISS roughly every six months.
The space agency expects Crew-6 to have a handover of several days with the four members of Crew-5, who have been on the ISS since October. Crew-5 will then return to Earth.
- Rescue capsule -
Also aboard the ISS are cosmonauts Dmitry Petelin and Sergei Prokopyev, as well as NASA astronaut Frank Rubio.
They had been scheduled to return home on March 28 but the cooling system of their Soyuz MS-22 capsule was damaged by a tiny meteoroid in December while docked with the ISS.
An uncrewed Russian Soyuz capsule, MS-23, took off on Friday from Kazakhstan to bring the three astronauts home. They are now scheduled to return to Earth in September.
Construction of the ISS began in 1998 at a time of increased US-Russia cooperation following the Cold War space race.
Russia has been using the aging but reliable Soyuz capsules to ferry astronauts into space since the 1960s.
But in recent years, Russia's space program has been beset by a litany of problems that have led to the loss of satellites and vehicles.
X.Karnes--AMWN