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(Reuters) - The Kremlin said on Wednesday that Moscow had no desire to block any internet resources after the state communications regulator said it was restricting the use of Twitter but that companies had to follow Russian law.

Roskomnadzor, accusing the social media platform of repeatedly failing to remove banned content from its site, said on Wednesday it was slowing down the speed of Twitter and threatened to block the service completely.

Beijing and Moscow to develop experimental research facilities on the Moon’s surface and its orbit.


Russia and China have unveiled plans for a joint lunar space station as Moscow seeks to recapture the glory of its space pioneering days of Soviet times, and Beijing gears up its own extraterrestrial ambitions.


Though Russia was once at the forefront of space travel – it sent the first man into space – its cosmic ambitions have dimmed thanks to poor financing and endemic corruption.


It has been eclipsed by China and the United States, which have both clocked major wins in space exploration and research in recent years.

The Russian space agency Roscomos said in a statement on Tuesday it signed an agreement with China’s National Space Administration (CNSA) to develop a “complex of experimental research facilities created on the surface and/or in the orbit of the Moon”.

CNSA, for its part, said the project was “open to all interested countries and international partners” in what experts said would be China’s biggest international space cooperation project to date.

Russia is seeking to retake the lead in the space race.

This year, it celebrates the 60th anniversary of Russia’s first-ever crewed space flight – it sent Yuri Gagarin into space in 1961, followed by the first woman, Valentina Tereshkova, two years later.

By contrast, the US space agency NASA only sent its first crewed flight into space in 1968.

But Moscow has lagged behind both Washington and Beijing in the exploration of the moon and Mars in recent years.

Meantime, China – which has sought closer partnership with Moscow – has started a successful space programme of its own.


‘A big deal’

Last year, Beijing launched its Tianwen-1 probe to Mars that is currently orbiting the Red Planet.


And in December, it successfully brought rock and soil samples from the moon back to earth, the first mission of this type in more than 40 years.


Chen Lan, an independent analyst specialising in China’s space programme, said the joint lunar space station was “a big deal”.

“This will be the largest international space cooperation project for China, so it’s significant,” Lan said.

Roscosmos chief Dmitry Rogozin wrote on Twitter that he invited CNSA chief Zhang Kejian to the launch of Russia’s first modern lunar lander, Luna 25, scheduled for October 1 – the first lunar lander to be launched by Russia since 1976.



Eyes on Mars

NASA has now set its sights on Mars with its Perseverance rovers last week conducting their first test drive on the planet. NASA eventually intends to conduct a possible human mission to the planet, even if planning is still at a preliminary stage.

Moscow and Washington are also collaborating in the space sector – one of the few areas of cooperation left between the Cold War rivals.

However, Russia did not sign the US-led Artemis Accord last year for countries that want to participate in a lunar exploration scheme spearheaded by NASA.


Under the Artemis programme announced during the tenure of former US President Donald Trump, NASA plans to land the first woman and the next man on the moon by 2024.

In another blow to Russia’s space reputation, Roscosmos last year lost its monopoly for crewed flights to the International Space Station (ISS) after the first successful mission of the US company Space X.

Elon Musks’s Space X has become a key player in the modern space race and has announced plans to fly several members of the public to the Moon in 2023 on a trip bankrolled by a Japanese millionaire.

Space X in March also landed a prototype rocket on Mars, but it exploded on the landing pad.


Source: Al Jazeera


ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Around 1,000 women gathered near Istanbul’s main Taksim Square on Monday, protesting what they see as a lack of action by authorities to prevent and punish violence against women, in a country where femicide rates have surged in recent years.



The protesters, mostly women carrying purple flags with women and LGBTI+ signs and wearing purple masks reading “We will win our freedom,” gathered on a main street after police closed off the entrances to Taksim Square on International Women’s Day.

Women police stood with their arms linked at the end of the street, blocking entry to the square while behind them stood fences, police in riot gear and water cannon trucks.

“Women are very strong and they are afraid of this. They should block murderers, not us,” said Ipek Deniz, a 36-year-old nurse participating in the protests.

The femicide rate roughly doubled between 2011 and 2019, according to a group that monitors murders of women, which also said that so far in 2021, 51 women have been murdered and another 26 have died under suspicious circumstances.


Turkey does not keep official statistics on femicide.

At the weekend, a video showing a woman being punched and kicked in the head by her ex-husband on the street in northern Turkey sparked outrage on social media. The suspect was then detained, media reports said, while the woman was admitted to hospital.

Speaking at a congress of his AK Party’s women’s wing, President Tayyip Erdogan said Turkey would establish a commission in parliament to address issues regarding violence against women.

“We hear that there are those who call on girls to leave their father’s homes as soon as possible. Turkey will somehow solve the problem of violence against women, the real threat is this mentality taking root,” he said.


The protester around Taksim chanted “Femicide is political” and “The life is ours, the choice is ours, the streets are ours, you can keep your family.”

“We are oppressed under the male power every day. Women’s murderers are rewarded by not being punished,” said Sumeyye Kose, a 21-year-old student.

“We are here against increasing violence, against systematic LGBTI-phobia, against femicide. We will win,” she said.

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