DUBAI: Manned missions launched by the UAE and șÚÁÏÉçÇű signal âa new era in Arab space exploration,â Emirati astronaut Sultan AlNeyadi has told Arab News from the International Space Station.
As the first Arab astronaut deployed on a long-term space mission, having arrived on the ISS in March alongside three Americans and three Russians, and the first Arab to perform a spacewalk, AlNeyadi is blazing a trail for the Arab worldâs budding space industry.
âHonestly, itâs a great honor to follow in the footsteps of the pioneers in space in the Arab world: Prince Sultan bin Salman, Muhammed Faris and my colleague, Hazzaa AlMansoori, who traveled to space before me,â he said during an interview conducted from the Mohammed Bin Rashid Space Centre in Dubai via video link with the ISS on Friday.
AlNeyadi was referring to șÚÁÏÉçÇűâs Prince Sultan, who flew aboard the American STS-51-G Space Shuttle Discovery mission in 1985, becoming the first Arab in space; Faris, the first Syrian and the second Arab in space, traveling aboard the Soyuz TM-3 to the Mir space station in 1987; and AlMansoori, the first Emirati in space, spending eight days on board the ISS in 2019.

Adnan AlRais, assistant director general (space operations and exploration sector) and mission manager of UAE Astronaut Programme, gives Arab News reporter Lama Alhamawi a tour of the Mohammed Bin Rashid Space Centre in Dubai. (AN Photo)
âItâs a great achievement for all of the missions, yet we need to look further into new challenges,â said AlNeyadi.
âThe mission we are conducting now, itâs a pure example of that. Spending six months on board the station is really important to participate in the human effort to push the boundaries of space exploration.
âAnd the EVA (extravehicular activity) that I conducted, itâs the first of (its) kind from the Arab world and definitely, it will open the door for many astronauts to join.â
He added: âDefinitely, itâs a new era. Itâs a new time for space explorations from the Arab world.â
șÚÁÏÉçÇű and the UAE have both been investing in their respective space industries, with a heavy emphasis on technology and medical research.
The Saudi Space Agency was launched four years ago by royal decree to accelerate economic diversification, enhance research and development, and raise private-sector participation in the global space industry.
Since its launch, the Kingdomâs state-funded space program has struck deals with several of the worldâs established space agencies, astronautical companies, and top universities to further their cooperation.
On May 22, Rayyanah Barnawi, a scientist who became the first Saudi woman to go into space, and Ali Alqarni, a trained fighter pilot, traveled to the ISS on a private mission.

Arab News reporter Lama Alhamawi at the Mohammed Bin Rashid Space Centre. (AN Photo)
âWhat we saw when the Saudi astronauts arrived from Axiom 2 to the International Space Station, it was a great moment to meet with them and to exchange the interest of space,â AlNeyadi said, referring to the visit by Barnawi and Alqarni.
âIt was, honestly, a kind of a surreal experience. Seeing two Arabs arriving at the station and ⊠chatting with them in Arabic. It was amazing and, again, it was exciting to share the experience with them so far. I was already two months into the mission, and I was telling them everything that I learned and telling them the fun stuff that they can do.
âTheir mission was purely scientific. I was happy to help and facilitate most of the activities on board. So, it was really a great honor and pleasure working with them.â
The UAE Astronaut Program was launched in 2017 by Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al-Maktoum, the vice president and prime minister of the UAE, and Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al-Nahyan, the then deputy supreme commander of the UAE Armed Forces and current UAE president.
AlNeyadi, who was the backup for AlMansoori in the UAEâs first scientific mission to the ISS, under the slogan âZayedâs Ambition,â was selected for that mission from over 4,000 candidates following a series of mental and physical tests.
In preparation for the mission, AlNeyadi began his training in September 2018 at the Yuri Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Centre at Star City in Moscow. He also received training in Houston, Texas, and Cologne, Germany, as part of partnership agreements with major space agencies, including NASA, ESA and JAXA.
AlNeyadi underwent more than 90 courses exceeding 1,400 hours, including safety and survival training, how to maneuver in a spacesuit weighing up to 10 kg, and daily tasks such as preparing food in space, use of cameras, and communications.
His intense training has set him in good stead for the exciting, although completely alien, experience of living and working for a prolonged period of time in zero gravity, 260 miles above Earthâs surface.
âThis is my favorite part of the day, actually, when I exercise. We have a device that we exercise upon and itâs facing the largest window on the station,â AlNeyadi told Arab News.
âI see everything passing in front of me: the mountains, the oceans, the places that I visited before.
âSo, the best part is taking pictures of these places and sharing that with the audience and itâs amazing. You can cover the whole Earth and in 90 minutes you see the night and the day. And itâs surreal to see everything at that speed.â
Notwithstanding the breathtaking views of the blue marble below, a typical day aboard the ISS sounds more familiar than many might expect. âI normally wake up at 4 a.m. for my prayers and then I go back to sleep if I can,â said AlNeyadi.
âOtherwise, my final wake-up time is 6:30, when I go and have breakfast and then we gather together around the ATU (audio terminal unit), which is the communication device, and we get the brief from different control centers all over the globe.
âAnd then weâll start the daily routine, be it space science or maintenance, or doing inventory. All of these activities are current, and we do this every day up until noon, when we gather for midday break and we have lunch and we chat about the daily activities as well. We continue until 7:30, (when) we gather for the final debrief of the day.
âThis is a daily routine that we have. We have specific days when we receive visiting vehicles or (conduct) extravehicular activities, and that would be the activity throughout the day. And we do have weekends where we gather as a whole, the seven crew members, and we watch movies and we have meals together. So, itâs always fun.â
Serving aboard the ISS is not without its challenges, however. Far from his loved ones, AlNeyadi is looking forward to some home comforts upon his return to Earth later this year. âI do miss my family. I want to meet them first,â the father-of-six told Arab News.
âTwo things I want to have are a hot shower and then a real cup of coffee.â
One thing that will stick with AlNeyadi for the rest of his life, however, is the day he became the first Arab to conduct a spacewalk â stepping clear of the ISS with nothing but mile after mile of sky beneath his feet and the eternity of outer space above his head.
âIt was amazing, actually, conducting the spacewalk itself,â said AlNeyadi. âItâs, I would say, the crown jewel of the mission itself. It was seven hours. I didnât feel it because I was really focused on the task and conducted the task with no issues.
âI remember taking a small note on my cuff checklist â a reminder to me â âImpossible is possible,â which is the motto of the UAE government, that we have nothing impossible. If we believe in a target, we work hard for it, we can achieve it.â
AlNeyadi was born on May 23, 1981, in Umm Ghafa, 30 km southeast of Al-Ain, in Abu Dhabi, where he attended primary and secondary school before following in his fatherâs footsteps to serve in the military, where he studied communications engineering.
He began his higher education in the UK, receiving a bachelorâs degree in electronics and communications engineering from the University of Brighton, before receiving a masterâs degree in IT from Australiaâs Griffith University in 2008, where he later earned a Ph.D.
In a series of videos produced on board the ISS for students back on Earth, AlNeyadi has sought to highlight the importance of hard work and the relevance of STEM subjects.

Rayyanah Barnawi â the first Saudi woman in space and the first Arab woman on the iSS â conducted scientific experiments during the Ax-2 mission, including tissue engineering and regenerative medicine. (Twitter/Astro_Rayyanah)
âI think part of the mission itself is to reach (out) to the audience and to showcase whatever youâre doing on board the station,â AlNeyadi said of his videos.
âIt is very important science, very important technology that we showcase. But we need to show this important stuff in an easy way and an interactive way so people can learn.
âAnd this is, honestly, a way to encourage the younger students to seek STEM education. That is science, technology, engineering and mathematics.â
In doing so, AlNeyadi hopes to inspire the next generation of Arab astronauts who will take the Middle Eastâs nascent space programs to the moon, to Mars, and beyond.
âWhen we talk about STEM education, this can open up a whole lot of opportunities for the youngsters,â he said.
âSo, in a fun and interactive way, I wanted to show this â the science is fun, the science is really cool â so the newer generation can think of something important in the future.â