Oman–Yemen Border
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The Oman–Yemen border is 294 km (183 mi) in length and runs from the
tripoint A triple border, tripoint, trijunction, triple point, or tri-border area is a geography, geographical point at which the boundaries of three countries or Administrative division, subnational entities meet. There are 175 international tripoints ...
with
Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia, officially the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA), is a country in West Asia. Located in the centre of the Middle East, it covers the bulk of the Arabian Peninsula and has a land area of about , making it the List of Asian countries ...
in the north to the
Arabian Sea The Arabian Sea () is a region of sea in the northern Indian Ocean, bounded on the west by the Arabian Peninsula, Gulf of Aden and Guardafui Channel, on the northwest by Gulf of Oman and Iran, on the north by Pakistan, on the east by India, and ...
in the south.


Description

The border consists essentially of a single straight line orientated NW-SE, from the Saudi tripoint down to the
Arabian Sea The Arabian Sea () is a region of sea in the northern Indian Ocean, bounded on the west by the Arabian Peninsula, Gulf of Aden and Guardafui Channel, on the northwest by Gulf of Oman and Iran, on the north by Pakistan, on the east by India, and ...
coast at Ras Darbat Ali. The exception is a small triangular 'kink' roughly halfway along the boundary line, which juts into Yemen so as to include the town of Habarut within Oman. Topographically the border traverses the Rub' al Khali desert in the north and the Jabal Qamar in the Dhofar Mountains in the south.


History

The far east of what is today Yemen historically formed the Sultanate of Mahra, which became part of Britain's
Aden Protectorate The Aden Protectorate ( ') was a British protectorate in southern Arabia. The protectorate evolved in the hinterland of the port of Aden and in the Hadhramaut after the conquest of Aden by the Bombay Presidency of British India in January ...
in 1866, though retaining a degree of autonomy. In this period Oman was under an informal British protectorate. Oman had asserted its rule over the south-western Dhofar region in 1829. A border between the Aden and Oman was not demarcated during the colonial period, though British government documents suggest that the Ras Darbat Ali cape had been fixed as Oman's westernmost point as early as 1933–35, with a British government document recording that "''it had been agreed that the question was not at that time an important one''." A British letter of 1947 states that "''the Frontier is shown as being on the west side of Ras Dharbar Ai in a Survey of India map of south-east Arabia 1:2,000,000, but on what authority this was done is not known. The mountain is locally recognised as being the boundary between Dhofar country and Mahra country on the coast at least, though to what extent this applied inland is not clear''." In 1962-3 Aden colony was split into the
Federation of South Arabia The Federation of South Arabia (FSA; ') was a federal state under British protectorate, British protection in what would become South Yemen. Its capital was Aden. History Originally formed on April 4, 1962 from 15 states of the Federation ...
in the west and the Protectorate of South Arabia in the east, both remaining under British protection. Following an
insurgency An insurgency is a violent, armed rebellion by small, lightly armed bands who practice guerrilla warfare against a larger authority. The key descriptive feature of insurgency is its asymmetric warfare, asymmetric nature: small irregular forces ...
in the region, Britain withdrew from Aden completely and the two protectorates were merged, gaining independence as
South Yemen South Yemen, officially the People's Democratic Republic of Yemen, abbreviated to Democratic Yemen, was a country in South Arabia that existed in what is now southeast Yemen from 1967 until Yemeni unification, its unification with the Yemen A ...
in 1967. Communists took over in 1969, renaming the country the 'People's Democratic Republic of Yemen', and abolishing the traditional semi-autonomy of the sultan of Mahra.
North Yemen North Yemen () is a term used to describe the Kingdom of Yemen (1918-1962), the Yemen Arab Republic (1962-1990), and the regimes that preceded them and exercised sovereignty over that region of Yemen. Its capital was Sanaa from 1918 to 1948 an ...
at this time remained a separate country. South Yemen's border with Oman remained undemarcated, and relations between the two states worsened during the Dhofar Rebellion, as South Yemen allowed the Communist Dhofari insurgents to base themselves in their territory, resulting in several cross-border skirmishes. Relations improved in the 1980s, with the two countries re-establishing diplomatic relation in 1983. Following the collapse of the Communist government in South Yemen, and the subsequent unification with North Yemen in 1990, a border agreement between Oman and Yemen was signed on 1 October 1992 which finalised the frontier at its current position. The border region remained largely peaceful during the various civil wars in Yemen since then. During the current war the border has remained under Yemen government control, though there have been reports of arms smuggling across the frontier, and Omani and Saudi interference in Yemen's Al Mahra Governorate.


Border Crossings

There are two main crossings: at Shahan (YEM)- Al-Mazyunah (OMN) in the north, and Hawf (YEM)- Sarfait (OMN) in the south.Daniel McLaughlin (2007) ''Bradt Travel Guide - Yemen'', pgs. 45


See also

* Oman-Yemen relations


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Oman-Yemen border Borders of Oman Borders of Yemen International borders