Iran has
successfully flown a monkey into space and back, according to the country's
state TV channel.
In what
was described as another step toward Tehran's goal of a manned space flight,
the report said the primate was sent up in a Pishtam, or Explorer, rocket to a
height of 72 miles
An image from Iranian state TV of the monkey it says has been sent to space
It gave
no other details on the timing or location of the launch, but said the monkey
returned safely.
Arabic
language channel Al Alam said the monkey returned alive.
Defence
Minister Ahmad Vahidi told state television: "This success is the first
step towards man conquering the space and it paves the way for other moves.
"The
monkey which was sent in this launch landed safely and alive and this is a big
step for our experts and scientists."
Iran has
said it wants to send an astronaut into space as part of its ambitious
aerospace programme.
In 2010,
the country said it launched a rocket into space carrying a mouse, turtle and
worms. But an attempt in 2011 to put a monkey into space failed, although no
official explanation was given.
The US
and its allies worry that technology from the space programme could also be
used to develop long-range missiles that could potentially be armed with
nuclear warheads.
If
confirmed, the monkey would be the latest in a long line of astronaut primates.
The first
was a Rhesus monkey called Albert, who died of suffocation after flying to a
height of 39 miles in a United States V2 rocket in 1948.
Albert II
became the first to reach space - by flying past the 100km (62 mile) 'Karman
line' - but died upon his return to Earth when his parachute failed.
Squirrel
monkeys Able and Miss Baker became the first primates to successfully return to
Earth following a space flight, when they travelled on the American Jupiter
AM-18 rocket in 1958.
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