Former Nasa scientist Mila Mitra says Isro's experiments will help improve our understanding of space and its effects on biology and micro-gravity.
Israel has denounced what it called "false reports" that its troops fired on civilians at or near the sites. It said that some soldiers fired warning shots on Sunday 1km away, and that they also opened fire after identifying "several suspects" on Monday and Tuesday.Very few videos have emerged from Gaza that show the incidents themselves, but BBC Verify has examined footage has surfaced and attempted to map how they unfolded.
All three are reported to have taken place near an aid distribution centre in the south-west of Gaza, in the Tal al-Sultan area.The site, named Safe Distribution Site 1 (SDS 1) by the GHF, opened on the 26 May. It is one of four such facilities, three of which are based in southern Gaza.The facilities are part of a new aid system - widely condemned by humanitarian groups - aiming to bypass the UN, which Israel has accused of failing to prevent Hamas diverting aid to its fighters. The UN says that has not been a big problem and that the GHF's system is unworkable and unethical.
However, only SDS 1 has been open and operational since Friday, according to official GHF posts online. It follows a chaotic opening week which saw the site overrun by desperate civilians, and projectiles being thrown towards Gazans at another facility at the GHF's northern site near Nuseirat on Thursday.A spokesperson for the foundation did not respond to messages asking why the other facilities have been closed for several days.
The GHF has also encouraged civilians to follow a set route when approaching SDS 1, directing them along a coastal road called al-Rashid Street.
The instructions have been issued on the foundation's official Facebook page."We will never be silenced, and we will never be lost," she said, holding back tears.
"Are our voices too loud for this house – is that why we are being punished?"During the debate, New Zealand's Foreign Minister Winston Peters was asked to apologise after calling Te Pāti Māori a "bunch of extremists" and said the country "has had enough of them".
The Māori party holds six of parliament's 123 seats.The Treaty Principles Bill, which sought to redefine New Zealand's founding treaty with Māori people, was voted down 112 votes to 11 in April - days after a government committee recommended that it should not proceed.