The next crew members of the International Space Station (ISS) US astronaut Michael Fossum (L), Russian cosmonaut Sergey Volkov (C) and Japanese astronaut Satoshi Furukawa (R) shake hands on May 13, 2011. - Photo by AFP

MOSCOW: Three astronauts on Tuesday landed safely in the Kazakh steppe aboard a Russian Soyuz capsule after a stay of over five months aboard in the International Space Station, Russian mission control said.

Nasa astronaut Mike Fossum, Russian cosmonaut Sergei Volkov and Satoshi Furukawa of Japan's JAXA space agency landed at the break of dawn some 90 kilometers north of the town of Arkalyk at 8:26 am after spending 165 days in space.

“It has landed,” said a message flashed on the screen at Moscow mission control shown in a live relay.

State television pictures showed the astronauts being extracted from the capsule apparently in good health.

Initial reports said that the Soyuz capsule had landed on its side rather than its bottom after descending to Earth with a parachute but such landing was not unusual.

Volkov, the first of the astronauts to be carried out of the capsule, was placed in a chair with a blue rug to protect himself from the sub zero morning temperatures as dawn broke over the steppe.

Both Fossum and Furukawa were then both safely extracted from the Soyuz, state television pictures showed.

It was during their stay on the ISS that a Russian unmanned Progress supply ship carrying supplies for the station crashed into Siberia in August shortly after launch, forcing a complete revision of the timetable for the manned spaceflight.

Their return to Earth leaves three astronauts remaining on the ISS, American Dan Burbank and Russians Anton Shkaplerov and Anatoly Ivanishin who blasted off from Russia's Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on November 14.

They will be joined by another multinational crew of three astronauts that is due to blast off from Baikonur on December 21.

Following the retirement of the US shuttle in July, Russia is currently the only nation capable of transporting humans to the ISS. ?

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