July/August 1993, Page 49
Country Report
Oman: An Arab Model for All Developing Countries
By Richard H. Curtiss
Only 23 years ago Oman, a scenic country on the mountainous southeastern
tip of the Arabian peninsula, had three private elementary schools,
with a total of 900 students, all boys, and no public schools at
all. The only education to which most Omani children could aspire
was learning to read just enough to recite Qur'anic verses correctly.
Parents who wanted anything beyond that for their children had
to send them out of the country to schools in the nearby United
Arab Emirates, to Oman's former colony of Zanzibar where they could
live with relatives while studying, or to relatively expensive boarding
schools in Egypt.
Today, young Omani men and women who have been educated solely
within their country are graduate students and teaching assistants
at Sultan Qaboos University, which opened in 1986 some 40 kilometers
from Muscat and Matrah, the twin cities of the capital area. Others,
having obtained their B.A. or B.S. degrees in Oman, are doing graduate
work at universities around the world, particularly in the United
States.
Oman's evolution from one of the most technologically and educationally
deprived countries in the world to a model of balanced economic
and social development in only one generation is one of history's
most astonishing, and inspiring, feats.
It was facilitated, of course, by revenues from Oman's first petroleum
exports in 1967. But Oman's oil has never flowed in the quantities
enjoyed by its two giant neighbors, Iran and Saudi Arabia, or some
of the smaller Arab emirates of the Gulf. Initial production was
so low, in fact, that Oman's ruler of the time, Sultan Said Bin
Taimur, was reluctant to use the meager revenues to begin developing
the modern infrastructure his only recently politically stabilized
country so desperately needed.
When his son, Qaboos Bin Said Al Said, upon returning from a British
military education at Sandhurst, urged his father at least to open
schools to help Omanis acquire the skills needed to function as
a nation in the modern world, he was put under virtual house arrest
in a palace in his birthplace, Salalah, Oman's southernmost coastal
city. It was from there, reportedly with encouragement from the
British political advisers who had urged his father to send him
to Sandhurst, that Sultan Qaboos took over the government on July
23, 1970, while his father, too, was in Salalah. That date marked
the beginning of a bloodless educational, social and economic revolution
that could become a model for every country still facing problems
similar to those of Oman in 1970.
In addition to an almost totally illiterate population, Oman, with
only two hospitals, had formidable health problems. It lacked even
a rudimentary economic infrastructure, with fewer than 6 miles (10
kilometers) of paved roads, and only a scattering of homes in the
capital served by electricity.
Although it is strikingly beautiful, Oman has a tiny population
of no more than two million people widely dispersed over an area
of 82,030 square miles (212,457 square kilometers), slightly smaller
than the state of Kansas. Some Omanis lived in tiny date-producing
oasis hamlets accessible only by footpaths through formidable mountains.
Others were to be found in agricultural and fishing towns and villages,
some reachable only by boat, in narrow plains and rocky inlets skirting
some 1,056 miles of Indian Ocean and Arabian/Persian Gulf coastline.
Omanis were cut off from each other by mountain ranges dipping
in some places directly into the sea, and from the rest of the Arabian
peninsula by an inland desert plateau that blends imperceptibly
into the Empty Quarter of Saudi Arabia. The young sultan, only 29
years old when he assumed power, set out systematically to overcome
those problems. One of his first acts was to end a simmering civil
war in his native Dhofar province and, in 1975, to demarcate Oman's
border with Yemen from which support for the rebels had come. The
following year he launched the country's first five-year plan setting
economic and social goals for his revitalized government.
Working in his favor were the basically peaceful and gentle nature
of the Omanis, whom all foreign visitors find strikingly friendly
and hospitable, and an Omani pride and self-assurance that stems
from never having been colonized. Even occupation of the Omani ports
of Muscat and Sohar by Portuguese seafarers, who first visited Oman
in 1507, was brief. Oman's Imam Sultan Bin Saif expelled them on
Nov. 18, 1650, a date now commemorated as Oman's national day. Omani
ships then turned the tables, harassing Portuguese held ports in
Africa and Asia.
The Omanis themselves have been both colonizers and traders in
various periods of history. Copper from the land of Magan, tentatively
identified by archeologists as Oman, reached the Sumerians, founders
of the world's first cities and inventors of the first writing system.
Omani sailors, using the monsoon winds, were a link between Sumer
in the valley of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers and the other two
contemporaneous civilizations at the dawn of written history in
the Indus River valley and the Nile River valley. To this day, copper
is mined and exported from the vicinity of Oman's port of Sohar.
Some 3,000 years after the rise of Sumer, Roman writers were complaining
that too much of the empire's wealth was bring drained off to pay
for the frankincense from Oman that sent clouds of fragrant smoke
heavenward from altars all over the ancient world. Today, visitors
to traditional households in Oman are greeted with rosewater sprinkled
on their hands upon arrival. As they depart, smoke from burning
frankincense is directed through, around and under robes and dresses
so that the guests will be wreathed in its pleasing, cleansing aroma
as they emerge into the street.
Many of the legendary voyages of Sinbad the Sailor were launched
from Omani ports, as were countless others that took South Arabian
sailors from the Hadramaut ports of Oman and neighboring Yemen as
far east as Guangzhou (Canton) in China as early as the seventh
century A.D. Because Omanis embraced Islam in 630 A.D., during the
lifetime of the Prophet Muhammad, some 200 million Indonesians,
Malaysians and Malays from Sarawak, Brunei and the southern Philippines
are Muslims. They trace their Islamic religion and some of their
ancestry to Hadramauti merchants who set up trading and sometimes
ruling dynasties throughout Southeast Asia.
Baluchistan's Makran coast in present-day Iran and Pakistan was
for many years a colony of Oman, and many Baluchis immigrated to
Oman during and since that time. Along with other parts of Africa,
the huge clove-growing island of Zanzibar (now a part of Tanzania),
off Africa's east coast, also became an Omani colony in 173O, making
Oman the only non-European country to hold possessions in Africa.
Ahmed Bin Said founded the present Al Bu Said dynasty in 1741 when
he was elected imam. In 1785, the titles of imam and sultan were
divided between his two sons. In 1798, Britain persuaded Said Bin
Sultan Ahmed to sign the first of the friendship treaties that have
linked Oman and Britain ever since. In 1831, at the height of its
power as a trading and seafaring nation, Oman sent a sailing ship
to Philadelphia to establish formal diplomatic relations with the
United States.
Oman's sprawling overseas empire was split in 1856, however, when,
after the death of its sultan, Britain settled a dispute between
his sons by giving Zanzibar to one and Oman to the other. Oman subsequently
lost its other overseas possessions. Then, rebellions that broke
out in 1915 in the country's interior and were not settled until
1959 sealed the decline that ended only in 1970.
The colonial ties that once linked Oman and Zanzibar, however,
had created an anomaly that served Oman well in the first urgent
rush to catch up educationally. In the early years of the 20th century,
an Omani trader might have a wife in Zanzibar and another in Oman.
Before 1970, therefore, some Omani children raised in Zanzibar had
excellent education's, while their siblings or cousins raised in
Oman had none. After 1970, with Oman gradually opening to the world
and conditions in Zanzibar deteriorating, hundreds of the better-educated
Omanis became available to help staff the 720 primary and secondary
schools opened by Sultan Qaboos during the first two decades of
his rule.
He also brought thousands of teachers from other Arab countries,
particularly Sudanese, Egyptians, Palestinians, Jordanians and Syrians.
Others from the British Commonwealth, Europe and the United States
arrived to teach Omanis foreign languages. Among the teachers and
technicians who came to Oman in the late 1970s were an annual contingent
of American Peace Corps volunteers, some of whom stayed to join
American companies participating in the rush to apply Western technology
to Oman's economic needs. By 1991, Oman employed 15,587 teachers
in 800 schools for 360,066 students, including 192,985 boys and
167,081 girls.
The speed with which the economy developed under Oman's carefully
prepared five-year plans was to some extent dependent upon the price
of petroleum. Production was 720,000 barrels per day (b/d) in 1992,
and the government's goal is to bring it to 750,000 barrels for
the rest of the 1990s. Output is limited, however, by the fact that
new oil deposits are being discovered at only a slightly higher
rate than old ones are depleted.
In the late 1970s, when the price of petroleum skyrocketed, Oman
built whole new suburbs in the capital area, permitting the expansion
of the government into modern ministry buildings which, along with
shopping centers and comfortable villas for the thousands of technocrats
required for Oman's economic development, now extend in a continuous
strip of sparkling white buildings along the scenic coastal hills
for 20 miles between the original capital and its international
airport.
At present, with the price of petroleum down by 50 percent from
its heyday, and the costs of extraction in Oman considerably higher
than in places like Kuwait, where oil literally gushes to the surface,
Oman has fewer revenues to spend. It is concentrating them on development
of other major population centers like the fishing center of Sohar,
the inland agricultural center of Nizwa, the well-watered southern
coastal center of Salalah, and the towns of the strategic Musandam
peninsula, cut off from the rest of Oman by parts of the United
Arab Emirates, but jutting into the Strait of Hormuz where the Arabian/Persian
Gulf joins the Indian Ocean.
Three major goals of the current five year plan are increased "Omanization,"
replacing foreign technicians and workers with Omanis as rapidly
as possible; further diversification of the economy to lessen its
heavy dependence upon oil; and increased privatization of Omani
manufacturing and marketing. The goal of Omanization is by 1995
to have Omanis filling 72 percent of the public-sector positions,
which Omanis generally prefer to positions in business.
Oman has expanded its fishing industry by providing fishermen with
motors for their boats and cold-storage facilities for their catches.
It is making similar improvements in agriculture and mining. Surprisingly,
it has entered joint ventures with Kazakhstan in the former Soviet
Union in the fields of oil extraction and creation of a trans-Asian
gas pipeline. Oman also has purchased an interest in an oil refinery
in Thailand to help secure a significant share of the Asian market
for its petroleum. Oman, with an estimated 9 trillion cubic feet
of natural gas reserves, also is expanding its own gas production,
and most of its power is generated and its heating and cooking done
with natural gas.
Successes of Oman's generation of development are recorded in the
country's statistics (see box). Politically, Oman remains an absolute
monarchy. Like its Arabian peninsula neighbors, however, it is moving
cautiously toward increased popular participation in government.
Elections were held for delegates to a consultative assembly (Majlis
A1 Shura) created in November 1991. From among the three delegates
elected from each local district, the sultan appointed one to participate
in the assembly, which consists of a total of 59 delegates.
At present, Oman has two major radio stations and one television
station, five daily newspapers and the Oman News Agency. In 1988,
the country had registered 1,015,000 television sets, 890,000 radios,
and 50,000 telephones. While preparing the public for more active
participation in national affairs, the government has created this
communications network to link the formerly isolated population
centers into one national entity—united with its neighbors
to the west by the Arabic language, and with its neighbors on all
sides by Islam. Virtually all Omanis are Muslim, with more than
50 percent of Oman's Muslims adhering to the Ibadhi tradition.
Militarily, Oman has been the most outspoken of the six member
states of the Gulf Cooperation Council in favor of collective GCC
defense measures backed up by defense treaties with the U.K. and
U.S. It advocates creation of a 100,000-strong GCC joint security
force capable of resisting aggression from ens regional power until
outside forces can reach the area.
Although its closest political and military ties traditionally
have been with the United Kingdom. in 1991 Oman received $15 million
in U.S. economic aid, and 5600,000 in U.S. military aid. During
the Gulf war, Oman permitted the U.S. to use Vmani facilities to
service Seventh Fleet ships operating from the Indian Ocean and
U.S. aircraft operating temporarily from bases in the Gulf and permanently
from Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean. In addition to its membership
in the GCC, Oman also is a member of the Organization of the Islamic
Conference (OIC) and the 21-member Arab League.
Throughout the first 20 years of Sultan Qaboos Bin Said's rule,
Oman remained relatively closed to the outside world. Although foreign
diplomats were free to come and go, technicians and businessmen
needed a local sponsor, scholars and exchange students were carefully
screened, and it was difficult for journalists to visit when they
wished to. That, too, is changing. Groups of tourists now visit
Oman, scholars are encouraged, and the government itself is inviting
foreign journalists to come and judge the tranformation of the country
for themselves.
There are surprises beyond the expanded roads, school system and
nationwide health network of local clinics, regional general hospitals,
and specialized treatment available in the national capital that
makes modern medical care available to the most remote villager.
There also is a system of civil courts and, in addition to traditional
Islamic laws, a parallel civil law system that owes much to English
common law.
Visitors also find that, after making the long journey from a pre-industrial
society to the end of the 20th century in only 20 years, young Omanis
now are applying what they have learned in some of the world's finest
universities and technical schools to the environmental and societal
considerations that will preoccupy the Western world in the century
to come.
Clearly there are lessons to be learned in Oman that can be applied
in many parts of the world where, for whatever reasons, the development
process has been less successful, and its benefits spread less uniformly
throughout society. If Oman's success, in both regards, has to be
seen to be believed, its ruler now is making that possible. What
first-time visitors will find are people who have retained the pride
and much of the charm and simplicity from an illustrious past, while
routinely producing miracles in this little-known land of infinite
possibilities. |