A South African man who won
the chance to be the first black African in space has died in a motorbike crash
before turning his dream into reality, his family announced on Sunday.
Mandla Maseko, a part-time
DJ and candidate officer with the South African Air Force, was nicknamed
“Afronaut” after landing a coveted seat to fly 103km (64 miles) into space in
2013 in a competition organised by a US-based space academy.
He died in a motorcycle
accident on Saturday, according to a family statement cited by local media.
The 30-year-old beat a
million other entrants from 75 countries to be selected as one of 23 people who
would travel on an hour-long suborbital trip on the Lynx Mark II spaceship.
Son of a school cleaner and
auto tool maker in Soshanguve township near Pretoria, his win was a source of
national pride and had neighbours congratulating him for putting South Africa’s
townships on the “galactic map”.
He spent a week at the
Kennedy Space Academy in Florida where he skydived and undertook air combat and
G-force training.
While there he met and
posed for pictures with US astronaut Buzz Aldrin, who was the second man to set
foot on the moon after Neil Armstrong as part of the 1969 Apollo 11 space
mission.
Maseko was originally
expected to fly in 2015 but no firm plans for his trip had been made public at
the time of his death..

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