ISRO vs SUPARCO / On the one hand, ISRO is sending Chandrayaan to the moon, but what has Pakistan's space agency done so far? see

Zoom News : Aug 21, 2023, 06:35 PM
ISRO vs SUPARCO: Indian Space Research Organization ie ISRO has a rich history of sending spacecraft, recently ISRO has sent Chandrayaan 3 to that part of the Moon, where no spacecraft of the world has reached till date. Indian Chandrayaan 3 is landing two days later on the South Pole of the Moon, which is being watched by the whole world. The question arises that is there any space agency in our neighboring country Kangal Pakistan as well, if so, what has it done till date? Know the news.

ISRO's Chandrayaan 3 is about to land on the Moon's South Pole. This is such a place on the moon, where no rover of the country has been able to reach. Apart from this, India is also counted among some of the top countries in the world in terms of space. Russia's Luna 25 was definitely supposed to land on the Moon's South Pole two days before our spacecraft, but due to its speed and technical reasons, it was destroyed before landing on the Moon. Now the eyes of the world are on our spaceship. Although ISRO has done many big space missions even before this, due to which India is counted among the top countries of the world in terms of space research. But Pakistan is far behind India in this matter.

Pakistan's space agency started 8 years before ISRO

The thing to note is that the space agency of Kangal Pakistan started 8 years before us i.e. 8 years before ISRO. But due to political upheaval, weak will, and desire to become a factory of terror, Pakistan became poor and its space agency remained far behind India's ISRO.

When was Pakistan's space agency formed?

After separation from India, Pakistan started many such modern things which India started many years later. However, even after this, today Pakistan is far away from India in terms of modernity and space research. Pakistan formed an organization named 'Space and Upper Atmosphere Research Organization' on 16 September 1961. It was formed eight years before ISRO, but now it does not stand anywhere in the matter of space research. Today Pakistan's condition is so poor that it cannot even think of sending a spacecraft. Whatever little work has been done in the field of space, China has been completely interfering in it.

How many satellites has been launched by Pakistan so far?

  • Pakistan has launched only 5 satellites so far. The first of these was released on 16 July 1990. It was named Badr-1 by Pakistan. The special thing is that it was an artificial digital satellite. However, it could last only for 6 months, after which it stopped working.
  • The second satellite was launched by Pakistan on December 10, 2001 in the name of Badr-B.
  • The name of the third satellite was Pakat-1 which was launched by Pakistan on 11 August 2011. Pakistan had taken the help of China to launch this satellite. To put it plainly, it was made by China only.
  • Talking about the fourth satellite, it was launched by Pakistan on 21 November 2013. Its name was Ecube-1. Pakistan's fourth satellite also lasted only two years.
  • Talking about the fifth satellite, it was also sent into space by Pakistan with the help of China. It was launched on 9 July 2018. Since then Pakistan has not sent any satellite into space.
The country is poor, the vault is empty, the space program for Pakistan is just a fantasy

Today Pakistan is standing in a pauper's condition. He is begging for loan from the whole world. Sometimes some Muslim country takes pity on him and definitely gives financial help. But it is a fact that Pakistan's coffers have become empty. Governments are weak, unable to take tough decisions. The culmination of fighting among themselves is such that the Shahbaz government has put full emphasis on putting the ousted Prime Minister in jail. On the other hand, Pakistan's army wants to maintain its supremacy. In such a situation, the top leadership of Pakistan is divided. This is the reason that Pakistan has gone so far behind on the path of progress that even imagining space programs is far-fetched for it.

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