"We have seen the report and congratulate India on the Mars satellite entering the orbit successfully," Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Hua Chunying told a media briefing here while replying to a question on the successful sojourn of India's Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM) spacecraft 'Mangalyaan'."This is pride of India and Pride of Asia and also is a landmark progress in humankind's exploration of outer space. So we congratulate India on that," she said.Responding to a question on whether China sees any room to work with India on space exploration in future, she said, "China always maintained peaceful development of outer space and carry out cooperation in this regard.""We are willing to work with the world to peacefully develop and explore the outer space and make contribution to the sustainable development and long term peace of the outer space," Hua said.Though China has been successful in launching manned missions into space as well as unmanned missions to Moon, it has not been successful in launching a probe to Mars so far.A Russian spacecraft carrying China's first Mars exploration probe, Yinghuo-1, which was launched in 2011, crashed a year later.Mangalyaan provides a lead to India in this regard, though China which has an advanced space programme is in the process of constructing a space station which is expected to be ready by 2020.Watched by Prime Minister Modi, Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) scientists broke into wild cheers and congratulated each other after the 1,350 kg spacecraft was manoeuvred into its designated place, capping a 666 million km journey that began on November 5 last year.When Mangalyaan was launched in November last, state-run Global Times daily in its editorial at that time said it would give an advantage to India."India has an ambitious goal of leading Asia in this area, especially having an advantage over China," it had said.Mangalyaan provides a lead to India in this regard though China which had an advanced space programme is in the process of constructing a space station which is expected to be ready by 2020."As poor as India is, New Delhi managed to carry out its Mars exploration programme with a budget of only USD 74 million, much less than the spending of China and Japan," it said.Some Chinese experts likened the entry of the Mars probe into orbit as being equivalent to hitting a "golf ball from Tokyo into a hole in Paris".