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Russia launches first rocket from repaired Baikonur launch pad

By Thomson Reuters Mar 22, 2026 | 7:36 AM

MOSCOW, March 22 (Reuters) – Russia launched a Soyuz rocket from a repaired launch pad at its Baikonur cosmodrome ​in Kazakhstan on Sunday, restoring ‌its capability to fly to the International Space Station for the first time since the launch pad was damaged last year.

At 1200 ‌GMT, ​a Soyuz-2.1a rocket carrying ⁠the Progress MS-33 ⁠cargo spacecraft lifted off and was placed into orbit, Russia’s space agency said. The spacecraft is expected to dock ​with the International Space Station on March 24.

The launch pad had been ⁠out of commission since ⁠it was badly damaged in ​November when a Soyuz MS-28 spacecraft with ​two Russian cosmonauts and one NASA ‌astronaut on board blasted off. No one was hurt and the crew safely reached the space station, but the ⁠incident deprived Russia of its sole means of sending crew or cargo back to the ⁠ISS for ‌months.

While Russia has other cosmodromes ⁠on its own territory and ​Baikonur ‌has other launch sites, the ​damaged launch ⁠pad was the only one able to handle the Soyuz rocket that carries crew capsules and Progress cargo vehicles to the ISS.

(Reporting by Maxim RodionovEditing by ​Peter Graff)