• Alia El Neyadi is considered the “first” Emirati ballet star.
    Alia El Neyadi is considered the “first” Emirati ballet star.
  • At the age of 22, the “first” Emirati ballet star was contemplating a career change, and had decided to sacrifice her first love for an office job.
    At the age of 22, the “first” Emirati ballet star was contemplating a career change, and had decided to sacrifice her first love for an office job.
  • In truth, Al Neyadi’s “retirement” did not last long. After eight months off the stage, she was dancing again.
    In truth, Al Neyadi’s “retirement” did not last long. After eight months off the stage, she was dancing again.
  • She is now preparing to perform alongside the historic Donetsk Opera and Ballet Theatre at Emirates Palace, on Friday, April 20, in the Abu Dhabi Classics’ season closing concert.
    She is now preparing to perform alongside the historic Donetsk Opera and Ballet Theatre at Emirates Palace, on Friday, April 20, in the Abu Dhabi Classics’ season closing concert.
  • Onstage since the age of eight, Al Neyadi, front left, was billed as the “first Emirati ballerina” while still a teenager.
    Onstage since the age of eight, Al Neyadi, front left, was billed as the “first Emirati ballerina” while still a teenager.
  • “I really was retiring – I was about to put my shoes down and say, ‘it’s time for me’,” remembers the 24-year-old. “But, I just missed dancing. I knew that I had to come back, and I had to do something completely different – and this is the plan that came out of it: Why don’t I be a part of a very well-known ballet, with very well-known dancers? I was like, ‘OK, let me do that’.”
    “I really was retiring – I was about to put my shoes down and say, ‘it’s time for me’,” remembers the 24-year-old. “But, I just missed dancing. I knew that I had to come back, and I had to do something completely different – and this is the plan that came out of it: Why don’t I be a part of a very well-known ballet, with very well-known dancers? I was like, ‘OK, let me do that’.”

What tempted the UAE’s ‘first’ ballet star Alia Al Neyadi back to the stage


  • English
  • Arabic

After her last high-profile, hometown performance, Alia Al Neyadi hung up her ballet slippers for what she pledged would be the final time.

At the age of 22, the “first” Emirati ballet star was contemplating a career change, and had decided to sacrifice her first love for an office job. Ballet had, at that point, been a part of her life every day for the past 18 years.

Fast forward almost two years to the day, and now Al Neyadi is preparing for her biggest dancing challenge yet – performing alongside the historic Donetsk Opera and Ballet Theatre at Emirates Palace, on Friday, April 20, in the Abu Dhabi Classics’ season closing concert.

If anything was going to tempt Al Neyadi back to the stage, it was likely to be the chance to dance alongside celebrity soloists Ivan Vasiliev and Maria Vinogradova in the classic ballet Le Corsaire. Quite a comeback.

A life after ballet

In truth, Al Neyadi's "retirement" – which was announced to The National in April 2016 before a gala performance with the UAE's Fantasia Ballet at Abu Dhabi National Theatre – did not last long. After eight months off the stage, she was dancing again.

“I really was retiring – I was about to put my shoes down and say, ‘it’s time for me’,” remembers the 24-year-old. “But, I just missed dancing.”

“I knew that I had to come back, and I had to do something completely different – and this is the plan that came out of it: Why don’t I be a part of a very well-known ballet, with very well-known dancers? I was like, ‘OK, let me do that’.”

The career that Al Neyadi chose as her professional priority was as a performing arts programmer with TCA Abu Dhabi – the government tourism and culture team behind Abu Dhabi Classics – and her first big coup was booking the Donetsk Opera and Ballet Theatre, a historic Ukrainian troupe directed by the internationally acclaimed dancer Vadim Pisarev.

Based on the version renowned Russian choreographer Yury Grigorovich first staged at Moscow's Bolshoi Theatre in 1994, Le Corsaire will mark the first time ballet has been presented as part of the series, which typically focuses on classical music.

The compromise Al Neyadi tried to forge when retiring was sacrificing ballet performance for ballet promotion; in reality, each role enforced and enabled the other. "When I graduated in 2016, I said I would give 100 per cent of my time to helping promote the ballet," Al Neyadi says. "I got into the government to help bring performers and to do educational exchanges with academies from all over the world – to bring ballet to the UAE. I wanted to do something to really help the development of the performing arts.

“But when I really started culturally engaging with so many people, I had new inspirations – I think when you do something for a very long time, you always need to step back, refocus, regroup, and deeply think about why you really love what you do – and being around so many artistic people, the vision that TCA gives of how important culture is, I just knew that I had to come back to it.”

Training for her return

The powers that be could not have found a more fitting ambassador for the art of ballet, or the arts in general. Onstage since the age of eight, Al Neyadi was billed as the “first Emirati ballerina” while still a teenager.

With more than 70 performances to date, it's a label that no longer fazes her. "I didn't realise this title really existed until a few years ago when I was sent to Ukraine for a competition, and the list said: 'Alia is the first ballet dancer to represent the UAE'," she says. 

"My personality helps me with that. In general, I'm very confident in what I do, I'm always up for challenges and trying things people aren't used to. If something's difficult, I'm even more intrigued to do it. I think that helps carry this kind of thing."

And there is a lot of heavy lifting involved. Al Neyadi has been in training for Le Corsaire for seven months, rehearsing more than 20 hours a week. Based on Lord Byron's poem of the same name, the story follows pirate chief Conrad and the young Greek woman he loves, Medora. Al Neyadi plays one of Medora's encouraging friends, alongside the female lead taken by Vinogradova, a leading soloist with the world-renowned Bolshoi Ballet – who is married to the male lead Vasiliev, a multi-award-winning heart-throb nicknamed "Rocket Man" by the adoring critics. Not that such prestigious company makes Al Neyadi shy.

"After so many years, I just want to make sure people like my performance, but I'm not really scared of the stage," she says. "I'm past that part where I get freaked out – when I hear the song, the melody, I get really into the character and the story, and I just go out and dance."

Finding acceptance

After all, Al Neyadi has been dancing for as long as she can remember. Her mother Svetlana, originally from Ukraine, founded the UAE’s first ballet school, Abu Dhabi’s Fantasia Ballet Centre, in 1997.

Sitting in the corner while her mother gave classes, the toddler Al Neyadi would wobble to the front of the room and join in. But as she grew older, pressure mounted from some who took issue with the unfamiliar ballet traditions and attire.

"It took me a very long time [to be accepted]," she said. "In the beginning when I came out as a ballerina, I was only eight years old, so it was all small tutus and everybody thought it was very cute. The challenging part was when I got a bit older at 14, 15, I went in some competitions and people started to ask questions – they asked me 'are you really a Muslim, or not?'

"In ballet, and art in general, we don't mix it with religion – that's number one in my rules. This is something completely different. My persona on stage is nothing to do with who I am [offstage]. When I go out, I wear what the culture is used to – I wear the abaya, I wear the shayla, I don't cover my face but I cover my hair – and that's my preference. Ballet is just something else I'm interested in, and because it is so new and people are not used to it, they tend to ask questions."

It may be encountering these queries at such a formative age that inspired Al Neyadi's tireless urge to promote the arts in the UAE. While bringing a world-renowned ballet troupe to Abu Dhabi is progress – and performing alongside them a still greater achievement – Al Neyadi believes creative cultural traditions will be truly forged with continued nurturing of homegrown artists in the UAE, and a big part of this is providing the infrastructure to support them.

Promoting arts and culture in the UAE

First on her wish list is the realisation of the planned Performing Arts Centre set for Saadiyat Island, a stunning futuristic complex designed by the late "starchitect", Zaha Hadid.

“It’s very new for the Emirati culture to go to a museum and stay there for hours looking at paintings, people don’t understand,” she says.

"I feel like the arts culture is a very different language, but somebody has to start – we have the Louvre [Abu Dhabi] now, we will have the Guggenheim [Abu Dhabi], we will also have our own Zayed National Museum – and hopefully the Performing Arts Centre, which is extremely needed in the UAE.

"Dubai of course has this beautiful opera house, but we don't often have our own artists in it – we don't have the national orchestra of Dubai, or the national ballet of the UAE. A venue is always nice, but my goal is to have an actual home – not just for the ballet, but for all the arts, and have the actual public performing in the company – that's the next step we have to take.

"I know now after so many years that ballet is way more accepted than it was before, but people still wonder 'is this serious, is this supposed to be a job?' But how can you make this a job in the UAE? We don't really hire anyone like that – unlike countries in Europe, or the USA.

"I try to make people understand that I'm not selling a fairy tale – this is also something very difficult. I'm not doing ballet as a full-time job. I mean, it is a full-time job but I still have another job – and until we get to have ballet as a job, there's a long way to go."

Al Neyadi performs with the Donetsk Opera and Ballet Theatre in Le Corsaire at Emirates Palace, Abu Dhabi, on Friday, April 20, 8pm. Tickets from Dh205, see abudhabimusic.ae

Ten tax points to be aware of in 2026

1. Domestic VAT refund amendments: request your refund within five years

If a business does not apply for the refund on time, they lose their credit.

2. E-invoicing in the UAE

Businesses should continue preparing for the implementation of e-invoicing in the UAE, with 2026 a preparation and transition period ahead of phased mandatory adoption. 

3. More tax audits

Tax authorities are increasingly using data already available across multiple filings to identify audit risks. 

4. More beneficial VAT and excise tax penalty regime

Tax disputes are expected to become more frequent and more structured, with clearer administrative objection and appeal processes. The UAE has adopted a new penalty regime for VAT and excise disputes, which now mirrors the penalty regime for corporate tax.

5. Greater emphasis on statutory audit

There is a greater need for the accuracy of financial statements. The International Financial Reporting Standards standards need to be strictly adhered to and, as a result, the quality of the audits will need to increase.

6. Further transfer pricing enforcement

Transfer pricing enforcement, which refers to the practice of establishing prices for internal transactions between related entities, is expected to broaden in scope. The UAE will shortly open the possibility to negotiate advance pricing agreements, or essentially rulings for transfer pricing purposes. 

7. Limited time periods for audits

Recent amendments also introduce a default five-year limitation period for tax audits and assessments, subject to specific statutory exceptions. While the standard audit and assessment period is five years, this may be extended to up to 15 years in cases involving fraud or tax evasion. 

8. Pillar 2 implementation 

Many multinational groups will begin to feel the practical effect of the Domestic Minimum Top-Up Tax (DMTT), the UAE's implementation of the OECD’s global minimum tax under Pillar 2. While the rules apply for financial years starting on or after January 1, 2025, it is 2026 that marks the transition to an operational phase.

9. Reduced compliance obligations for imported goods and services

Businesses that apply the reverse-charge mechanism for VAT purposes in the UAE may benefit from reduced compliance obligations. 

10. Substance and CbC reporting focus

Tax authorities are expected to continue strengthening the enforcement of economic substance and Country-by-Country (CbC) reporting frameworks. In the UAE, these regimes are increasingly being used as risk-assessment tools, providing tax authorities with a comprehensive view of multinational groups’ global footprints and enabling them to assess whether profits are aligned with real economic activity. 

Contributed by Thomas Vanhee and Hend Rashwan, Aurifer

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How to register as a donor

1) Organ donors can register on the Hayat app, run by the Ministry of Health and Prevention

2) There are about 11,000 patients in the country in need of organ transplants

3) People must be over 21. Emiratis and residents can register. 

4) The campaign uses the hashtag  #donate_hope

The Pope's itinerary

Sunday, February 3, 2019 - Rome to Abu Dhabi
1pm: departure by plane from Rome / Fiumicino to Abu Dhabi
10pm: arrival at Abu Dhabi Presidential Airport


Monday, February 4
12pm: welcome ceremony at the main entrance of the Presidential Palace
12.20pm: visit Abu Dhabi Crown Prince at Presidential Palace
5pm: private meeting with Muslim Council of Elders at Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque
6.10pm: Inter-religious in the Founder's Memorial


Tuesday, February 5 - Abu Dhabi to Rome
9.15am: private visit to undisclosed cathedral
10.30am: public mass at Zayed Sports City – with a homily by Pope Francis
12.40pm: farewell at Abu Dhabi Presidential Airport
1pm: departure by plane to Rome
5pm: arrival at the Rome / Ciampino International Airport

Sui Dhaaga: Made in India

Director: Sharat Katariya

Starring: Varun Dhawan, Anushka Sharma, Raghubir Yadav

3.5/5

The years Ramadan fell in May

1987

1954

1921

1888

WOMAN AND CHILD

Director: Saeed Roustaee

Starring: Parinaz Izadyar, Payman Maadi

Rating: 4/5

What can victims do?

Always use only regulated platforms

Stop all transactions and communication on suspicion

Save all evidence (screenshots, chat logs, transaction IDs)

Report to local authorities

Warn others to prevent further harm

Courtesy: Crystal Intelligence

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If you go

The flights

The closest international airport for those travelling from the UAE is Denver, Colorado. British Airways (www.ba.com) flies from the UAE via London from Dh3,700 return, including taxes. From there, transfers can be arranged to the ranch or it’s a seven-hour drive. Alternatively, take an internal flight to the counties of Cody, Casper, or Billings

The stay

Red Reflet offers a series of packages, with prices varying depending on season. All meals and activities are included, with prices starting from US$2,218 (Dh7,150) per person for a minimum stay of three nights, including taxes. For more information, visit red-reflet-ranch.net.

 

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