
-
Grand Theft Auto VI release postponed to May 2026
-
Lawyers probe 'dire' conditions for Meta content moderators in Ghana
-
Maresca confident Chelsea can close gap to Liverpool
-
Watchdog accuses papal contenders of ignoring sex abuse
-
Berlin culture official quits after funding cut backlash
-
US hiring better than expected despite Trump uncertainty
-
EU fine: TikTok's latest setback
-
Stocks gain on US jobs data, tariff talks hopes
-
Barca's Ter Stegen to return from long lay-off for Valladolid trip
-
US hiring slows less than expected, unemployment unchanged
-
Man Utd must 'take risk' and rotate players as they target European glory: Amorim
-
Vatican chimney installed ahead of papal conclave
-
Toulouse's Ramos to miss Champions Cup semi with injury
-
Grand Theft Auto VI release postponed to May 2026: publisher
-
S.African mother found guilty of selling young daughter
-
EU wins post-Brexit fishing row with Britain
-
Activists say drones attacked aid boat bound for Gaza
-
Israel says struck near Syria presidential palace amid Druze clashes
-
Eurozone inflation holds above expectations in April
-
Orgies, murder and intrigue, the demons of the Holy See
-
'Deadly blockade' leaves Gaza aid work on verge of collapse: UN, Red Cross
-
Pakistani Kashmir orders stockpiling of food as India tensions flare
-
Stock markets gain as China mulls US tariff talks
-
Mahrez aims to land first Asian Champions League for Al Ahli
-
West Bank Palestinians losing hope 100 days into Israeli assault
-
Activists say drones hit aid boat heading for Gaza, blame Israel
-
Stokes fit to captain England against Zimbabwe
-
TikTok fined 530 mn euros in EU over China data transfer
-
Howe urges Newcastle to be ruthless in transfer market
-
England defender Dier to leave Bayern at end of season - club official
-
UK comedian Russell Brand appears in court on rape charges
-
Trump signs executive order to cut NPR, PBS public funding
-
'No dumping ground': Tunisia activist wins award over waste scandal
-
French prison attacks linked to drug traffickers, say prosecutors
-
Hong Kong posts 3.1% growth, warns of trade war 'risk'
-
Fresh turmoil ahead of South Korean election
-
German chemical giant BASF keeps outlook, warns on tariffs
-
80 years on, Dutch WWII musical still 'incredibly relevant'
-
Slot says Liverpool Premier League win was one of 'best days of my life'
-
UK comedian Russell Brand arrives at court to face rape charges
-
Bangladesh's influential Islamists promise sharia as they ready for polls
-
Shell net profit sinks 35% in first-quarter as oil prices fall
-
Fearing Indian police, Kashmiris scrub 'resistance' tattoos
-
Australian PM says battle ahead to win election
-
In show stretched over 50 years, Slovenian director shoots for space
-
Hard right wins local UK election in blow to PM Starmer
-
Australian triple-murder suspect never asked after poisoned guests: husband
-
Brunson brilliance as Knicks clinch series, Clippers sink Nuggets
-
UK court to rule on Prince Harry security appeal
-
'Alarming deterioration' of US press freedom under Trump, says RSF

First woman, Black astronaut to make 2024 flight around Moon
NASA unveiled the crew on Monday for its first human mission to the Moon in more than 50 years –- including the first woman and Black man to voyage into deep space.
Christina Koch, a NASA astronaut who holds the record for the longest single spaceflight by a woman, will be a mission specialist on next year's Artemis II flight around the Moon.
NASA's Victor Glover, a naval aviator, will pilot the Orion spacecraft that circles the Moon in November 2024, becoming the first Black man to take part in a lunar mission.
Rounding out the crew are veteran NASA astronaut Reid Wiseman, 47, the mission commander, and Jeremy Hansen, also 47, a former fighter pilot now with the Canadian Space Agency.
The three Americans and one Canadian will become the first astronauts to venture that deep into space since the historic Apollo missions ended in 1972.
The Artemis II flight is a prelude to returning humans to the Moon for the first time in a half century and an eventual mission to Mars.
The three American astronauts have all spent time on the International Space Station (ISS) while Hansen, the Canadian mission specialist, will be making his first space flight.
The four astronauts, dressed in blue flight suits, were introduced by NASA administrator Bill Nelson at an event at the Johnson Space Center in Houston.
"The largest, most powerful rocket in the world is going to propel them onward and upward into the heavens," Nelson said.
Koch, 44, an electrical engineer, spent a record 11 consecutive months in space and took part in the first all-female spacewalks while on the ISS.
"Am I excited?" Koch said. "Absolutely!"
The 46-year-old Glover said Artemis II is "more than a mission to the Moon and back."
"It is the next step that gets humanity to Mars," he said.
- Mars by 2040 -
Wiseman, the mission commander, said the diverse crew was made up of "exceptional operators."
"We're just all professional explorers," he told AFP.
"We are representing our nation," Wiseman said, but "we need the entire world to go along with us."
Francois-Philippe Champagne, Canada's minister of innovation, science and industry, attended the event and said his country "could not be more proud" to have a Canadian on the crew for the flight.
As part of the Artemis program, NASA aims to send astronauts to the Moon in 2025 -- more than five decades after the final Apollo mission.
Besides putting the first woman and first person of color on the Moon, the US space agency hopes to establish a lasting human presence on the lunar surface as a stepping stone for an eventual voyage to Mars.
Nelson, the NASA chief, has said he expects a crewed mission to Mars by the year 2040.
The 10-day Artemis II mission will test NASA's powerful Space Launch System rocket as well as the life-support systems aboard the Orion spacecraft.
The first Artemis flight wrapped up in December with an uncrewed Orion capsule returning safely to Earth after a 25-day journey around the Moon.
During the trip around Earth's orbiting satellite and back, Orion logged well over a million miles (1.6 million kilometers) and went farther from Earth than any previous habitable spacecraft.
Only 12 people -- all of them white men -- have set foot on the Moon.
G.Stevens--AMWN