To keep eye on India, 2 Pak spy satellites launched by China

Wednesday 11th July 2018 07:04 EDT
 

Beijing: China has launched two satellites for Pakistan that, among other things, are meant to keep an eye on India. One of them - the PRSS-1 - is a remote sensing satellite built by China. The other - PakTES-1A - is Pakistan's indigenously developed scientific experiment satellite. The two were launched on Chinese rocket Long March-2C from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in northwest China. The remote-sensing PRSS-1 satellite can carry out day and night monitoring, and it has viewing capacity even in clouded conditions.

Keep watch on India

The satellite would be used for land and resources surveying, monitoring of natural disasters, agriculture research, urban construction and to provide remote sensing information for China's "Belt and Road" mega-project. Scientists said it would also help Pakistan keep watch on India. The PRSS-1 is the first optical remote sensing satellite China sold to Pakistan.

The launch of the satellites marks yet another instance of Pakistan's space cooperation with China, its number one ally. In August 2011, China had launched PAKSAT-1R, a communication satellite. Pakistan, which already had five satellites in space, lacks heavy duty launchers and satellite fabrication facilities.

India is way ahead of Pakistan in space technology, with 43 operational satellites in space. India also has the radar imaging satellites with all-weather surveillance capability. India used images gathered from its satellites for the surgical strikes it carried out in 2016. Three years ago, Pakistan opted out of India's project for a "South Asia Satellite". Prime Minister Narendra Modi's "gift" to SAARC countries was an extension of his "Sab Ka Saath Sab Ka Vikas" ideology to India's neighbourhood, where China is extending its influence. Islamabad opted out, suggesting it had its "own space programme".


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