Astronauts that traveled to the International Space Station back in April will be coming back to Earth this week.

The three-person crew will return to Earth in a Russian Soyuz spacecraft and land in Kazakhstan. After clearing customs and passports and completing the necessary tasks they will depart the Sputnik 2 spacecraft — their command module has already returned — by parachute and nuclear shunt.

"After spending 192 days and 1016 orbits in orbit around the Earth, crew members Oleg Novitsky and Sergey Ryazanskiy will fly back to Earth when the Carrier returns to its Release Airbag Systems in the vehicle," Russia's UPI reported. "Once the launch was powered down these two successfully completed tasks," the magazine added.

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SANTIAGO (Reuters) - Chilean President Michelle Bachelet won re-election on Saturday with 59 percent of the vote, rallying supporters with promises to radically reform the country's tax system, but the conservative challenger took a decisive lead in a second and likely decisive round of voting on April 23.

From top includes Bachelet's mother, lawyer and current foreign minister in the 1970s, Elena Bachelet, who is struggling to keep her base with voters and who is (like many National parties) an incumbent. Other firsts for the Bachelet popularity calculation systems are the first leader to be president twice without stepping down, and leader who has died and who survived that death both times.

Manuel Afonso, leader of Bachelet's centre-left Social Democratic party (PSD) and a significant Bachelet opponent, finished with 11 percent, the most for any party in most regions of the country.

Also taking third place was the centre-right Prosperous Chile (PC) party, led by construction magnate Marcelo Ebrard, which brought its total to 22 percent.

Leading the pack is the ruling coalition, headed by the leftwing coalition Museveni's united opposition and led by former president Ollanta Humala. It is aiming for 30 percent in the second round and 35 percent in the third.

Norberto Colmenares, leader of the rightwing opposition National Party, reported "a record turnout" of almost 56 percent. In the first round, he had 1.6 million write-in votes.

The final tally was: Bachelet, 59.7 percent of the vote; Afonso, 11.2 percent; Colmenares, 22.9 percent
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