Popular Front for the Liberation of the Occupied Arabian Gulf
The Popular Front for the Liberation of the Occupied Arabian Gulf, later renamed the Popular Front for the Liberation of Oman and the Arabian Gulf, was a Marxist and Arab nationalist revolutionary organisation active in an armed struggle against the Arab monarchies in the Arabian Peninsula. The organization was dedicated to overthrow all monarchies in Arabia culminating in the Dhofar Rebellion against the Sultanate of Oman.
History
The group developed from the Dhofar Liberation Front, and adopted the name PFLOAG in September 1968. PFLOAG's goal was the establishment of an Arab socialist state in the Gulf region through the strategy of fighting a people's war. PFLOAG sought to expel British forces from Oman. The Front sought to establish a constitution, abolish martial law, restore freedom of the press and expression and ensure the rights of minorities. On economic issues, it intended to nationalize the oil companies, develop industries and implement land reform. The Front called for more social justice and affirmed its support for all Asian, African and Latin American liberation movements. References were also made to the Palestinian struggle. The rebels opened schools which served both boys and girls. The group fought against tribalism and promoted the role of women, including in armed struggle.PFLOAG's leadership described their stance as Marxist-Leninist.
Having close relations to the government of South Yemen, the PFLOAG opened an office there. With South Yemeni support, PFLOAG guerrillas seized control over large sections of western Dhofar. In August 1969 PFLOAG captured the town of Rakhyut. China, which sought to continue deepening its relations with South Yemen and viewed PFLOAG as proteges of the National Liberation Front in South Yemen, supported PFLOAG. China distanced itself from PFLOAG in 1971 as part of efforts to improve its diplomatic relations with the Arab states.
In 1974 the organization was divided into two separate bodies: the Popular Front for the Liberation of Oman and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Bahrain.
The PFLO leadership pledged to continue on the “trail of struggle”, as Al-Ghassani put it in an address on June 9, 1978, that marked the thirteenth anniversary of the revolution:
We are committing ourselves to fight alongside our Omani people in the Gulf and the Arabian Peninsula against the ambitions of imperialism and Iranian expansion
Feminism
In 1968, at the Hamrin Conference, the PFLOAG committed itself to women's emancipation, seeing it as intrinsic to the broader liberation of Dhofar. Traditionally, the women of Dhofar enjoyed a relatively good position compared to women of other regions in the area. Abdel Razzaq Takriti notes that "omen participated in work and were not socially segregated. They were allowed to smoke and could travel without a male companion." However, women were still restricted in their emancipation at that time since few enjoyed the opportunity to travel for education for example.Although the PFLOAG had adopted a quite absolute stance on women's emancipation, they were not entirely successful in implementing their aspirations. From 1968 onward, there was a gradual implementation of laws against polygamy and female circumcision, and a promotion of equal inheritance rights. The last was retracted, however, due to opposition in the ranks of the Front. Women also were recruited in the Front's army and could participate in its schools. This was done to fight oppression on a broader scale, rather than only focusing on political oppression by the Sultan. It has been argued that gender is an important factor in the practice of sectarianism, as well as tribalism, which were both considered by the Front's leadership as forms of oppression.
Heiny Srour has mentioned that the Front's stance on feminism inspired her to film her 1974 documentary on the Dhofar War, called The Hour of Liberation Has Arrived. In this documentary, she attempted to capture the "avant-garde feminism" of the movement.