‘Borderless world’, as seen from space, highlights need for collaboration and inclusivity, astronauts and NASA experts say

Expo 2020 Dubai: Space Week – Day 2 roundup

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Country borders do not exist when viewed from space – a simple observation made by astronauts and experts at a panel organised for Expo’s Space Week that served to highlight the need for collaboration, inclusion and diversity in the space sector for it to be successful.

“You can’t describe the view from space,” said Emirati astronaut Hazza Al Mansouri, speaking during the Space Week event at Terra – The Sustainability Pavilion on Monday.

“You learn something – you notice there are no borders between countries. It’s only continents, mountains, the seas, and that’s it. I’ve learnt that, as humans, we have to walk together to achieve amazing things. Maybe we are divided here [on Earth], but up there we are united.”

Soichi Noguchi, Japanese aeronautical engineer and Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) astronaut, and Elizabeth Landau, Senior Communications Specialist at NASA, joined Mansouri, who made headlines in 2019 for becoming the first Emirati in space, and the first Arab on the International Space Station (ISS).

“Space knows no borders; it’s a place for everybody,” Landau said. “It’s an amazing topic for everyone to share in because it affects all of us. We’re in space right now, and we have so much to learn and be inspired by.”

Noguchi, who has completed three missions and spent 344 days in space, added: “What have I learnt? What’s important about space flight? I would say diversity. Obviously, there are a lot of people in the team, and all of us contribute to the success of the mission. So diversity, and of course inclusion, is the key to the success of human space flight. We have to be diversified, and we have to include a lot of different players for the success of missions.”

The panel, ‘Dignified Storytelling: Stories of Great Ambition and Hope’, was part of Expo 2020’s Space Week running from 17-23 October in association with the UAE Space Agency and the Mohammed bin Rashid Space Centre.

An initiative between Dubai Cares, Expo 2020 and the UAE’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, ‘Dignified Storytelling’ is a series of sessions during the 182 days of Expo that focus on avoiding stereotypes, stigmas and biased narratives, while ensuring respect for social and cultural norms.

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