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It has been suggested that this article or section be merged with Enlargement of the Arab League and Charter of the Arab League to Arab League. (Discuss) Proposed since August 2011. |
The Arab League has 22 member states.
The Arab League was founded in Cairo in 1945 by Egypt, Iraq, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Transjordan (Jordan from 1946), and Yemen. There was a continual increase in membership during the second half of the 20th century, with additional 15 Arab states and 4 observers being admitted.
Israel is not a member despite 20% of its population being Palestinian Arab, nearly half the Jewish population being descended from Jews from Arab countries, and Arabic being an official language.
Chad is also not a member, despite Arabic being one of its two official languages, some 12% of Chadians identifying as Arab[1] and around 900,000 Arabic-speaking.[2]
The Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic is not a member of the Arab League as it is recognized by only some Arab League states, while Western Sahara is recognized by the League as part of Morocco,[citation needed] which controls nearly 80% of the territory.
Iran is not considered part of the Arab world, as the majority of its population are Persian, with only 2% of its population being Arab.[3]
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Egypt's membership was suspended in 1979 after it signed the Egyptian–Israeli Peace Treaty, and the League's headquarters were moved from Cairo to Tunis. In 1987, Arab League states restored diplomatic relations with Egypt, the country was readmitted to the League in 1989, and the League's headquarters were moved back to Cairo.[4]
The Libyan Arab Jamahiriya was suspended from the Arab League on 22 February 2011.[5] On 27 August 2011, the Arab League voted to restore Libya's membership by accrediting a representative of the National Transitional Council, which is partially recognised as the interim government of the country in the wake of Gaddafi's ouster from the capital of Tripoli.[6]
On 12 November 2011 the League passed a decree that would suspend Syria's membership if the government failed to stop violence against civilian protestors by 16 November amidst the 2011 uprising.[7] Despite this, the government did not yield to the League's demands.
Four countries are observer states—a status that entitles them to express their opinion and give advice but denies them voting rights.[8] These are Eritrea, where Arabic is one of the official languages, as well as Brazil and Venezuela, which have large and influential Arab communities.[9] India is another observer to the Arab League.[8]
| Country |
Admission date |
Capital |
Area (km²) |
Population (2010)[10] |
Official languages |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1962-08-16 | Algiers | 2,381,741 | 34,586,184 | Arabic | |
| 1971-09-11 | Manama | 750 | 738,004 | Arabic | |
| 1993-11-20 | Moroni | 2,235 | 773,407 | Comorian, Arabic, French | |
| 1977-09-04 | Djibouti | 23,200 | 740,528 | Arabic, French | |
| 1945-03-22 | Cairo | 1,002,450 | 80,471,869 | Arabic | |
| 1945-03-22 | Baghdad | 438,317 | 29,671,605 | Arabic, Kurdish | |
| 1945-03-22 | Amman | 92,300 | 6,407,085 | Arabic | |
| 1961-07-20 | Kuwait city | 18,000 | 2,789,132 | Arabic | |
| 1945-03-22 | Beirut | 10,452 | 4,125,247 | Arabic | |
| 1953-03-28 | Tripoli | 1,759,541 | 6,461,454 | Arabic | |
| 1973-11-26 | Nouakchott | 1,030,700 | 3,205,060 | Arabic | |
| 1958-10-01 | Rabat | 446,550 | 31,627,428 | Arabic, Tamazight | |
| 1971-09-29 | Muscat | 309,550 | 2,967,717 | Arabic | |
| 1976-09-09[12] | - | 6,040 | 4,260,636 | Arabic | |
| 1971-09-11 | Doha | 11,437 | 840,926 | Arabic | |
| 1945-03-22 | Riyadh | 2,149,690 | 25,731,776 | Arabic | |
| 1974-02-14 | Mogadishu | 637,661 | 10,112,453 | Somali, Arabic | |
| 1956-01-19 | Khartoum | 1,886,068 | 30,894,000 | Arabic, English | |
| 1945-03-22 | Damascus | 185,180 | 22,198,110 | Arabic | |
| 1958-10-01 | Tunis | 163,610 | 10,589,025 | Arabic | |
| 1971-12-06 | Abu Dhabi | 83,600 | 4,975,593 | Arabic | |
| 1945-05-05 | Sana'a | 527,968 | 23,495,361 | Arabic |
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