Monday, December 8, 2025
ADVT 
International

Sunita Williams set to return home today after extended ISS mission

Darpan News Desk IANS, 18 Mar, 2025 11:50 AM
  • Sunita Williams set to return home today after extended ISS mission

Washington, March 18 (IANS) Indian-descent American astronaut Sunita Williams, is scheduled to return to Earth Tuesday evening, ending an unusually protracted stay aboard the International Space Station (ISS).

A spacecraft carrying Williams and three other astronauts will undock from the ISS in a few hours and it will splash down off the coast of the American state of Florida at 5:57 p.m. US Eastern (around 3 a.m. Wednesday in India), according to NASA.

The crew of the spacecraft called Dragon is scheduled to undock from the ISS and close the hatch at 11:15 p.m. US Eastern (8:45 a.m. Tuesday in India).

NASA will be live-streaming the Dragon’s return, as part of its joint programme with SpaceX, called NASA’s SpaceX Crew 9 mission.

For Williams and Barry “Butch” Wilmore, it will be the start of a journey they were supposed to undertake 10 months ago at the end of their eight-day mission to the space station.

Their earlier schedule was delayed because of technical reasons, NASA has said.

Elon Musk, the SpaceX owner whose spacecraft is bringing back Williams and Wilmore, has suggested the two astronauts could have been brought back earlier with his help.

“They were left up there for political reasons, which is not good,” Musk said in an interview alongside President Donald Trump on Fox News recently.

Williams, who turned 60 in September, is the second India-descent American astronaut of international acclaim. The first was Kalpana Chawla. Just a few years older than Williams, Chawal died in the 2003 Columbia space shuttle disaster.

Sunita Lyn Williams, as she is called, was born in 1965 to a father from Gujarat — Deepak Pandya — and a mother from Slovenia, Ursuline Bonnie Pandya (née Zalokar).

Williams made her first trip to the International Space Station in 2006, aboard space shuttle Discovery.

 

MORE International ARTICLES

British-Indian couple convicted of exporting GBP57 mn cocaine to Australia

British-Indian couple convicted of exporting GBP57 mn cocaine to Australia
A British Indian couple has been convicted of exporting more than half a tonne of cocaine worth 57 million pounds to Australia after a probe found they were behind a company that sent the drugs by plane under a cover load of metal toolboxes. Arti Dhir, 59, and Kavaljitsinh Raijada, 35, were convicted of 12 counts of exportation and 18 counts of money laundering by a jury following a trial at Southwark Crown Court on Monday.

British-Indian couple convicted of exporting GBP57 mn cocaine to Australia

US issues record-high 1.4 mn visas to Indians in 2023

US issues record-high 1.4 mn visas to Indians in 2023
Bringing down the visitor visa appointment wait times by 75 per cent, the US Consular Team in India processed a record-smashing 1.4 million US visas in the year 2023. Stating that the demand across all visa classes was unprecedented -- with a 60 per cent increase in applications compared to 2022 -- the US Embassy and Consulates said on Monday that Indians now represent one out of every 10 US visa applicants around the world.

US issues record-high 1.4 mn visas to Indians in 2023

Israel-Hamas war: CIA, Mossad chiefs to meet Qatar PM for temporary ceasefire

Israel-Hamas war: CIA, Mossad chiefs to meet Qatar PM for temporary ceasefire
The director of the American spy agency, Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), and the chief of the Israel Spy agency, Mossad, will be meeting the Prime Minister of Qatar in a European capital for reaching a temporary ceasefire into the ongoing Israel-Hamas war in Gaza strip. The release of Israeli hostages in Hamas captivity will also be discussed in the meeting along with the temporary ceasefire.

Israel-Hamas war: CIA, Mossad chiefs to meet Qatar PM for temporary ceasefire

British Sikh says was urged to confess Post Office theft due to her Asian descent

British Sikh says was urged to confess Post Office theft due to her Asian descent
Kuldeep Kaur Atwal, 73, was accused of stealing the money over a period from July 1995 until November 1996, when Post Office auditors made a morning visit to the Coventry branch in 1997. Before her trial at Coventry Crown Court in 1997, Atwal, then 46, was told by the auditors that her cultural background may have played a role in her criminality, The Guardian newspaper reported on Thursday.

British Sikh says was urged to confess Post Office theft due to her Asian descent

Gaza death toll from Israeli attacks rises to 25,490

Gaza death toll from Israeli attacks rises to 25,490
Amid the unabated fighting between Israel and Hamas in the Gaza Strip, the death toll in the besieged enclave rose to 25,490, the Palestinian Health Ministry said on Tuesday. At least 195 Palestinians were killed and 354 others wounded in the last 24 hours, the ministry said in a statement,

Gaza death toll from Israeli attacks rises to 25,490

Indian-origin couple convicted in US for forced labour, physical abuse of kin

Indian-origin couple convicted in US for forced labour, physical abuse of kin
An Indian-origin Sikh couple has been convicted in the US for forcing a relative to work at their store for long hours, subjecting him to physical abuse and threats for years and confiscating his immigration documents. Harmanpreet Singh, 30, and Kulbir Kaur, 43, from Richmond, Virginia, enticed the victim -- then a minor -- to travel to the United States with false promises of helping him enrol in a school.

Indian-origin couple convicted in US for forced labour, physical abuse of kin