Pan African Space Program (LOS)

The Pan African Space Program is a space program operated by the Pan American Economic Organisation to explore space. It is currently one of the 5 members of the ISS Union who run the International Space Station. Its headquarters are in Cairo in the Egyptian Caliphate.

The members of the program must contribute a entrance fee of 100 million dollars this funds future development of the program. A annual payment of 50 million dollars must be payed for continued membership though bigger nations offer more into the program.

The program began in 1971 after the Principality of Cape Afrika, Kingdom of Southern Namibia and the Empire of Madagascar united to form a new space program called the Southern African Space Program. Up north, Western Libya, the Sultanate of Egypt and the Union of the Nile combined there space program to form the North African Program for Space Aeronautics. In 1978, Anteffa Hakann became Prime Minister of the Union of the Nile and insisted on better north-south relations. Under his plan he wrote the Pan African Space Treaty to establish the organisation and it was a huge success.

The program continues to operate today and the new Galacticus Rover B-19 has just been launched in October 2016 to land on Jupiter.