Corruption and scandal threatens Russia's new HK$44billion space cosmodrome
Putin has hailed the new cosmodrome, but construction of the launchpad, due to be ready in December, has been hindered by corruption

Designed to showcase a revamped space industry and divert attention from recent failures, Russia's multi-billion-dollar project to build its own space launchpad to take over from Soviet-era Baikonur has been mired in corruption scandals.
Hailed by President Vladimir Putin as the country's biggest construction project, it has an estimated budget of 300 billion rubles (HK$44 billion).
The cosmodrome started going up in the remote far eastern Amur region in 2012.
Since then, 10,000 workers have toiled to build 115 kilometres of roads in this immense but scarcely populated region, as well as 125 kilometres of railways and a town with housing for 25,000 people.
But in the same period, Russia has opened dozens of probes into embezzlement of funds, with Moscow forced to top up the budget and even deploy student labour to help complete the strategically vital project on schedule by December.
The agency in charge of the project, Spetsstroi, is a state organisation overseen by the defence ministry and ultimately by Putin.