Encyclopedia of Islam



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Gulf States


five smaller Arab Gulf States, plus Saudi Arabia, 

formed the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) on 

May 25, 1981. For political and strategic reasons, 

Iran and Iraq are conspicuously absent from this 

regional alliance.

bAhrAIN


The smallest of the Gulf States, the island nation 

of Bahrain has a population of 718,306 (2008 

est.), more than 235,000 of whom are nonnation-

als. The majority (70 percent) consists of follow-

ers of t

Welve


-i

mam


  s

hiism


 who maintain close 

ties to Shii religious centers in Iraq and Iran. The 

government is controlled by the Sunni Al Khalifa, 

a merchant family. Bahrain has been subject in the 

past to Portuguese and British rule, but it achieved 

independence in 1971, when it became officially 

known as the State of Bahrain. At that time, a 

constitution was approved and an elected national 

assembly was created, but it was disbanded in 

1975. It was then ruled as a conservative shaykh-

dom (emirate) until 2002, when the government 

was reclassified as a monarchy and the national 

assembly was reconstituted in response to Shii 

demands for more participation in governance.

KuWAIT

Situated on the western side of where the Shatt 



al-Arab waterway empties into the Persian Gulf, 

Kuwait is bordered by Iraq to the north and Saudi 

Arabia to the south. Its population is 2.6 million 

(2008 est.), of whom as many as 60 percent are 

nonnationals. Most of the people are Sunni Mus-

lims and followers of the m

aliki

  l


egal

  s


chool

About 25 percent are adherents of Twelve-Imam 



Shiism; many of the country’s wealthy merchants 

are Shiis with roots in Iraq and Iran. There is 

a mixed population of non-Muslim residents, 

including Christians, Hindus, Buddhists, and 

Sikhs. Kuwait’s ruling family is the Al Sabah, who 

are Sunni Arabs. They have played a leading role 

in Kuwaiti affairs since the 18th century, when 

Kuwait City, the capital, emerged as a regional 

commercial center. Once closely allied to Otto-

man authorities in southern Iraq, they agreed to 

become a British protectorate in 1899. The coun-

try achieved independence in 1961, and its gov-

ernment is classified as a constitutional monarchy, 

which consists of a ruling emir from the Al Sabbah 

and a national assembly. In reaction to opposition 

and criticism from the assembly, however, the 

emir has intervened to disband it several times 

since the 1960s. Shiis in Kuwait became politically 

active in the aftermath of the i

ranian


 r

evolUtion

oF

 1978–1979. Some Shii radicalism was stirred 



up by pro-Iranian agents, but activism has also 

come about as a result of Shii frustration with the 

lack of a proportional voice in national affairs. The 

government has occasionally resorted to harsh 

countermeasures, and eruptions of violence have 

occurred. Sunni Islamist groups, some affiliated 

with the m

Uslim


  b

rotherhood

, have also formed 

there. The government, as a result, has made some 

concessions to such groups, such as supporting 

conservative Islamic legislation with respect to 

Women

’s rights and alcohol consumption.



From August 1990 to March 1991, Iraq invaded 

and annexed Kuwait on the orders of s

addam

h

Usayn



, Iraq’s president. Although the Al Sabah 

were able to escape, many Kuwaitis and nonna-

tionals suffered. The occupation was ended by an 

armed international coalition of forces authorized 

by the United Nations. During the 1990s, Kuwait 

supported efforts to contain Husayn’s regime, and 

it allowed the country to be used as a staging area 

for the 2003 invasion and occupation of Iraq by a 

second armed coalition, led by the United States 

and Britain.

OMAN

Located at the southeastern end of the Arabian 



Peninsula at the Strait of Hormuz and on the 

shores of the Gulf of Oman and the Arabian Sea, 

the Sultanate of Oman is the third-largest country 

in the region. The UAE borders it in the north-

west, Saudi Arabia in the west, and Yemen in the 

southwest. The country, whose capital is Musqat, 

is ruled by a member of the Al Bu Said family, 


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