PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Kingdom of Bahrain
Geography
Area: 727 sq. km. (274 sq. mi.); approximately
four times the size of Washington, DC. Bahrain
is an archipelago of 36 islands located off the
eastern coast of Saudi Arabia. The four main
islands are joined by causeways, and make up
about 95% of the total land area.
Cities: Capital--Manama, pop. (2002 est.)
148,000. Other cities--Al Muharraq.
Terrain: Low desert plain (highest elevation
point--122 m).
Climate: Hot and humid from May-September, with
average highs ranging from 30o-40o
C (86o-104o F). Maximum
temperatures average 20o-30o
C (68o-86o F) the
remainder of the year.
People
Nationality: Noun and adjective--Bahraini(s).
Population (July 2005 est.): 688,345, including
about 235,108 non-nationals.
Annual growth rate (2005 est.): 1.51%.
Ethnic groups: Bahraini 63%, Asian 19%, other
Arab 10%, Iranian 8%.
Religions: 98% Muslim (Shi’a 70%, Sunni 30%),
with small Christian, Jewish and Hindu
communities.
Languages: Arabic (official), English, Farsi,
and Urdu are also widely spoken.
Education: Education is not compulsory, but is
provided free to Bahrainis and non-nationals at
all levels, including higher education.
Estimated net primary school attendance
(1991-2001)--84%. Adult literacy, age 15 and
over (2003 est.)--89.1% for the overall
population (male 91.9%, female 85%).
Health: Infant mortality rate (2005
est.)--17.27 deaths/1,000 live births.
Life expectancy--72 yrs. males, 77 yrs.
females.
Work force (2005 est.): 380,000 of which 59% are
foreigners and 20.8% female.
Government
Type: Constitutional hereditary monarchy.
Independence: August 15, 1971 (from the United
Kingdom).
Constitution: Approved and promulgated May 26,
1973; suspended on August 26, 1975; the National
Action Charter was approved by a national
popular referendum on February 14-15, 2001, and
a new constitution was issued on February 14,
2002.
Branches: Executive--King (chief of
state); Prime Minister (head of government);
Council of Ministers (cabinet) is appointed by
the King and headed by the Prime Minister.
Legislative--The bicameral parliament
(al-Majlis al-Watani) consists of a 40-member
elected House of Deputies and a 40-member Shura
Council appointed by the King. Members of both
chambers serve four-year terms. Judicial--High
Civil Appeals Court. The judiciary is
independent with right of judicial review.
Administrative subdivisions: 12 municipalities (manatiq):
Al Hidd, Al Manamah, Al Mintaqah al Gharbiyah,
Al Mintaqah al Wusta, Al Mintaqah ash Shamaliyah,
Al Muharraq, Ar Rifa' wa al Mintaqah al
Janubiyah, Jidd Hafs, Madinat Hamad, Madinat 'Isa,
Juzur Hawar, Sitrah.
Political parties: None. Formal parties are
banned, but political societies have been
sanctioned since 2001 and were formally allowed
to register per a July 2005 law.
Suffrage: Universal at age 18.
Economy
GDP (2005 est.): $11.58 billion.
Real GDP growth rate (2005 est.): 5.9%.
Per capita GDP (2005 est.): $20,500.
Natural resources: Oil, natural gas, fish,
pearls.
Agriculture (less than 1% of GDP): Products--fruit,
vegetables, poultry, dairy products, shrimp,
fish.
Industry: Types--oil and gas (13.1% of
GDP), manufacturing (12.4% of GDP), aluminum.
Services: Finance (24.2% of GDP), transport and
communications (8.9% of GDP), real estate (9.2%
of GDP); government services (14.8% of GDP).
Trade (2004--12.4% of GDP): Exports--$8.14
billion: oil and other mineral products, base
metals, textiles. Major markets--India
(4.3%), U.S. (2.9%), Saudi Arabia (3.0%), Japan
(1.7%), South Korea (1.4%). Imports--$7.83
billion: crude oil, machinery and appliances,
transport equipment, foodstuffs. Major
suppliers--Saudi Arabia (32.4%), U.S.
(5.6%), France (4.8%), U.K. (6.1%), Germany
(6.1%), Japan (7.3%).
PEOPLE
Bahrain is one of the most densely populated
countries in the Middle East; about 89% of the
population lives in the two principal cities of
Manama and Al Muharraq. Approximately 66% of the
indigenous population is originally from the
Arabian Peninsula and Iran. Bahrain currently
has a sizeable foreign labor force (about 34% of
the total population). The government’s policies
on naturalization remain controversial. In June
2002, the King issued a decree allowing citizens
of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) to take up
dual Bahraini nationality. Opposition political
groups charge that the government is granting
citizenship to foreign nationals who have served
in the Bahraini armed forces and security
services to alter the demographic balance of the
country, which is primarily Shi’a. According to
passport officials, about 40,000 individuals
have been naturalized over the past 50 years
(about 10% of the total population).
The indigenous population is 98% Muslim.
Although more than two-thirds of the indigenous
population is Shi’a Muslim, the ruling family
and the majority of government, military, and
corporate leaders are Sunni Muslims. The small
indigenous Christian and Jewish communities make
up the remaining 2% of the population. Roughly
half of foreign resident community are
non-Muslim, and include Christians, Hindus,
Baha’is, Buddhists and Sikhs.
Bahrain has invested its oil revenues in
developing an advanced educational system. The
first public schools for girls and boys were
opened in the 1920s. The government continues to
pay for all schooling costs. Although school
attendance is not compulsory, primary and
secondary attendance rates are high, and
literacy rates are currently among the highest
in the region. Higher education is available for
secondary school graduates at the Bahrain
University, Arabian Gulf University and
specialized institutes including the College of
Health Sciences--operating under the direction
of the Ministry of Health--which trains
physicians, nurses, pharmacists, and paramedics.
The government has identified providing
educational services to the Gulf Cooperation
Council as a potential economic growth area, and
is actively working to establish Bahrain as a
regional center for higher education.
HISTORY
The site of the ancient Bronze Age civilization
of Dilmun, Bahrain was an important center
linking trade routes between Mesopotamia and the
Indus Valley as early as 5,000 years ago. The
Dilmun civilization began to decline about 2,000
B.C. as trade from India was cut off. From 750
B.C. on, Assyrian kings repeatedly claimed
sovereignty over the islands. Shortly after 600
B.C., Dilmun was formally incorporated into the
new Babylonian empire. There are no historical
references to Bahrain until Alexander the
Great’s arrival in the Gulf in the 4th century
B.C. Although Bahrain was ruled variously by the
Arab tribes of Bani Wa’el and Persian governors,
Bahrain continued to be known by its Greek name
Tylos until the 7th century, when many of its
inhabitants converted to Islam. A regional
pearling and trade center, Bahrain came under
the control of the Ummayad Caliphs of Syria, the
Abbasid Caliphs of Baghdad, Persian, Omani and
Portuguese forces at various times from the 7th
century until the Al Khalifa family, a branch of
the Bani Utbah tribe that have ruled Bahrain
since the 18th century, succeeded in capturing
Bahrain from a Persian garrison controlling the
islands in 1783.
In the 1830s the Al Khalifa signed the first
of many treaties establishing Bahrain as a
British Protectorate. Similar to the binding
treaties of protection entered into by other
Persian Gulf principalities, the agreements
entered into by the Al Khalifa prohibited them
from disposing of territory and entering into
relationships with any foreign government
without British consent in exchange for British
protection against the threat of military attack
from Ottoman Turkey. The main British naval base
in the region was moved to Bahrain in 1935
shortly after the start of large-scale oil
production.
In 1968, when the British Government
announced its decision (reaffirmed in March
1971) to end the treaty relationships with the
Persian Gulf sheikdoms, Bahrain initially joined
the other eight states (Qatar and the seven
Trucial Sheikhdoms now the United Arab Emirates)
under British protection in an effort to form a
union of Arab emirates. The nine sheikhdoms
still had not agreed on terms of union by 1971,
however, prompting Bahrain to declare itself
fully independent on August 15, 1971.
Bahrain promulgated a constitution and
elected its first parliament in 1973, but just
two years later, in August 1975, the Amir
disbanded the National Assembly after it
attempted to legislate the end of Al-Khalifa
rule and the expulsion of the U.S. Navy from
Bahrain. In the 1990s, Bahrain suffered from
repeated incidents of political violence
stemming from the disaffection of the Shi’a
majority. In response, the Amir instituted the
first Bahraini cabinet change in 20 years in
1995 and also and increased the membership of
the Consultative Council, which he had created
in 1993 to provide advice and opinion on
legislation proposed by the cabinet and, in
certain cases, suggest new laws on its own, from
30 to 40 the following year. These steps led to
an initial decline in violent incidents, but in
early 1996 a number of hotels and restaurants
were bombed, resulting in several fatalities.
Over 1,000 people were arrested and held in
detention without trial in connection with these
disturbances. The government has since released
these individuals (see Government and Political
Conditions Section below for details).
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
Shaikh Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa succeeded the
throne in March 1999, after the death of his
father Shaikh Isa bin Hamad Al Khalifa,
Bahrain’s ruler since 1961. He championed a
program of democratic reform shortly after his
succession. In November 2000, Shaikh Hamad
established a committee to create a blueprint to
transform Bahrain from a hereditary emirate to a
constitutional monarchy within 2 years. The
resulting “National Action Charter” was
presented to the Bahraini public in a referendum
in February 2001. In the first comprehensive
public vote in Bahrain since the 1970s, 94.8% of
voters overwhelmingly endorsed the charter. That
same month, Shaikh Hamad pardoned all political
prisoners and detainees, including those who had
been imprisoned, exiled or detained on security
charges. He also abolished the State Security
Law and the State Security Court, which had
permitted the government to detain individuals
without trial for up to 3 years.
On February 14, 2002, one year after the
referendum endorsing his National Action
Charter, Shaikh Hamad pronounced Bahrain a
constitutional monarchy and changed his status
from Amir to King. He simultaneously announced
that the first municipal elections since 1957
would be held in May 2002, and that a bicameral
parliament, with a representative lower house,
would be reconstituted with parliamentary
elections in October 2002. As part of these
constitutional reforms, the government also
created an independent financial watchdog
empowered to investigate cases of embezzlement
and violations of state expenditure in July
2002.
Turnout for the May 2002 municipal elections
was 51%, with female voters making up 52 %
percent of voters. Turnout for the 2002
parliamentary elections--the first in almost
three decades--was 53% in the first round and
43% in the second round, despite the fact that
the four political societies, including the
largest Shia society, organized a boycott to
protest constitutional amendments enacted by the
King that gave the appointed upper chamber of
parliament voting rights equal to the elected
lower chamber. Sunni Islamists won 19 of the 40
seats. Despite strong participation by female
voters, none of the female candidates standing
in these elections won a parliamentary seat. The
new parliament held its first joint sitting in
December 2002. Bahrain will hold elections for
the five municipal councils in May 2006 and for
the 40 seats in the lower house of parliament in
October 2006.
Bahrain has a complex system of courts, based
on diverse legal sources, including Sunni and
Shi'a Sharia (religious law), tribal law, and
other civil codes and regulations created with
the help of British advisers in the early 20th
century. In 2001, Shaikh Hamad created the
Supreme Judicial Council to regulate these
courts and separate the administrative and
judicial branches of government.
Principal Government Officials
King--Shaikh Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa
Crown Prince and Commander in Chief of the
Bahrain Defense Force--Shaikh Salman bin Hamad
Al Khalifa
Prime Minister--Shaikh Khalifa bin Salman Al
Khalifa
Deputy Prime Minister and Islamic Affairs
Minister--Shaikh Abdullah bin Khaled Al Khalifa
Deputy Prime Minister for Ministerial
Committees--Shaikh Mohammad bin Mubarak Al
Khalifa
Deputy Prime Minister and Transport and
Communications Minister--Shaikh Ali bin Khalifa
Al Khalifa
Foreign Minister--Shaikh Khalid bin Ahmed Al
Khalifa
Ambassador to the United States--Dr. Naser
M.Y. Al Belooshi
Ambassador to the United Nations--Tawfeeq
Al-Ahmed Al-Mansoor
Bahrain maintains an
embassy
in the United States at 3502 International Drive
N.W., Washington, D.C. 20008; tel: [1] (202)
342-1111; fax: [1] (202) 362-2192. The Bahraini
Mission to the UN is located at866 Second
Avenue, New York, NY 10017; tel: [1]
(212)223-6200; fax [1] (202) 319-0687.
ECONOMY
The first Gulf state to discover oil, Bahrain
has worked to diversify its economy over the
past decade. Bahrain has stabilized its oil
production at about 40,000 barrels per day
(b/d), and reserves are expected to last 10-15
years. Revenues from oil and natural gas
currently account for 13.1% of GDP and provide
about 74% of government income. The Bahrain Oil
Company refinery built in 1935, the first in the
Gulf, has a capacity of about 260,000 b/d. Since
1980, 60% of the refinery has been owned by the
Bahrain National Oil Company and 40% by the U.S.
company Caltex. Saudi Arabia provides most of
the crude for refinery operation via pipeline.
Through an agreement with Saudi Arabia, Bahrain
also receives a large portion of the net output
and revenues from Saudi Arabia's Abu Saafa
offshore oilfield. The Bahrain National Gas
Company operates a gas liquefaction plant that
utilizes gas piped directly from Bahrain's
oilfields. Gas reserves should last about 50
years at present rates of consumption. The Gulf
Petrochemical Industries Company is a joint
venture of the petrochemical industries of
Kuwait, the Saudi Basic Industries Corporation,
and the Government of Bahrain. The plant,
completed in 1985, produces ammonia and methanol
for export. Growth in the hydrocarbons sector
will be contingent upon new discoveries--Bahrain
awarded exploration rights to Malaysia’s
Petronas and the U.S.’ Chevron Texaco after the
resolution of Bahrain’s long-standing
territorial dispute with Qatar, but no
meaningful finds have been announced to date.
Bahrain's other industries include the majority
state-owned Aluminum Bahrain (Alba)--which
operates the largest aluminum smelter in the
world outside Eastern Europe with an annual
production of about 720,000 metric tons (mt) in
2005 after the completion of an expansion
program--and related factories, such as the
Aluminum Extrusion Company and the Gulf Aluminum
Rolling Mill. Other plants include the Arab Iron
and Steel Company's iron ore pelletizing plant
(4 million tons annually) and a shipbuilding and
repair yard.
Bahrain's development as a major financial
center has been the most widely heralded aspect
of its diversification effort. Bahrain is a
regional financial and business center;
international financial institutions operate in
Bahrain, both offshore and onshore, without
impediments, and the financial sector is
currently the largest contributor to GDP at
24.2%. More than 100 offshore banking units and
representative offices are located in Bahrain,
as well as 65 American firms. Bahrain has also
made a concerted effort to become the leading
Islamic finance center in the world,
standardizing regulations of the Islamic banking
industry. It currently has 28 Islamic banks--the
largest concentration of Islamic financial
institutions.
Bahrain is working to develop other service
industries such as information technology,
healthcare and education. The government has
used its oil revenues to build an advanced
infrastructure in transportation and
telecommunications. The transport and
communications sector grew by almost 9% in 2002
and is likely to expand as the government
proceeds with liberalization of the state-owned
telecommunications industry. The state
monopoly--Batelco--was broken in April 2003.
Bahrain's international airport is one of the
busiest in the Gulf. A modern, busy port offers
direct and frequent cargo shipping connections
to the U.S., Europe, and the Far East.
The government of Bahrain moved toward
privatizing the production of electricity and
water by licensing Al Ezzal to construct an
independent power plant that will cost $500
million. It is expected to start operating at
full capacity in April 2006. In January 2006,
the Finance Minister announced that Al Hidd
Power Plant will be sold for $738 million to
consortium of British, Japanese, and Belgian
companies.
Regional tourism is also a significant source
of income. The government continues to favor
large-scale tourism projects. It opened the only
Formula One race track in the Middle East in
2004, and has awarded tenders for several
tourist complexes.
Government revenues continue to be largely
dependent on the oil industry. Bahrain has
received significant budgetary support and
project grants from Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and
the United Arab Emirates. The reconstituted
parliamentary process has produced spirited
debate over government spending, particularly
defense spending, but no actual reductions.
Ministry of Defense spending will account for
18% of current spending in 2005 and 2006 based
on the budget approved by parliament in July
2005. The Ministry of Education and Ministry of
the Interior are the second and third largest
spenders. The bulk of capital outlays have been
allocated to improving housing and
infrastructure in line with government efforts
to raise the standard of living of the Shi’a
population and to attract foreign investment.
The government has also started to extend
protections to workers. Private sector employees
won permission to form unions in late 2002; King
Hamad has given his tentative approval for the
formation of unions in government departments.
As part of the government’s labor reform
program, it presented legislation to parliament
to form the Labor Market Regulatory Authority
(LMRA) and establish a fund to support the
training of Bahraini workers.
Bahrain and the United States signed a free
trade agreement in September 2004. The Bahraini
parliament ratified it in July 2005, and the
U.S. Congress followed in December 2005.
President Bush signed the agreement into law in
January 2006. Entry-into-force is pending as
Bahrain completes implementing legislation.
DEFENSE
The Bahrain Defense Force (BDF) numbers about
9,000 personnel and consists of army, navy, air
force, air defense, and royal guard units. The
public security forces and the coast guard are
separate from the BDF and report to the Ministry
of the Interior. Bahrain's defense spending
since 1999 has been steady. The government
spends around $440 million annually on their
military, about 20% of current expenditures. The
reconstituted parliamentary process has produced
spirited debate over government spending,
particularly defense spending, but no actual
reductions.
With the help of the U.S. and the Gulf
Cooperation Council (GCC), Bahrain has made
significant efforts to upgrade its defense
systems and modernize its armed forces over the
last 20 years. In 1982, the GCC gave Bahrain
$1.7 billion for this purpose. Since the 1991
Gulf War, the U.S. has provided military and
defense technical assistance and training to
Bahrain from foreign military sales (FMS),
commercial sources, excess defense article sales
(EDA) and under the International Military and
Education Training (IMET) program. The U.S.
Office of Military Cooperation in Bahrain is
attached to the U.S. Embassy and manages the
security assistance mission. U.S. military sales
to Bahrain currently total $2.5 billion.
Principal U.S. military systems purchased by the
BDF include eight Apache helicopters, 54 M60A3
tanks, 12 F-16C/D aircraft, 14 Cobra
helicopters, and the TPS-59 radar system.
Bahrain has received $255 million in U.S. EDA
since 1995.
Military exercises are conducted on a regular
basis to increase the BDF’s readiness and
improve coordination with the U.S. and other GCC
forces. The BDF also sends personnel to the
United States for military training. This
training includes courses from graduate level
professional military education down to entry
level technical training.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
Since achieving independence in 1971, Bahrain
has pursued a policy of close consultation with
neighboring states. Bahrain became a member of
the United Nations and the Arab League in 1971.
In 1981 it joined its five neighbors--Saudi
Arabia, Oman, Kuwait, the U.A.E. and Qatar--to
form the strategic Gulf Cooperation Council
(GCC). Bahrain has complied with GCC efforts
steps to coordinate economic development and
defense and security planning. In December 1994,
for example, Bahrain concurred with the GCC
decision to drop secondary and tertiary boycotts
against Israel. Bahrain also responded
positively to Kuwait’s request to deploy the GCC
collective defense force, “Peninsula Shield,”
during the build up and execution of Operation
Iraqi Freedom (OIF) in 2003.
In addition to maintaining strong relations
with its largest financial backers, Saudi
Arabia, Kuwait and the U.A.E., Bahrain has
worked to improve its relations with Qatar and
Iran in recent years. Bahrain-Iran relations
have been strained since the discovery in 1981
of an Iran-sponsored coup plot in Bahrain.
Bahraini suspicions of the Iranian role in local
unrest in the mid-1990s remain. However, with
the fall of Saddam Hussein’s regime in Iraq,
Bahrain has begun taking steps to improve
relations with Iran. These efforts have included
encouraging Bahrain-Iran trade and maritime
security cooperation.
On March 16, 2001, the International Court of
Justice (ICJ) announced its judgment on the
long-standing maritime delimitation and
territorial dispute between Bahrain and Qatar.
The binding judgment awarded sovereignty over
the Hawar Islands and Qit’at Jaradah to Bahrain
and sovereignty over Zubarah (part of the Qatar
Peninsula), Janan Island and Fasht ad Dibal to
Qatar. The peaceful settlement of this dispute
has allowed for renewed co-operation.
Bahrain’s strategic partnership with the U.S.
has intensified since 1991. Bahraini pilots flew
strikes in Iraq during the 1991 Gulf War, and
the island was used as a base for military
operations in the Gulf. Bahrain also provided
logistical and basing support to international
Maritime Interdiction efforts to enforce UN
sanctions and prevent illegal smuggling of oil
from Iraq in the 1990s. Bahrain also provided
extensive basing and overflight clearances for a
multitude of U.S. aircraft operating in support
of Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF) and
Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF). Bahrain also
deployed forces in support of Coalition
operations during both OEF and OIF. Bahrain is
currently offering humanitarian support and
technical training to support the reconstruction
of the Iraqi banking sector, and has offered
support for each stage of Iraq’s political
transformation. Bahrain has also cooperated
effectively on criminal investigation issues in
support of the campaign on terrorism; the
Bahrain Monetary Agency moved quickly to
restrict terrorists' ability to transfer funds
through Bahrain's financial system.
U.S.-BAHRAINI RELATIONS
The American Mission Hospital, affiliated with
the National Evangelical Church, has operated
continuously in Bahrain for more than a century.
Bahrain has also been a base for U.S. naval
activity in the Gulf since 1947. When Bahrain
became independent, the U.S.-Bahrain
relationship was formalized with the
establishment of diplomatic relations. The U.S.
embassy at Manama was opened September 21, 1971,
and a resident ambassador was sent in 1974. The
Bahraini embassy in Washington, DC, opened in
1977. In October 1991, Amir Isa bin Salman Al
Khalifa made a state visit to Washington. In
2001, Amir Hamad bin Isa Al-Khalifa made his
first visit to the U.S. after succeeding his
father in 1999. He returned to Washington on an
official visit in January 2003. King Hamad made
an official visit to Washington in November 2004
to meet with President Bush and cabinet-level
officials.
Bahrain and the United States signed a
Defense Cooperation Agreement in October 1991
granting U.S. forces access to Bahraini
facilities and ensuring the right to
pre-position material for future crises.
Currently the headquarters of the U.S. Navy's
Fifth Fleet, the U.S. designated Bahrain a Major
Non-NATO Ally in October 2001.
U.S.-Bahraini economic ties have grown
steadily since 1932, when Americans participated
in the development of Bahrain's oil industry.
Bahrain is a regional base for numerous American
banks and firms. President Bush signed the
U.S.-Bahrain free trade agreement (FTA) into law
in January 2006.
Principal U.S. Embassy Officials
Ambassador--William
T. Monroe
Deputy Chief of Mission--Susan Ziadeh
Political/Economic Officer--Steven Bondy
Economic/Commercial Officer--Stephen Simpson
Consular Officer--Sara Cobb
Public Affairs Officer--Wyn Hornbuckle
Management Officer--Raymond Kengott
The
U.S. Embassy in Bahrain is located off
Sheikh Isa Highway, at Building 979, Road 3119,
Block 321, Zinj, Manama, Bahrain. The mailing
address is P.O. Box 26431, Manama, Bahrain; tel:
[973] 242-700; fax: [973] 272-594. The embassy's
hours of operation outside of Ramadan are 8:00
a.m. - 4:00 p.m., Saturdays-Wednesdays.