South Korea's first astronaut rescued by startled nomads

Wed Apr 30, 2008 10:48am BST
 
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By Lee Ji-yeon

SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korea's first astronaut said she and her fellow crew were rescued by startled nomads after their space capsule thudded far off course into the remote steppes of Central Asia earlier this month.

Yi So-yeon, 29, told SBS TV she thought she might die as they re-entered the earth's atmosphere more steeply than normal and of excruciating pain from massive gravitational pull and as falling objects inside the capsule crashed into her.

"The nomads were surprised when Yuri (Malenchenko, the Russian flight engineer) climbed out of the capsule," the nanotechnology engineer said in a transcript of the interview made available on Wednesday.

"They very well would have been, since a ball of fire fell from the sky and then a white object crawled out of it."

The Soyuz-TMA capsule, returning with three crew on April 19 from the International Space Station, veered 300 miles (480 km) off course and landed in the Kazakh steppes where Yi said they were discovered by a group of passing nomads.

Yi said they helped the crew out of their charred capsule, initially poking them to see if they were alive.

"It was as if they were watching monkeys in a cage. It drew a larger crowd, and eventually we were surrounded by about 50 people," she said.

After dragging the crew into the shade, some of their helpers crawled back into the cramped capsule to bring out of the satellite phone.  Continued...

 
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