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This file is about exchanges between the Sultanate of Muscat and Oman, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD)....
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This file relates to The Sultanate of Oman and its dealings with the Omani rebel movement. It contains correspondence concerning: The Consul General in Muscat D G Crawford’s report on the situation. It mentions: the difficulties the situation creates for Oman’s desire to join the UN and the Arab League; the significance of the possible future defection of Sheikh Sulaiman Bin Himyar Al Nabhani to the Ruler of Oman Sultan Qaboos Bin Saeed Al Said; and the opposition of the Sultan and his uncle Tariq Bin Taimur to any accommodation with the rebels The possible resolution of the conflict through a regional approach mediated by other Arab states, as Sulaiman Bin Himyar, Ghalib Bin Ali Al Hina'i and Taleb Bin Ali Al Hina'i have dwindling followers in other countries The possible future Omani goodwill mission; the statement from Ghalib denying the liquidation of the Imamate of Oman offices in various countries, reported in the Kuwaiti newspaper Al Siyasa, because of this new approach; and comment from the British Embassy in Kuwait
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This file relates to development projects in Oman. It contains correspondence concerning: The civil development of Salalah, and the progress since the accession of the Sultan of Oman Qaboos Bin Saeed Al Said to the throne Lists of current and future development projects in Oman The multiple invitations from the government of Oman to various consultancies, including Llewelyn-Davies, Weeks, Forestier-Walker and Bor, the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, Harold Whitehead and Partners Limited, and Bechtel Incorporated, to conduct economic surveys and development plans in the Sultanate
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p. 12 : ... and his Foreign Affairs Adviser, Omar Baruni
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This file concerns domestic and foreign political affairs in Oman. It contains correspondence relating to: Ministerial changes in the Government of Oman Internal challenges and rivalries within the government Meetings with ministers in the government, and HMG’s recommendations for government reform Developments in the Dhofar conflict, with statements from the People's Democratic Republic of Yemen (South Yemen) and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Oman and the Arab Gulf (PFLOAG) International media coverage on Oman, including allegations on the Soviet radio station Radio Peace and Progress that the British military have used napalm in Dhofar Oman’s foreign relations The views of Egypt, Libya, and Iraq on the Dhofar conflict and the presence of British officers in Oman Arrangements, briefings, and records of the visit of the Omani Minister for Communications, Social Affairs and Labour Abdul Hafidh Saleem Rajab to the UK Issues of development in Oman, including the construction of roads, hospitals, and schools and the employment of foreign advisers and staff Sultan Qaboos Bin Saeed Al Said’s speech on National Day 1972, reviewing Oman's achievements in the past two years and plans for the future, and criticising PFLOAG and South Yemen
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Séparé du reste de la péninsule arabique par une barrière montagneuse et le désert du Rub al-Khali, le sultanat d’Oman a construit son histoire tourné vers l’océan Indien. Son commerce maritime, longtemps florissant, déclina avec la concurrence de la Grande-Bretagne qui, vers le milieu du XIXe siècle, devint son protecteur. Le pays retombe alors dans un état d’extrême pauvreté. Depuis l’ère du pétrole et la fin de la puissance coloniale anglaise, les données se sont modifiées. Les revenus du pétrole ont permis le développement trés rapide des infrastructures et la fin d’un isolement séculaire. Ce changement s’est traduit récemment par l’adhésion d’Oman au Conseil de coopération du Golfe. Il y rejoint les Etats pétroliers conservateurs voisins : Arabie saoudite, Bahrein, Etat des Emirats arabes unis, Koweit, Qatar. Mais le particularisme omanais s’exprime à travers l’approche originale de son dirigeant, le sultan Kabous, sur des questions aussi importantes que la sécurité de la région ou le problème palestinien. Face aux sentiments panarabes ou islamiques dominants, le sultan Kabous maintiendra-t-il longtemps encore des positions qui vont à contre-courant ? C’est une des interrogations de cet article, qui tente aussi d’apprécier les chances de durée d’un régime encore fortement consolidé par l’assistance étrangère, britannique et américaine.
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This article was originally intended as a review of that excellent book by Fred Halliday, Arabia Without Sultans. However, I realise that there is not much point in commenting on a book about a situation of which many Australians are ignorant. Hence, my “ book review” has, as its main task, an account of some very important developments in the south of Arabia (defined as the peninsula including Saudi Arabia, North and South Yemen, Oman and the Trucial or Gulf States).
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This interview with the head of state of the Sultanate of Oman was conducted in writing during the last week in January 1995 by Anne Joyce, editor of Middle East Policy.
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