Washington-SANA
The US space organization "Aerospace Corporation" expected that the debris of the Chinese missile out of control will fall out of control over the weekend over North Africa.
The American newspaper "New York Times" quoted organization sources as saying today: "The missile may enter the Earth's airspace tomorrow," adding: "If this is true ... the debris of the missile may fall over Sudan."
Dmitry Rogozin, head of the Russian state company "Roscosmos", revealed earlier today the places in which the Chinese missile parts could fall, indicating that the vulnerable areas are South America, Africa, Australia, southern Eurasia and part of North America.
The "Long March 5B" missile was launched from the Chinese island of Hainan on the 29th of last month, carrying the Tianhe spacecraft, which contains what will become the living quarters of three people in a permanent Chinese space station. The launch vehicle was the first of 11 other missions required to complete the station.