RIYADH (AFP) – Saudi Arabia will send its first ever woman astronaut on a space mission later this year, the latest move by the kingdom to revamp its ultra-conservative image.
Rayyana Barnawi will join fellow Saudi Ali Al-Qarni on a 10-day mission to the International Space Station (ISS), the official Saudi Press Agency (SPA) said.
Barnawi and Al-Qarni will fly to the ISS aboard a SpaceX Dragon spacecraft as part of a mission this spring by the private space company Axiom Space, SPA and Axiom said.
Also on board Ax-2 will be former NASA astronaut Peggy Whitson who will be making her fourth flight to the ISS, and Tennessee businessman who will serve as pilot John Shoffner.
The Ax-2 crew will be launched to the ISS by a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Launch Complex 39A at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
Oil-rich Saudi Arabia will be following in the footsteps of the neighbouring United Arab Emirates, which in 2019 became the first Arab country to send one of its citizens into space.
Astronaut Hazzaa al-Mansoori spent eight days on the ISS.
Another Emirati, Sultan al-Neyadi, will also make a voyage to the space station later this month.
Nicknamed the “Sultan of Space”, the 41-year-old Neyadi will become the first Arab astronaut to spend six months in space when he blasts off for the ISS aboard a Falcon 9 rocket.
Saudi Arabia’s foray into space is not its first, however. In 1985, Saudi royal Prince Sultan bin Salman bin Abdulaziz, an air force pilot, took part in a United States-organised space mission, becoming the first Arab Muslim to travel into space.
In 2018, Saudi Arabia set up a space programme and last year launched another to send astronauts into space, all part of Prince Salman’s Vision 2030 agenda for economic diversification.
Axiom Space carried out its first private astronaut mission to the ISS in April 2022. Four private astronauts spent 17 days in orbit as part of Ax-1.