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The Arabian Peninsula and Arab world in photos

Tunisia:

tunisia by jojofotografia, on Flickr


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Boats on the Beach - Hammamet by BlueVoter - thanks for 600k views, on Flickr


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Sidi Bou Saïd, Tunisia by MrLo37, on Flickr

@Mootaz-khelifi @Tunisian Marine Corps brothers check this thread out when you log on and please feel free to contribute.
 
Oman:

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DSC_8511.02rev.Bahla.Fort. by hanwong01, on Flickr

Caravan by Michaela Damm, on Flickr

20121216 Marriott hotel Salalah-11 by MikeySee, on Flickr

I have been to that hotel. One of the best hotels/resorts that I have ever been to. It can be warmly recommended.:):D


Their COAS is a Baluch..
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Rawalpindi - May 28, 2014: A delegation headed by Major General Matar bin Salim bin Rashid Al Bulushi, Commander of the Royal Army of Oman called on Chief of Army Staff General Raheel Sharif, today at General Headquarters.
 
Last edited:
The Baluch Role in the Persian Gulf during the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries
Beatrice Nicolini
From: Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East
Volume 27, Number 2, 2007
pp. 384-396 |

In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:


During the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, evidence of the Baluch population could be found in the service of the Al Ya'rubi of Oman, mainly as mercenary troops. Officers were called jam'dar and soldiers sowar. To the Arabs of Oman, these Baluch corps constituted their military power (al-shawkah) and their strength and were an indispensable tool in the conquest and maintaining of Omani tribal power. It was, however, with the Omani dynasty of the Al Bu Sa'id of Oman—starting around the first half of the nineteenth century—that the Baluch, and the coastal strip of Makran, the main region in south Central Asia of their origin, became an institutional part of the Omani governmental forces and major political leaders. Baluch tribes also settled in other Gulf areas beside Oman, and in separate villages, practicing their tribal customs and speaking their language.

Being Baluch is a question of geographical and cultural identity; therefore their integration in the Arab regions of the Gulf has been always assured and stable when closely related to their original corporate role of defense force. Consequently, the role of Baluch—especially Makrani—in the Arab Gulf countries has been growing and modifying itself since the nineteenth century. During the twentieth century, Baluch cultural identity, and most of all the Baluch presence in numerical terms with respect to Arab Gulf nationals, did become a significant reality, and also a cultural reality. Today there are many integration problems between nationals and nonnationals in most of the Arab Gulf countries, and the Baluch contribution to the richness of Gulf culture and society could represent a significant step toward future cooperation and integration through reform governmental projects. Consequently, when talking about globalization, one should keep in mind that this concept is not new for this particular region. The society of the Gulf has in fact been a "globalized" community from time immemorial; nevertheless, each ethnic group composing this cosmopolitan world succeeded in preserving its own cultural identity.

In the United Arab Emirates, for example, there are today 135,700 southern Baluch (7 percent of the population) as a part of a larger community of about 8 million. Starting in the late 1950s, sudden wealth made this region one of the richest of the world. Here the Baluch found work as unskilled laborers, policemen, or fishermen. Other Baluch joined the military. Still others labored in the oil fields and on the farms of the wealthy Gulf states. Although the Baluch work extremely hard, they are much better off than they were in Baluchistan, one of the poorest areas of the world. One of the main causes of the Baluch "diaspora" to the other shores of the Arabian Sea largely results from their lands of origin, which I describe together with their society's conditions and customs.

The Baluch reside mainly in Baluchistan, a dry, desolate region in the southeastern part of the Iranian plateau. It extends from the Kerman desert to the east of Bam and the Beshagard mountains and to the western borders of the Sind and Punjab provinces of today's Pakistan. During the second half of the nineteenth century, Baluchistan was divided by the British between Iran and Pakistan. These two states had a dispute concerning the border dividing the two parts of Baluchistan; it was resolved by an agreement signed in 1959.

Iranian Baluchistan is a part of the Sistan and Baluchistan provinces. The barren land of Iranian Baluchistan, situated on the southeastern side of the country, is part of "Great Baluchistan," with the other half located in Pakistan. The province is divided into four regions—Sarhadi, Sarawan, Bampur, and Makran—based on their environmental differences.

One of the main characteristics of Baluchistan is the variation in flora and fauna that exists because of the climatic differences. This multifeatured, inhospitable land has given rise to people of different ethnos. The ethnic diversity is such that one can find Baluch and Brohi Arabs, Jats and Kurds, and also blacks, whose ancestors had once been brought to this land as slaves from East Africa by the Omani Arabs.
 
@DESERT FIGHTER

Yes, out of the 10 million or so Baluch there are approximately 400.000 in Oman. The country is diverse due to their long imperial history but the majority of the local nationals are still Omani Arabs. You also have Afro-Arabs from the Swahili coastline (former Omani colonies) and local non-Arabic speaking Semitic people. Locals speaking the Harsusi, Bathari, Shehri, Mehri and Hobyot languages.
Algeria:

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CASBAH D ALGER by OMAR-DZ, on Flickr

Madagh 1 ere Plage by cherif.alger, on Flickr

M'Zab by iñaki do campo gan, on Flickr



DSC04780 by fchmksfkcb, on Flickr​
 
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