Hong Kong media said, Hainan Wenchang launch center confirmed that a few days ago fell in Indonesia 8 meters long and 5 meters wide metal parts, is the November 24, 2020 “Chang’e 5” launch rocket booster, and may be in the local smashed residents. Officials responded vaguely to this.
According to international media reports, an 8-meter-long, 5-meter-wide semi-tubular metal body with a gold-colored five-star logo and CNSA lettering was found in Ranggau Bay in Kotawaringin Barat, central Kalimantan, southern Indonesia’s Borneo Island on Jan. 5, along with a “life jacket” and some electronic equipment.
The Hong Kong-based China Human Rights and Democracy Information Center (CHRDIC) reported on Jan. 7 that an official from the command department of the Wenchang launch center in Hainan confirmed that the half-tube metal body was part of the Long March 5 rocket booster for the Nov. 24, 2020, launch of Chang’e-5.
The report said the official was surprised that the rocket booster landed in Indonesia, he said it should be a booster recovery failure, the official also said it was not clear why there were electronic devices and life jackets in the booster.
BLS-300C34-119C, which were found near the site of the incident, may be related to the military use test.
According to HRIC, the booster recovery failure could expose some of Chang’e-5’s important military applications.
The report also said that the failed booster recovery could have killed or injured Indonesian residents, who live near the booster’s crash. However, when the center called the Chinese National Space Administration several times, officials did not respond to whether they were contacting the Chinese embassy in Indonesia to prepare for the recovery of the object, nor did they respond to the possibility of killing Indonesian residents.
According to official Chinese Communist Party reports, Chang’e 5 was launched on November 24, 2020, from the Wenchang Launch Center in Hainan, and after completing the automatic lunar surface sampling mission, the return vehicle landed in Siziwangqi, Inner Mongolia, on December 17, 2020.
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