Nahwa Explained

Nahwa
Official Name:Nahwa
Native Name:Arabic: النحوة
Settlement Type:Village
Translit Lang1 Type:Arabic
Translit Lang1 Info:Arabic: نحوة
Pushpin Map:UAE#Persian Gulf
Pushpin Relief:1
Pushpin Map Caption:Location of Nahwa
Coordinates:25.2683°N 56.2803°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Type1:Emirate
Leader Title:Emir
Leader Name:Sultan bin Muhammad Al-Qasimi
Elevation M:506
Elevation Ft:1663
Utc Offset:+4
Timezone:UAE standard time
Population Total:302[1]
Population As Of:2015
Area Total Km2:4.40

Nahwa is a territory that forms part of the Emirate of Sharjah in the United Arab Emirates. It is a counter-enclave (or second-order enclave) within the Omani territory of Madha, which is itself an exclave of Oman and an enclave within the United Arab Emirates.[2] Access to the village of Nahwa is through the northernmost road into the Madha enclave south of Khor Fakkan which leads to New Madha. From New Madha, there is a paved but winding road (about 5km (03miles)) leading to Nahwa.

Entering Nahwa, there is an Emirati police outpost some after the boundary marker. The village itself is further up the road, on the same side as the police outpost. It consists of about 40 buildings and has its own clinic. This part of the village is called New Nahwa, and there are more houses further down the road in Old Nahwa. The third part of Nahwa is the village of Shis.[3]

While the situation is uncommon, Nahwa is not the only exclave in the world surrounded by another enclave; some exclaves of Dutch Baarle-Nassau are embedded in Belgian Baarle-Hertog enclaves.

History

Nahwa's counter-enclave was formed as a result of Madha's decision to declare allegiance to Oman instead of Al Qawasim of Sharjah, Al Qawasim of Ras Al Khaimah, or Al Sharqi of Fujairah which today all form part of the United Arab Emirates.

In the late 1930s or early 1940s the leaders of the four rival clans who ruled the Musandam Peninsula (Al Qassimi of Ras Al Khaimah, Al Qassimi of Sharjah, Al Sharqi of Fujairah, and the Bu Said of Oman) gathered a group of village elders of the nearby village of Madha and posed the question as to which sheikhdom the Madhanis would declare allegiance. While Madha chose Oman, Nahwa chose to stay loyal to Al Qawasim of Sharjah, effectively making them a counter enclave within the exclave of Madha. Following consultations between the area's tribes and Julian F. Walker, the British representative to the Trucial States, the borders were established and later finalized in 1969.[4] [5]

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://github.com/justinelliotmeyers/UAE_Official_Boundaries UAE Official Boundaries
  2. News: Madha village's pledge of allegiance changed the map forever. The National. 2018-07-19. en.
  3. News: A hidden piece of the Emirates. The National. 2018-07-19. en.
  4. News: Madha village's pledge of allegiance changed the map forever. The National. 2018-01-05. en.
  5. News: A century-old choice created one of the Gulf's oddest geopolitical features . The Economist . 2023-01-14 . 0013-0613.