The 22-nation agency said it had selected former British Paralympic
sprinter John McFall as part of a new generation of 17 recruits
picked for astronaut training.
He will take part in a feasibility study designed to allow ESA to
assess the conditions needed for people with disabilities to take
part in future missions.
"It's been quite a whirlwind experience, given that as an amputee,
I'd never thought that being an astronaut was a possibility, so
excitement was a huge emotion," McFall said in an interview posted
on ESA's website.
He will join five new career astronauts and 11 reserves in training
after ESA replenished its astronaut ranks for the first time since
2009.
ESA posted openings last year for people fully capable of passing
its usual stringent psychological, cognitive and other tests who are
only prevented from becoming astronauts due to the constraints of
existing hardware in light of their disability.
It received 257 applications for the role of astronaut with a
disability, a parallel role that it terms "parastronaut".
Disability equality charity Scope described his selection as "a
major leap forward".
"Better representation of disabled people in influential roles will
really help improve attitudes and break down the barriers that many
disabled people face today," the charity's Head of Communications,
Alison Kerry, said.
Following a motorcycle accident that led to his right leg being
amputated at the age of 19, McFall went on to win the 100-metres
Bronze Medal at the Beijing Paralympic Games in 2008.
The 31-year-old doctor will help ESA engineers design changes in
hardware needed to open professional spaceflight to a wider group of
qualified candidates, the agency said.
"I think the message that I would give to future generations is that
science is for everyone and space travel hopefully can be for
everyone," McFall said.
(Reporting by Tim Hepher and Yiming Woo, additional reporting by
Kylie MacLellan in London; Editing by Nick Macfie, William Maclean)
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