Iran launches its first satellite
Iran has launched its first domestically made satellite into
orbit, state media reports.
TV commentary said Monday's night-time launch from a
Safir-2 rocket was "another achievement for Iranian scientists under sanctions".
The satellite was designed for research and telecommunications purposes, the television report said.
Iran is subject to
UN sanctions as some Western powers think it is trying to build a nuclear bomb, which it denies.
Tehran says its
nuclear ambitions are limited to the production of energy, and has emphasized its
satellite project is entirely peaceful.
The launch of the
Omid (Hope) satellite had been expected and was clearly timed to coincide with the 30th anniversary of the Iranian revolution, according to the BBC News.
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said the satellite was launched to spread "monotheism, peace and justice" in the world.
But the launch could cause alarm in the West because of fears the technology could be used to make a long-range missile, possibly with a nuclear warhead, said BBC News.
Iran will no doubt reply that it is once again being judged by double standards for using a technology that is commonplace in many other parts of the world, he adds.
Speaking after the launch,
Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki stressed the project was peaceful.
"Iran's satellite technology is for purely peaceful purposes and to meet the needs of the country," Reuters agency quoted
Mottaki as saying on the fringes of an
African Union summit in
Ethiopia.
Last August,
Iran said it had successfully launched a rocket capable of carrying its first domestically built satellite, having in February launched a low-orbit research rocket as part of preparations for the satellite launch.
That launch marked the inauguration of a new space centre, at an unidentified desert location, which included an underground control station and satellite launch pad.
The
White House called the 2008 launch "unfortunate", warning it would further isolate Iran from the global community.
In February 2007,
Iran said it had launched a rocket capable of reaching space - before it made a parachute-assisted descent to Earth.
In October 2005, a
Russian rocket launched
Iran's first satellite, the Sina-1, which carried photographic and telecommunications equipment.