TWO astronauts from the US and Russia are safe after an emergency landing in Kazakhstan following the failure of a rocket taking them to the International Space Station.

Nasa astronaut Nick Hague and Roscosmos’s Alexey Ovchinin lifted off as scheduled at 2.40pm local time from the Baikonur Cosmodrome on a Soyuz booster rocket. But Roscosmos and Nasa said the three-stage booster suffered an emergency shutdown of its second stage.

The capsule jettisoned from the booster and went into a ballistic descent, landing at a sharper than normal angle and subjecting the crew to heavy G-forces.

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Nasa said that rescue teams have reached Hague and Ovchinin and they have been taken out of the capsule and were in good condition.

The capsule landed about 12 miles east of the city of Dzhezkazgan. The emergency is the latest mishap for the Russian space programme, which has been dogged by a string of launch failures and other incidents in recent years.

“Thank God, the crew is alive,” Russian president Vladimir Putin’s spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, told reporters when it became clear that the crew had landed safely.

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Russian deputy prime minister Yuri Borisov said all manned launches will be suspended

pending an investigation into the cause of the failure. Borisov added that Russia will fully share all relevant information with the US.

It was to be the first space mission for Hague, who joined Nasa’s astronaut corps in 2013. Ovchinin spent six months on the orbiting outpost in 2016.

Roscosmos chief Dmitry Rogozin, who watched the launch together with Nasa administrator Jim Bridenstine, tweeted that a panel has been set up to investigate the cause of the booster failure.

Earlier this week, Bridenstine emphasised that collaboration with Russia’s Roscosmos remains important.

Relations between Moscow and Washington have sunk to post-Cold War lows over the crisis in Ukraine, the war in Syria and allegations of Russian meddling in the 2016 US presidential vote, but they have maintained co-operation in space research.