The making of heroes - the women and men of China's space program
Since Yang Liwei first flew into the great beyond, Chinese taikonauts have completed six manned spaceflights, conducted over 100 experiments and orbited the earth for a total of 68 days and nights.
In early January, to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the taikonaut corps, all 11 taikonauts who have been to space gathered in one of the training centers, raised their clenched fists, and revisited the oath of bravery and commitment they took years before.
In the most recent Shenzhou-11 mission in 2016, Jing Haipeng and Chen Dong stayed in the space lab Tiangong-2 for 30 days.
In the near future, when China's space station is finally in orbit, manned space missions will be a regular occurrence. Engineers and even tourists will go to space.
Zhang Xiaoguang and his colleagues have already thrown themselves into preparations for work on the space station, and his words on completing the Shenzhou-10 mission ring more true than ever.
"Our space dream knows no boundary, and our toil will never cease."
- Foreign delegates gain a close look at grassroots livelihood, protection of people's rights
- Primary school students tell revolutionary stories of Jinggangshan in English
- Shanxi emergency official probed after deadly mine blast
- One hundred thirty-six artifacts from Cambodia on display in Shanxi
- Hukou Waterfall roars to life after heavy upstream rainfall
- Lion King co-director heads jury at Chongqing animation festival































