Revision as of 09:23, 29 September 2006 editNepaheshgar (talk | contribs)16,882 edits →To Ali Doostzadeh← Previous edit | Revision as of 09:35, 29 September 2006 edit undoFellFairy (talk | contribs)109 edits →To Ali Doostzadeh: meaning of "international dispute"Next edit → | ||
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:::It's simple. The UAE is a madeup country in 1971 by the British. Iran has been there in the region way before the British. As per international dispute, no it is a small land dispute and it is like the fakland wars between argentina or england or the issue of northern ireland. --] 09:23, 29 September 2006 (UTC) | :::It's simple. The UAE is a madeup country in 1971 by the British. Iran has been there in the region way before the British. As per international dispute, no it is a small land dispute and it is like the fakland wars between argentina or england or the issue of northern ireland. --] 09:23, 29 September 2006 (UTC) | ||
::::It's probably more like ], ], ], ], ] etc. Are these cases not generally referred to as international disputes? ] 09:35, 29 September 2006 (UTC) |
Revision as of 09:35, 29 September 2006
Changed to reflect disputed status between UAE and Iran. Input on further reworking of this entry is welcome. -nanomu
Tunb
These islands are disputed over, facts of both sides must be discussed, names and meaning in both languages must be included not one, and these islands should not be categorized as iranian islands but must be categorized as "disputed territories".
- Practice what you preach. You changed the name "Persian Gulf" (WHICH IS NOT "DISPUTED", but is a name fully recognized by the UN and all historical documents) to the fictitious artificial "Arabian Gulf" in the article. You also wrote the sentence: "These and the island of Abu Musa are Emirati islands occupied by Iranians in 1971." Occupied by Iran? That's not exactly presenting views of both sides. And besides, the UAE is hardly 35 years old. That's at most 0.01 the age of Iran (Persia). So it's a bit too young to claim ownership on something that existed before it did. Not to mention that at least 1/4 of UAE's population is ethnically Persian anyway, only ruled by some Sheikh arabs.--Zereshk 09:10, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
- more than 1/4, the ajami population combined with the iranian immigrant populations actually form a large ethnic group within the UAE. the same in bahrain and parts of oman, iraq, and parts of kuwait. just like this user is doing right now, their sheikhs are trying to distort irans former and current cultural influence on the region.Khosrow II 15:22, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
Just Ruled By Sheikhs!
Does the unity of the Emirates makes it a fully new country?, in the past each Emirate was an independent country and those Emirates are very old they are mentioned by historians hundreds of years before -except the new Emirate (Ajman) which has developed in the 19th century-. if you need any information about the history of the Emirates and the historians whom visited it just tell me its my plesure to tell any way if you know Arabic you can use www.alwarraq.com this site contains hundreds of books written hundreds of years ago you can search it for any thing you want . Im here to say the truth without any influence from my feelings, when you see that Iran have occupied those islands militarily you wonder why??. im in a hurry now but i tell you that not 1/4 of Emirati people are from Persian ancestory but the 1/4 are talking about is a mixture of Persian, Turkmen, Balushi, Azeri people and i my self from Tabriz originally but the truth to be sayed those islands are emirati islands and i will explain why later True Path
- Get your facts straight. 1/4 of their population is from Iran:
- "A quarter of the population reportedly trace their origins to neighbouring Iran." See: "Young Iranians Follow Dreams to Dubai", The New York Times, HASSAN M. FATTAH. Published: December 4 2005.--Zereshk 17:05, 18 July 2006 (UTC)
Protected
I've protected this article stop the budding edit war we had going here. I'll be happy to unprotect it when I (or any other admin) sees evidence that you guys aren't going to edit disruptively here, or better yet, have resolved to put aside your differences and Do What's Best for Misplaced Pages. If all else fails, I'd probably settle for the two principals here being able to prove they know what "vandalism" means. Please, when editing an article, don't just revert each other blindly, and don't accuse people of "vandalism" when they have done nothing of the sort. If you do, I will be Cranky. Happy editing! fuddlemark (befuddle me!) 13:53, 18 July 2006 (UTC)
- At least put a POV tag up there and then lock it, just to show that you arent taking sides with this blatant campaign of misinformation. There is no such thing as "Arabian Gulf" according to the UN geographically accepted names.--Zereshk 17:06, 18 July 2006 (UTC)
According to UN maps and all the other international maps, the island belongs to Iran and not "occupied" by Iran, also the official name of the of the gulf is Persian gulf not Arabian. The alternative is sometimes used, mostly in Arab countries, but the official and UN sanctioned name is Persian gulf. This is not just a difference of opinions, it is one side ignoring the facts. I agree with Zereshk, there should be a POV tag as long as it is locked.Gol 00:38, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
According to the whole world Mandilla is a terrorist then he was arawded later, anyway the UN does not say that it is an Iranian island but disputed and the ICJ is looking in the issue, the truth speaks from me but Chauvinism speaks from you both Zereshk & Gol.
- UN certainly doesn’t say that the island belongs to UAE and was “occupied” by Iran. Only UAE and perhaps a few other Arab countries say that. We can add that to the article to represent their point of view but to mention it as fact without mentioning anything else is POV pushing. Also you are extremely rude and uncivil, I guess that is why you don’t sign your posts. I would be afraid to sign as wellGol 09:17, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
the UN is a dummy in the hands of the great powers and only recognize areas whith their current governors for example they didnt recognize the states of the former USSR while they know that Russia invaded those lands, but when they liberated their countries and used power then the UN recognized them as independent other cases Bulgan, Palestine.. anyway i want you to tell me what facts to be sayed tell me exactly, now i want to know why is all that anger of just adding Arabic name (which is the origional name of the islands) to the article?, i know that most iranians are polite but you are impolite and accused me of being rude and uncivil (i dont know what is the link between uncivility and me signing) if you like me signature i will sign each time just be happy ;) MARVEL 12:47, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
- I called you uncivil because you called me chauvinist. As for UN I actually agree with you but we can not ignore international rules and say what we believe is true. This is not a personal website it is an encyclopedia. you can create a section mentioning that UAE claims the island and also the history behind it, as long as it is sourced, but you can not mention it as the only facts and ignor the rest of the world who consider the island property of Iran. UAE claims to the islands is just that, a claim.You can only mention Iran as the occupier after the international organization says so and UN has not done that yet. I personally have no problem with the Arabic name and you can add it if you want; I never objected to that or erased it. As for the Persian Gulf issue, it is called Persian in the whole world except a few Arab countries. The most we can do is to add Arabian gulf as an alternative name, and it is mentioned in the main article, but not as the official name since the UN sanctioned name is Persians gulf and even the page in WP is titled Persian gulf so it is completely ridiculous to call it Arabian gulf but give link to a page called Persian gulf! Gol 04:17, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
History speaks
Lets discuss this issue from every sight, first you must understand the invading and aggressive mentality of iran against weaker countries especially Arab lands that were struggling against foreign colonization on them, although many countries deserve to be hated by Iran for ex:Russia, Britain which imposed a war on Iran, however Arab countries were a good hunt because they are not united and because they were fighting colonization, so Iran have occupied those three islands as well as Ahwaz which was inhibited by Arabs even before Islam (parts of Ahwaz is called now Khuzestan province other name Arabistan for more information www.al-ahwaz.com) and many cities on what is now Iranian coast Langeh and many other places although they were completely independent and ruled hundreds of years ago by Arab dynasties. We know that the three islands were ruled by Arab-ruled Kingdom of Hormuz (1330-1622) and in the eighteenth century it was ruled by Al Qawasim dynasty which today provides the Sheikhs of Ras al-Khaimah and Sharjah, if we take in mind the strategic location of those islands in the mouth of the strait of hormoz some thing make a greedy neighbor desire it, we must know that Iran recognized those islands as islands ruled by Ras al-Khaimah as well as Britain, in 28/9/1912 requested permission from the ruler of Ras al-Khaimah to build a lighthouse, in 1929 the british commissar sayed in a message to the governor of al-Khaimah:"your island Tunb..." William Walles the representor of British foreign ministry noted that 'those islands and Sirri (which is an Emirati island as well) were Arab islands in the time when Britain came to the region and all documents support that saying' and the British foreign minister in his book published in 28/10/1970 stated that those islands were Arab islands, anyway Irans evidences are so weak and the Behistun Inscription does not point to these islands but somehow Iran translated in a way that it could mean an island this issue is very questionable, even if the inscription says that those islands were a part of the Achaemenid Empire that does not mean it is a Persian island the Achaemenid Empire seised many lands by war and reached Syria for example does that in any way tells you that Syria is Persian country?! this is a twisted mentality and if we will go after the Persian armies then Oman and Bahrain must be Persian countries and must join Iran as 'they where a part of persian empire'... just sending and occupying some where does not make it belong to the origional owners greedy iran which strangely claimed Bahrain!, in the other side the Al Qawasim ruled the islands continuesly and provided services and schools, if we look a slightest look in history we find that those three islands are Arab... if the owner of a land was so forgiving and never demanded his legal right in a big part in what is now an iranian coast and quit demanding the island of Sirri does that make him "weak" and must be used and his land must be taken?, if you look to the Persian people in the gulf countries they are treated equally and the matter of inequality is not even in mind and never heard about but the arabs in ahwaz are living a very low and poor life although most of irans Petrol come from there, some have problems with the name Arabian Gulf.. this Gulf was known in many other names in Arabic and Persian it was called the lower sea,salt sea,sea of hagar,sea of Qarif,Gulf of Basra and other names if it was a matter of historic naming then the Red Sea must be called sea of Qalzam, Anatolia must be called asia minor etc, when it comes to that Persia is older than Emirates that is not fully true modern iran was founded only 90 yrs ago in the other side most Emirates are 800+ old which country is older now :), Arabian Civilization was very old and ruled the peninsula read about the Queen of Sheba, there is alot to be sayed I will continue later...
MARVEL 02:34, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
Lets discuss this issue from every sight, first you must understand the invading and aggressive mentality of iran against weaker countries especially Arab lands that were struggling against foreign colonization on them, although many countries deserve to be hated by Iran for ex:Russia, Britain which imposed a war on Iran, however Arab countries were a good hunt because they are not united and because they were fighting colonization,
- First I would like to say that Iran has not started a war in over 250 years, so you are wrong in your assertion taht Iran took land from weaker Arab states. And if I remember correctly, it was Arab states that continually increased tensions, with Nasser calling on the change of the name Persian Gulf, with Iraq invading Iran, etc...
- Also, Iran was just as much of victim of European imperialism as Arab states were. between 1800 and the end of WWII, Iran lost Turkmenistan, Afghanistan, Georgia, parts of Armenia, and Arran, as well as control of our oil. Irans monarchs were corrupt and incompetent, and they were nothing more than puppest of the west by the end of the Qajar era.
so Iran have occupied those three islands as well as Ahwaz which was inhibited by Arabs even before Islam (parts of Ahwaz is called now Khuzestan province other name Arabistan for more information www.al-ahwaz.com) and many cities on what is now Iranian coast Langeh and many other places although they were completely independent and ruled hundreds of years ago by Arab dynasties.
- Since you are talking about history, let me tell you the history of the Arabs that now reside in Khuzestan province and Irans Persian Gulf coast line. Those Arabs either migrated or were moved to those areas to act as buffers against other Arab states. The Lakhmid Arab kingdom was founded by Iran, and they remained Iran's ally for hundreds of years until the end of the Sassanid era. You seem to think that these areas are Arab lands, but they arent, they are as much Arab land as the land in north eastern Iran is kurdish land (the Kurds, just like the Arabs hundreds of years earlier, were moved there by a Safavid monarch). Also, I am sure that you are aware that large chunks of the Iraqi, Bahraini, Emirati, and Omani populations are of Iranian descent, so if you are willing to sacrifice all those nations in a trade for Khuzestan, be my guest, because by your logice, those lands would be Iranian right?
- Also, after the Arab occupation, many independent Iranian kingdoms formed (Turkish ones, Iranian ones, Arab ones, etc...). However, those Arab kingdoms you are talking about were insignifcant, and didnt last long in the ever changing environment. Infact, some of those Arab monarchs were very Persianized themselves, because by the time the Abbasids took power in the Caliphate, they were more Persian than they were Arab (culturally and linguistically).
Iran translated in a way that it could mean an island this issue is very questionable, even if the inscription says that those islands were a part of the Achaemenid Empire that does not mean it is a Persian island the Achaemenid Empire seised many lands by war and reached Syria for example does that in any way tells you that Syria is Persian country?! this is a twisted mentality and if we will go after the Persian armies then Oman and Bahrain must be Persian countries and must join Iran as 'they where a part of persian empire'... just sending and occupying some where does not make it belong to the origional owners greedy iran which strangely claimed Bahrain! in the other side the Al Qawasim ruled the islands continuesly and provided services and schools, if we look a slightest look in history we find that those three islands are Arab... if the owner of a land was so forgiving and never demanded his legal right in a big part in what is now an iranian coast and quit demanding the island of Sirri does that make him "weak" and must be used and his land must be taken?,
- You just contradicted yourself. You say that because Iran used to rule those places once, that doesn't make them Iranian, well there you go, just because one small Arab kingdom had control of the islands for a short time hundreds of years ago doesnt make the islands Arab.
- First, I would like to tell you that the North African nations, Palestine, Syria, Jordan, Lebanon, and Iraq, were not Arab until after the Arabization during the Arab occupations of those regions. Before the Islamic invasions of the Near East and Africa, there were only about 500,000 Arabs in the whole region (Will Durant, Story of Civilisation).
- Regarding Bahrain, Iran had a legitamet claim. Modern Bahrain was founded by the Persians a thousand years ago, and became a very rich port. Therefore, it attracted many Arabs to the island, who eventually settled it. That is why today the largest minority in Bahrain (40%) is of Persian descent. Later, the Arabs gained power there when they invaded and eventually conquered Iran. So you talk of "origional rulers", dont you realise that Arabs did not originate in any of these islands, they migrated to them later on in history.
if you look to the Persian people in the gulf countries they are treated equally and the matter of inequality is not even in mind and never heard about but the arabs in ahwaz are living a very low and poor life although most of irans Petrol come from there,
- So is that why Emirati's still call the Persian descendents Ajami's (which in simpler terms means stupid)?
- There are many provinces poorer than Khuzestan province. And for your information, Khuzestan was the richest and most developed province in Iran before Iraq invaded and destroyed it. So you can thank Saddam Hussein for the poverty in Khuzestan.
some have problems with the name Arabian Gulf.. this Gulf was known in many other names in Arabic and Persian it was called the lower sea,salt sea,sea of hagar,sea of Qarif,Gulf of Basra and other names if it was a matter of historic naming then the Red Sea must be called sea of Qalzam, Anatolia must be called asia minor etc, when it comes to that Persia is older than Emirates that is not fully true modern iran was founded only 90 yrs ago in the other side most Emirates are 800+ old which country is older now :), Arabian Civilization was very old and ruled the peninsula read about the Queen of Sheba, there is alot to be sayed I will continue later...
- Its the reasons behind the term Arabian Gulf that we have a problem with. The Term Arabian Gulf was invented and proposed by the British, who wanted to weaken Irans influence in the Persian Gulf area, so that they could conquer the people of the region more easily (divide and conquer). However, the term was not accepted widely by Arabs, and they saw no need for the change. Persian Gulf was used by Arabs until even the 1960's. However, Nasser, the pan-Arab president of Egypt, was angered at Iran's support for Israel, and therefore declared that in retaliation Arabs should go on a campaign to change the name. So there is the brief history, it is Arab aggression towards Iran, and we cannot accept that. I wish the reasons were as simple as you mentioned, but the truth is that the name was not changed because of those reasons, but because of hostility and hatred, and that is unacceptable.
- Also, now that we are talking about name changing, did you know that pan-Arabs changed all the Persian names in Iraq for Arabic ones. Yes, Mosul, Basra, Kirkuk, etc... Were all Persian cities, with Persian names. The name of the Arvandrud waterway was changed to the Shatt al-Arab, and the Persian speaking population was oppressed and eventually oblitarated by Saddams regime. The truth is, your governments and leaders have been attacking everything Iranian in the regime for a century now. You never see Iran attempting to change names, you never see Iran funding programs for changing names, etc... and for the record, Baghdad comes from the Persian language.
- lastly, Iran has a 3000 year history, I dont even know what your talking abouot.Khosrow II 03:13, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
First I would like to say that Iran has not started a war in over 250 years, so you are wrong in your assertion taht Iran took land from weaker Arab states. And if I remember correctly, it was Arab states that continually increased tensions, with Nasser calling on the change of the name Persian Gulf, with Iraq invading Iran, etc...
- Didnt start a war?!, what do you call the occupation of Al-Ahwaz,3 Emirati islands, the western coast of the Arabian Gulf?!.
Also, Iran was just as much of victim of European imperialism as Arab states were. between 1800 and the end of WWII, Iran lost Turkmenistan, Afghanistan, Georgia, parts of Armenia, and Arran, as well as control of our oil. Irans monarchs were corrupt and incompetent, and they were nothing more than puppest of the west by the end of the Qajar era.
our monarchs are pretty much the same.
Since you are talking about history, let me tell you the history of the Arabs that now reside in Khuzestan province and Irans Persian Gulf coast line. Those Arabs either migrated or were moved to those areas to act as buffers against other Arab states. The Lakhmid Arab kingdom was founded by Iran, and they remained Iran's ally for hundreds of years until the end of the Sassanid era. You seem to think that these areas are Arab lands, but they arent, they are as much Arab land as the land in north eastern Iran is kurdish land (the Kurds, just like the Arabs hundreds of years earlier, were moved there by a Safavid monarch). Also, I am sure that you are aware that large chunks of the Iraqi, Bahraini, Emirati, and Omani populations are of Iranian descent, so if you are willing to sacrifice all those nations in a trade for Khuzestan, be my guest, because by your logice, those lands would be Iranian right?
- Since you are talking about Khuzestan do you know the complete history of Khuzestan?, Khuzestan was first the cradle of Semitic civilization (Elamite) and Sabeans (whom exist in Khuzestan until now) but then non-semetic Persian Achaemenids occupied Khuzestan from their original home (behind Zagros mountains which is the natural borders between Arabistan -Ahwaz- and between Iran), and then semitic Arabs get the area again when they built their own cities which was the only cities there, then the earned the land also you can find Ahwaz mentioned in Al-Muallakat (the suspended poets) and al-ahwaz was very known between Arabs in pre-Islamic times, when it comes to the lakhmids you must know that the lakhmid kingdom started nearly in the same time when sasanid kingdom started. The rest of your claim is so childish read it and dont laugh at it.
You just contradicted yourself. You say that because Iran used to rule those places once, that doesn't make them Iranian, well there you go, just because one small Arab kingdom had control of the islands for a short time hundreds of years ago doesnt make the islands Arab.
- Do you need glasses honestly?, i sayed repeatedly just containing some area militarily does not makes it belong to the occupier, but the ones who make cities in somewhere no one else lived in and they make homes and full system and a dynasty in that area and a country they really earn the land fully, the Arab kingdoms didnt last for along time?, they've lived their and made homes and inhibited that area and ruled their own, but when you look at Iranian claim they depend in an imaginary point of view and in short times of military occupations on those islands.
First, **********
- Very racist and very unacceptable sentence, what is your goal any way?, then those areas you are talking about are now ethnicly Arabs, and if you know that the population of Paris was only 500 in 990 AD does that make people from Paris not French people?, people grow and marry keep that in mind.
Regarding Bahrain, Iran had a legitamet claim. Modern Bahrain was founded by the Persians a thousand years ago, and became a very rich port. Therefore, it attracted many Arabs to the island, who eventually settled it. That is why today the largest minority in Bahrain (40%) is of Persian descent. Later, the Arabs gained power there when they invaded and eventually conquered Iran. So you talk of "origional rulers", dont you realise that Arabs did not originate in any of these islands, they migrated to them later on in history.
- You need glasses and some brains too if you bothered your self with a 1 min search you will find bahrain known in times much before any Persian empire it was known as "Delmun" and ..you must read some history books before writing or editing others posts if you need a discussion over Bahrain or any were else just tel me.
So is that why Emirati's still call the Persian descendents Ajami's (which in simpler terms means stupid)?
- Says who it means stupid?, this word "Ajami" exist in the Holy Quran and is used widely to refer to Persian people.
There are many provinces poorer than Khuzestan province. And for your information, Khuzestan was the richest and most developed province in Iran before Iraq invaded and destroyed it. So you can thank Saddam Hussein for the poverty in Khuzestan.
- Who likes Saddam anyway we all hate him we know he is a bad guy, but Ahwazi people's resistanse to the Iraqi army indicates that they are independent and do not follow any regime Irani or Iraqi regime and they are independent, isnt it clear that Ahwazi people are seeking independence from Iran?.
Its the reasons behind the term Arabian Gulf that we have a problem with. The Term Arabian Gulf was invented and proposed by the British, who wanted to weaken Irans influence in the Persian Gulf area, so that they could conquer the people of the region more easily (divide and conquer). However, the term was not accepted widely by Arabs, and they saw no need for the change. Persian Gulf was used by Arabs until even the 1960's. However, Nasser, the pan-Arab president of Egypt, was angered at Iran's support for Israel, and therefore declared that in retaliation Arabs should go on a campaign to change the name. So there is the brief history, it is Arab aggression towards Iran, and we cannot accept that. I wish the reasons were as simple as you mentioned, but the truth is that the name was not changed because of those reasons, but because of hostility and hatred, and that is unacceptable.
- Names change in this changing world and as i've said before the name of the places and bodies of water changes by time and their are many examples of that, also Arabs were good sailors from the oldest times they were the first to use Manson wind and the triangle mizzen which proven successful all that in the time of ancient Yemeni civilization times which is older that the oldest Persian Empire, then do not use big words such as hostility and hatred no one hate iran but people are demanding their rights.
Also, now that we are talking about name changing, did you know that pan-Arabs changed all the Persian names in Iraq for Arabic ones. Yes, Mosul, Basra, Kirkuk, etc... Were all Persian cities, with Persian names. The name of the Arvandrud waterway was changed to the Shatt al-Arab, and the Persian speaking population was oppressed and eventually oblitarated by Saddams regime. The truth is, your governments and leaders have been attacking everything Iranian in the regime for a century now. You never see Iran attempting to change names, you never see Iran funding programs for changing names, etc... and for the record, Baghdad comes from the Persian language."
will you tell me the original names of those cities although Basra was founded by Arabs in the 7th century i want to hear the persian name for it, Arbil was called be Sumerians "Urbilum" then the name was not changed much, Kirkuk is an Assyrian ancient name of the city which Arabs didnt change i also want to hear the Persian name of this city. in the opposite iranians changed the names of the Arab cities and here is a list:
Original=new Persian Name
- al-Huwaiza=Dasht Meshan
- al-Khalfia=Khalaf Abad
- al-Khafajia=Sosenkurd
- al-Ahjar al-Sab'a=Haft Kull
- al-Salihiyya=Andmeshk
- Tustar=Tushtar
- Shelwah=Dasht Abi
- al-Muhammara=Khorramshahr
- al-Fallahia=Shadkan
- Ramiz=Ramhurmuz
- Ma'ashur=Bandar Mahshihr
- Khor Abdallah's port=Bandar Shahboor
- al-Busaiteen=Bustan
- al-Sus=al-Shush
- al-Khaza'alia= Khaz'al abad
- al-Hamidiyya=Farah abad
- Askar makram=Bandukeer
- al-Kasaba=Rud Kanar
- al-Tamimiyya=Hundigan
- notice:all cities above founded by Arabs and populated by Arabs.
You must search Persian books of when was the first time Arvandrud was mentioned, this river was given that name from the people who live in both banks of the river Arabs, and even Iranian historians untill recently called it Shatt al-Arab untill now Iranian people in that area call it Shatt al-Arab
Iran has a 3000 year history, I dont even know what your talking about
what am talking about is that you compared the history of Iran from the ancient times in all dynasties and compared it with the modern history of the Emirates after unity and you concluded that Emirate has a history (0.01)of the Age of the Persian Empire, take in mind that some Emirates are more than 2000 years old and evidences of human activity and trade for more than 5000 years, you must calculate the history of Emirates from before the unity an the true comparation is between the Arabian Civilizaion and Persian Empire.
final conclusion:we know right from wrong and it is not a shame to do a mistake but it is a shame to keep doing wrong the islands are full emirati islands so is alahwaz and western coast of the Arabian Gulf, that is for the truth seeker but for some one wants to fool himself nothing is right except the thing he wants it to be right, if my country started any aggression on any country especially a neighboring country i will stand against my country and refuse what it do and apologize for the others, but as i see now not every one is ready for the same, some here are amateurs who like their homeland and trying to defend it everyway, so if you want to change names in this encyclopedia we can change too, if you want to call Shatt al-Arab as Shatt al-Arab/Arvandrud we will change the name of the Persian Gulf into Persian Gulf/Arabian Gulf we are capable of it, Admin please keep locking this Article to prevent it from childish vandalism.
- there is no point in arguing with you about this, since you basically ignored everything i said and dont even know the history of the region. anyway, this article will eventually be unprotected and will eventually be corrected.Khosrow II 17:29, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
i have answered every thing you asked or wondered about even when some of them were silly but you rather closing your head, just for the record i dialy read history books for 4hrs and i can assure you that i know more about history that you and all of your friends,and as you are not able to discuss you must stay in the corner and stop vandalisingMARVEL 18:43, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
- what silly points? you contradict yourself over and over, and your argument makes no sense. like i said, this article will soon be unprotected and corrected anyway, so there is no point in me arguing with you overthe history of the dispute. the simplicity of it is that iran is a multi ethnic society, and has always been, and the land it has belongs to all of them, including abu musa, and the tunbs.Khosrow II 19:02, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
request unprotection?
Unprotect --Ķĩřβȳ♥ŤįɱéØ 03:27, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
Support and if not unprotected then please at least add a POV tag as Zereshk has suggested. Khorshid 05:51, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
Support the Unprotect misinformation in the article that needs to be changed.Khosrow II 06:06, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
Support Gol 09:29, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
Page protection is not subject to referendum (in fact, there's very little of Misplaced Pages where the results of a vote matter much). It's quite simple: if this article is unprotected, will an edit war continue? "The other bloke is obviously wrong!" is no argument at all, particularly since MARVEL (talk · contribs) would undoubtedly say the same thing about you people.
Has either side of this argument considered talking to the other (and I don't just mean shouting slogans at one another)? Consider that the other side may have a reason for its views, and trying to work out a compromise? Or, if you're really really sure that the other side's views have no merit, then at least challenging them to provide a source for their views, which (provided you're willing to be fair) often ends a dispute once and for all?
I will unprotect this article only if I can be sure you fellows won't immediately start edit warring and spuriously accusing each other of "vandalism". fuddlemark (befuddle me!) 12:16, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
- Since you asked, I left him as message in his talk page explaining the issue and I hope he responds logically. However, this is the clear case of one side ignoring facts. This is not the difference of opinion, I am amazed he has not been warned yet; he wants to represent the POV of UAE government, which is not shared by UN or any other international organization, as facts and deletes everything else. He justifies his action by saying that UN is a dummy! There should be a POV tag as long as it is locked. And he should be told that this is not a personal or pro UAE website but an encyclopedia.Gol 04:41, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
- The only matter of urgency right now is the Persian Gulf. If you will not unprotect it, then atleast change the arabian gulf's to Persian Gulf, and then you may protect the article again.Khosrow II 18:18, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
Mark,
Either unprotect it, or keep it protected and put a POV tag up there. Our friend here is on an agenda, which is pretty obvious. I think our call for impartiality should be respected.--Zereshk 19:21, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
The "Arabian Gulf" links to "Persian Gulf" anyways...
What is the point, besides POV-pushing, of having it say "Arabian Gulf"??? --Ķĩřβȳ♥ŤįɱéØ 10:19, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
- Exactly. It is very clear that MARVEL is pushing an Arab nationalist POV (which he does not even bother to mask). It is so obvious to be comedic. Khorshid 13:17, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
- I agree. What is the point of having Arabian gulf, even though it goes to Persian gulf. Problems similar to this have come and gone and always both the scholars and the masses agree its called Persian gulf. What's the point of all of this fighting? --(Aytakin) | Talk 00:35, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
- You got me. Politics, I guess. Khorshid 03:52, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
Update
As I said I attempted to talk to him and this was his response to me.
“Iran occupying those islands is a fact as they sent their troops there and kicked the inhabitabts of Tunb Greater out this is just a matter of history and every one knows that,man you have a conscious, and i will not be able to connect anymore because i have tests there days do what your concious tells you Salamz”
He is basically twisting the argument talking about morality! He has no back up and no source. Facts are: 1) The official name of the gulf is Persian (Arabian used as an alternative in a few countries only and not sanctioned by UN.) 2) Iran is not the occupier according to UN or anybody except the government of UAE which has a claim on the islands. We can, and should, mention that the claim exists and also what happened in 1971 to be fair to the other side, but that is all. Island is ruled by Iran and at the current moment it is legitimate and not occupation. Please unlock the page so we can correct the information. Thank you.Gol 06:14, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
- IMHO, i suggest repeating the fact that he has no sources or anything to an administrator or many of them, instead of trying to reason with this fellow. --Spahbod 17:45, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
{editprotected}
{editprotected|Please revert to previous version. Current version is POV}
- See m:The Wrong Version ;). No admin will mess around with the version while the article is protected. There is disucssion with the protecting admin above, follow that. Don't use {editprotected} here again, cheers. --Commander Keane 10:02, 21 July 2006 (UTC)
The Real Problem is...
(So 'Ahwaz', when are the Arabs going to pay me and my cousins retribution for getting **** up with Saddam's Arab-paid-for Chemical bombs)
(Yes, Zereshk, Arabs are the source of all evil in the world ...)
IT IS THE HATRED AGAINST ARABS
FOR THE FULL STORY READ THE RELATED Talk:Ahvaz Odenatus 04:51, 22 July 2006 (UTC)
First, Zora or whoever you are, please KEEP YOUR HATRED FOR YOURSELF. Second, saddam and his followers is the ones that got *****d by iranians not the other way around. 6 years in Iraq, the world sending them all kinds of weapons, arabs sending them all the oil money they needed, still iran f***** them in the ***, very similar thing happened when Nader shah of persia conquered oman and bahrain and some more arab countries. We think of the arabs in khuzestan as our brothers, they took arms with us when we *****d saddam's a**. So again i advice keep your hatred for yourself, you aint fooling noone but yourself. And one more personal attack like that, and you will find yourself blocked, even if you think using anonymous proxy is gonna help you. --Hakhamaneshi 20:26, 22 July 2006 (UTC)
Mr:Hakhamsakawashikamanshi you do not just need glasses you need a brain too read before answering the guy was just quoting... so you are happy on what nader did? this faliure made a kingdom which didnt last for long and he was turkic anyway right? , it is sufficient for arabs to be descended from Abraham and for me to be from great Bakr bin Wael MARVEL 13:16, 23 July 2006 (UTC)
Experiment
On Misplaced Pages, we never like to leave articles protected for too long. This one's been protected for five days now; it's time to unprotect and see what happens. Remember that aggressive editing will not be tolerated. Have fun! fuddlemark (befuddle me!) 11:19, 23 July 2006 (UTC)
Thank you for protecting it in the first place MarkGallagher, i thing their vandalism will start, however those gang have given their openion exclusively in wikipedia, for example the al-Mohammera an arab city persians gave it a NEW name "Khorramshahr" and the original name of it was and is al-Mohammera but those close-minded people give the article the name "khorramshahr" solely because it is a Persian name and we must know that this city is populated by arabs and founded by arabs, but when it comes the Arabian Gulf they defend the name Persian and reject the arabic NEW name, this is a double standard, moreover they use offensive words (a thing they used to in their daily life), im not asking for impossible things when it comes to a disbuted area just mention both names i didnt ask for removing the persian name a thing they do to the arabic name, so admin those guys do not want to discuss they prefer "edit war" and wishing to destroy the neutrality of Misplaced Pages, so admin keep protecting this page. MARVEL 13:16, 23 July 2006 (UTC)
- What on earth are you talking about? I'm checking the page history and you started the edit war on July 17th when you unilaterally inserted, and later forced, your POV into the article, without any prior discussion on talk page and now you want the page protected because you are editing against the consensus. Also, Khorramshahr is called Khorramshahr because that's the official name of the city, Mohammerah is just a former name. See Encyclopedia Britannica's entry on the city. --ManiF 13:58, 23 July 2006 (UTC)
Formerly.. who changed its name???????, did the arab people of the city changed its name or was it the iranian general Reza Shah?, there is now 200,000,000 arab people in the arab world call the city al-mahamara, you like iran at first place but i like the truth at first place i go with the truth even if it was against me, ah also since you refered to britannica i have something you really like Encyclopedia Britannica's entry on Arabian Gulfalso called Arabian Gulf, see what britannica says?, you guys like iran and i also like iran but chauvinism is rejected so is the extremism and ignoring the other, if i was chauvinism like many of you guys -who took place in edit war- i would remove the persian name but what i did is adding the arabic name and meaning to the article and i will write a full history of those islands if i get a guarantee that my effort will not "go with the wind" and my article is vandelized by those "iranian knights", admin protect this page you saw what happened!. MARVEL 14:34, 23 July 2006 (UTC)
The experiment's not going too well
So, less than three hours after unprotection, MARVEL and ManiF are at each others' throats in an edit war. Well, that's Not Good. I'd rather not protect immediately after unprotecting, so instead I've blocked MARVEL and ManiF for twenty-four hours to think about how to be a little less agressive in their editing.
Remember, guys: Misplaced Pages articles don't have to be perfect right now, and using the summary "revert vandalism" will make you look silly. So don't do it. Happy editing! fuddlemark (befuddle me!) 14:59, 23 July 2006 (UTC)
- MARVEL, as well as some other anon users, have been vandalising and putting POV in a number of iran related articles, such as this. MARVEL started the edit war, and he is now continuing it. ManiF is simply correcting the article from the POV. also, MARVEL, i would like to remind you that the British gave these islands to Iran if Iran would allow bahrain to become its own nation. The Arabs agreed to that agreement, and therefore Iran got these islands. They are Iranian islands.Khosrow II 16:17, 23 July 2006 (UTC)
Iran is occupying those islands as well as Ahwaz and they are chnging name it is not vandalism to only mention the other name it is vandalism when removing the arabic name and the truth, every thing here is confused the admin protects the article and then he let it to vandalism, if he wants to block he should also block Spanhood too, i tell you some thing, we have been tolerant for a long time and arab related articles were vandelized by iranies and admins -unfortunately- are with the other side just because the have wrote their lie previously, the lie is a lie and iran is occupying ahwaz and the three islands and the irani name should by removed as well as all arab related articles, i have alot to say, but now AdMiN why havent you block that spanbod when he vandelized the article or is there is secret plans???
- do you know why we get more support in cases like this? its because historical facts are on our side. Iran is not occupying the tumb islands nor are they occupying ahvaz. that is just your POV.Khosrow II 06:01, 24 July 2006 (UTC)
communicating with such mentality is difficult, why do i write long posts and one reads them?, why do arabs of khuzestan seek independence and why arabistan is now called khuzestan and arabic name are changes, at least you and your gang friends try to keep away from arab related articles and mind your own.
The Greater and Lesser Tunbs and The island of Abu musa are Iranian islands in the Persian Gulf
The Greater and Lesser Tunbs and The island of Abu musa are Iranian islands in the Persian Gulf
The Persian Gulf
The Persian Gulf is a crescent-shape groove which has demonstrated the encroachment of the Indian Ocean waters (Makrân Sea, also known as Gulf of Oman) in an span of 900 km long and 240 km wide in the inferior folds of southern Zagros mountains. The Persian Gulf and its neighboring countries constitute almost one ninth of the 44 million square km span of the Asian continent (1). The Persian Gulf has been a valuable waterway since the beginning of history and as the venue of the collision of great civilizations of the ancient East, it has a background of several millenniums (2). Since centuries ago, the Ilamites used the Port of Bushehr and the Khârg Island for dwelling, shipping and ruling over the coasts of the Persian Gulf as well as transaction with the West Indies and the Nile Valley (3). In the Latin American geography books the Persian Gulf has been referred to as More Persicum or the Sea of Pars (4).
The Latin term "Sinus Persicus" is equivalent to "Persicher Golf" in German, "Persico qof" in Italian, "Persidskizalir" in Russian and "Perusha Wan" that all mean "Pars" (5). and le golf perse in French
Prior to the stationing of the Aryan Iranians on Iran's Plateau, the Assyrians named the sea in their inscriptions as the "bitter sea" and this is the oldest name that was used for the Persian Gulf (6).
An inscription of Darius the Great found in the Suez Canal, used a phrase with a mention of river Pars which points to the same Persian Gulf.
The Greek historian Herodotus in his book has repeatedly referred to the Red Sea as the "Arab Gulf" (7), and Straben, the Greek historian of the second half of the first century BCE and the first half of the first century AD wrote: Arabs are living between the Arabian Gulf and the Persian Gulf (8).
Ptolemy, another renowned Greek geographer of the 2nd century has referred to the Red Sea as the "Arabicus Sinus", i.e. the Arabian Gulf. In the book `the world boundaries from the East to the West' which was written in the 4th century Hegira, the Red Sea was dubbed as the Arabian Gulf.
Today, the most common Arabic works refer to the sea in south Iran as the "Persian Gulf", including the world famous Arabic encyclopedia `Al-Monjad' which is the most reliable source in this respect (9).
There are undeniable legal evidences and documents in confirmation of the genuineness of the term Persian Gulf. From 1507 to 1560 in all the agreements that Portuguese, Spanish, British, Dutch, French and Germans concluded with the Iranian government or in any other political event everywhere there is a mention of the name Persian Gulf (10).
Even in agreements with the participation of Arabs there is a mention of "Al-Khalij al-Farsi" in the Arabic texts and "Persian Gulf" in English texts, such as the document for the independence of Kuwait which was signed between the emir of Kuwait and representatives of the British government in the Persian Gulf.
The document, which was signed on June 19, 1961 by Abdullah As-Salem As-Sabah, has been registered in the Secretariat of the United Nations according to article 102 of the U.N. Charter and can be invoked at any U.N. office (11).
Since the beginning of the 20th century, the name "Persian Gulf" has been used in geography and history books with less reference to the "Fars Sea". Such a change has suggested the idea that the "Fars Sea" had been an old name substituted by a new term "Persian Gulf" (12)
The beginning of 1930s was a turning point in the history of efforts for changing the name of Persian Gulf when Sir Charles Bellgrave, (?) the British diplomatic envoy in Iranian island of Mishmâhig, which today known as Bahrain opened a file for the change in the name of the Persian Gulf and proposed the issue to the British Foreign Office. Even before the response of the British Foreign Office he used the fake name (in an attempt to retake Bahrain, the Tunbs, Abu Musa, Sirri, Qeshm, Hengam and other islands belonging to Iran and to disclose and thwart the plot of disintegration of Khuzestan) (13).
Besides all the disputes that have been made over the name of the Persian Gulf, the United Nations with its 22 Arab member countries has on two occasions officially declared the unalterable name of the sea between Iran and the Arabian Peninsula as the Persian Gulf. The first announcement was made through the document UNAD, 311/Qen on March 5, 1971 and the second was UNLA 45.8.2 (C) on August 10, 1984. Moreover, the annual U.N. conference for coordination on the geographical names has emphatically repeated the name "Persian Gulf" each year (14).
Although using the "Arabian Gulf" instead of the "Persian Gulf" has no basis and will not be accepted in any culture or language, however, it will not diminish our responsibility in expressing the reality and eliminating ambiguities as the main and oldest inhabitants of the region.
HISTORICAL SITUATION OF GREATER AND LESSER TUNBS, ABU MUSA "The Greater Tunb Island is limited from north to Qeshm Island, from west to the Lesser Tunb, from south to Abu Musa and Raas al-Khaima and from east to Oman (15). The island is called the Greater Tunb, Gap Tunb, Tunb-e Mar, Greater Tunb-e Mar, etc..." (16).
In the Islamic era up to the recent centuries the Greater Tunb Island was part of the states of Fars, Kerman, Mokran and Hormuzgan.
In 1884 it was part of the Persian Gulf ports. In 1949 together with 29 other islands it was a village under the district of Lengeh. In 1951, it was part of the village Mazdouqi in Lengeh district of the city of Lar. In 1954, it was a village in Abu Musa district of Bandar Lengeh port city. In 1958, Abu Musa and Great Tunb districts jointed together and formed a large district with Kish Island as its center. In 1976, it became part of the city of Kish. In 1982, it became part of the city of Abu Musa. In 1991, the Great Tunb Island was part of the Tunb district of the city of Bu Musa (17).
The Greater Tunb Island due to its far distance from the Strait of Hormuz has no strategic importance by itself. However, given Iran's strategic situation, it is considered an important link in the defensive line of Iran in the Strait of Hormuz (18).
The Lesser Tunb Island is neighboring the city of Lengeh in the north, Abu Musa Island in the south, the Greater Tunb Island in the east and Faroo and Faroogan islands in the west. The island is rectangular in shape (19).
Footnotes:
1- Institute of Political and International Studies, selected Persian Gulf documents, volume 1, page 5 2- Ibid, page 5. 3- Mehdi Azimi, "Persian Gulf Political History", Port and Sea, Nos. 41-41, page 2 4- Institute of Political and International Studies, series of articles of seminar on Persian Gulf issues, page 135 5- Institute for Political and International Studies, selected Persian Gulf documents, volume 1, page 18, Institute of Political and International Studies, series of articles of seminar on Persian Gulf issues, page 136. 6- Seyed Hassan Mousavi, "A brief discussion on historical-political geography of the Persian Gulf...", sociology and humanities of Shiraz University, page 118. 7- Institute of Political and International Studies, selected Persian Gulf documents, pages 18-22, Institute of Political and International Studies, series of articles of seminar on Persian Gulf issues, page 137. Seyed Hassan Mousavi "A brief discussion on historical-political geography of the Persian Gulf..." sociology and humanities of Shiraz University, page 118. Mehdi Azimi, "Persia Gulf Political History", Port and Sea, page 22. 8- Institute of Political and International Studies, selected Persian Gulf documents, volume 1, page 22. 9- Ibid, page 146. 10- Institute of Political and International Studies, series of articles of seminar on Persian Gulf issues, page 148. 11- Institute of Political and International Studies, ibid, page 149. 12- Pirouz Mojtahedzadeh, "Persian Gulf in return for history", political and economic, Nos. 105-106, page 26. 13- Pirouz Mojtahedzadeh, "Persian Gulf in return for history", political and economic, Nos. 105-106, page 27. 14- Pirouz Mojtahedzadeh, "Persian Gulf in return for history", Nos. 105-106, page 28. 15- Iraj Afshar Sistani, Abu Musa Island and the Greater and Lesser Tunbs, page 105. 16- Iraj Afshar Sistani, ibid, page 11. 17- Iraj Afshar Sistani, ibid, page 119. 18- Iraj Afshar Sistani, Abu Musa Island and the Greater and Lesser Tunbs, page 121. 19- Ibid, page 123.
http://azadi.pejman.googlepages.com/home
http://pejman.azadi.googlepages.com/thepersiangulf&itsname
Article moving
This article should be moved to Greater and Lesser Tonbs, as the proper transliteration of their official names is: Tonb-e Kuchek, and Tonb-e Bozorg. ArmanJan 14:19, 31 July 2006 (UTC)
Neutrality
Hello, I'm new here and just stumbled across this article. This whole debate here strikes me as very silly. There is evidently a dispute about these islands, out in the real world. Therefore, I thought it's pretty obvious that Misplaced Pages must neutrally present both sides. Isn't that what that famous "NPOV" stands for that everybody is going on about? Instead, all you guys have been doing for months (I clicked on that link saying "history"!) is going back and forth between one version that just says they are Iranian, and another version that just says they're Emirate. Isn't that rather silly? I was looking at some other articles on territorial disputes, and I can assure you other Wikipedians have managed better to present a neutral view. I'll try and edit the article myself, based on the German version and material from both the "Iranian" and the "Arab" version here. I'll leave the rest of the details for you guys to work out. FellFairy 11:31, 28 September 2006 (UTC)
To Ali Doostzadeh
Why did you revert my edit? And what does the age of the two states have to do with it? The claim put forward by the UAE apparently goes back to an earlier claim by one of the member emirates. The founding date of the UAE itself is quite irrelevant. And be that as it may, please feel free to correct any factual errors in what I wrote, but you can't just go back to a version that presents the Iranian possession as undisputedly correct, that way it will never be a neutral article. You can't seriously be claiming that the sovereignty dispute doesn't exist, and that the UAE claims don't merit any presentation? I thought Misplaced Pages was very proud of its neutrality in such things, but now I really don't know what to do. I'm new here and I don't want to start off with an edit war, but for now I think I'll revert this to what I wrote earlier. FellFairy 21:07, 28 September 2006 (UTC)
- It's currently part of Iran. If a madeup country like UAE disputes it, then it should be mentioned. But it is not an international dispute. --alidoostzadeh 21:32, 28 September 2006 (UTC)
- Not an international dispute? Richard Schofield, Deputy Director of the Geopolitics Research Centre at the School of Oriental and African Studies in London, is of a different opinion. It seems he found enough international dispute about Tunbs to fill up 6 volumes and 5000 pages . FellFairy 09:14, 29 September 2006 (UTC)
- It's simple. The UAE is a madeup country in 1971 by the British. Iran has been there in the region way before the British. As per international dispute, no it is a small land dispute and it is like the fakland wars between argentina or england or the issue of northern ireland. --alidoostzadeh 09:23, 29 September 2006 (UTC)
- It's probably more like Isla Perejil, Hans Island, Hawar Islands, Zuqar Island, Spratley Islands etc. Are these cases not generally referred to as international disputes? FellFairy 09:35, 29 September 2006 (UTC)
- It's simple. The UAE is a madeup country in 1971 by the British. Iran has been there in the region way before the British. As per international dispute, no it is a small land dispute and it is like the fakland wars between argentina or england or the issue of northern ireland. --alidoostzadeh 09:23, 29 September 2006 (UTC)