Nigeria has taken serious steps to put the country’s first man into
space in 2015 with the assistance of the British government. The federal
government, according to dailymail.co.uk, has accepted £300million this
year alone to set in train ambitious plans to launch the country’s own
rockets. The medium said the first Nigerian astronauts are being trained
to join Russian, Chinese or American missions within the next two
years. Britain’s support for Nigeria’s space initiative and other
countries has been criticised by its nationals, who said that the
Department for International Development’s budget will rise by 35 per
cent in real terms by 2015. They said while aid costs are ballooning,
spending on the military, the police, border control and care homes is
being slashed by the government. Britain is also spending about
£280million a year on aid to India, another country with its own space
programme.
Jonathan Isaby from the TaxPayers’ Alliance said:
“When budgets are tight both for families and the government alike,
people cannot understand why ministers are sending more of our
hard-earned cash overseas. Taxpayers find it especially unacceptable
when their money is sent abroad as aid to developing countries which
then somehow find sufficient cash to fund the likes of a space
programme.
“It is totally unacceptable that British taxpayers’
money is effectively subsidising Nigeria’s efforts to send an astronaut
into space”, he said. Nigeria’s space programme started in 2003 but its
first satellite lost power and disappeared from orbit.
It now
has three in space, NigComSat-1R, NigeriaSat-2 and Nigeria-Sat X, the
first to be constructed by Nigerian engineers. Although Nigeria has
bought its own satellites and launched on Russian rockets, the federal
government has built laboratories which it hopes will produce its own
space craft by 2028.
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