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Is South Africa safe for tourism
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May 21, 2012, 02:58:35 PM *
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Author Topic: Is South Africa safe for tourism  (Read 1617 times)
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krishre
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« on: July 02, 2010, 04:32:16 AM »


Is South Africa safe for tourism?
No, not at all. Only if you have a death wish and want to comeback in a body bag. With the highest crime rate in the world do you really want to spend your free time there? These links tell it like it is. As far as the government is concerned there is no crime problem. Read these and then tell me if you want to still go.

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Mr 007
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« Reply #1 on: March 19, 2011, 09:14:13 PM »

Funds to maintain Europe's Ariane 5 rocket
By Jonathan Amos Science correspondent, BBC News
Ariane 5 (Arianespace) Europe's Ariane 5 rocket has made 42 consecutive launches without mishap
Continue reading the main story
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    * 2011 'year of rockets' for Europe

European Space Agency (Esa) member states are putting 240m euros (£210m) into industry so that the Ariane 5 rocket can continue to be exploited.

The company that operates the vehicle, Arianespace, has made losses in each of the past two years, even though it is the dominant player in its market.

Esa, which developed the big rocket, agreed to the cash injection at a two-day council meeting in Paris.

The decision follows an assessment of the costs of running the rocket system.

This assessment, ordered last year by member states, was intended to gauge where efficiencies could be found in the supply and operation chains.

The new money covers the period up until the major meeting of European space ministers at the end of 2012.

It is expected that a plan will be on the table by then to put Arianespace and its operations on a more sustainable footing.

Ariane 5 rockets launch from the Kourou spaceport in French Guiana.

Six or seven flights are conducted each year, usually lofting two satellites at a time.

Through a subsidiary, Arianespace also markets Russian Soyuz vehicles, which historically launch out of the Baikonur and Plesetsk cosmodromes, but which will soon fly from French Guiana too.

The company is also bringing online a third, but much smaller rocket called Vega to carry into orbit institutional or scientific payloads weighing up to 1.5 tonnes.

An Ariane 5 is scheduled to launch next on 30 March. The vehicle will put the Yahsat 1A and Intelsat New Dawn telecommunications satellites on paths to take up geostationary positions 36,000km above the Earth.

The combined mass of these satellites will be about nine tonnes.
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