Oman national football team

The Oman national football team (Arabic: منتخب عُمَّان لِكُرَّةُ الْقَدَم) represents Oman in men's international football and is controlled by the Oman Football Association. Although the team was officially founded in 1978, the squad was formed some time before that and a proper football association was formed only in December 2005.

Oman
Shirt badge/Association crest
Nickname(s)Al-Ahmar
(The Reds)
Samba Al-Khaleej
(Gulf Samba)
AssociationOman Football Association
ConfederationAFC (Asia)
Sub-confederationWAFF (West Asia)
Head coachBranko Ivanković
CaptainHarib Al-Saadi
Most capsAhmed Mubarak (183)[1]
Top scorerHani Al-Dhabit (43)
Home stadiumSultan Qaboos Sports Complex
FIFA codeOMA
First colours
Second colours
FIFA ranking
Current 72 Increase 1 (26 October 2023)[2]
Highest50 (August – October 2004)
Lowest129 (October 2016)
First international
 Libya 14–1 Muscat and Oman
(Cairo, Egypt; 2 September 1965)
Biggest win
 Oman 14–0 Bhutan 
(Muscat, Oman; 28 March 2017)
Biggest defeat
 Libya 21–0 Muscat and Oman
(Baghdad, Iraq, 6 April 1966)
Asian Cup
Appearances5 (first in 2004)
Best resultRound of 16 (2019)
WAFF Championship
Appearances5 (first in 2008)
Best resultThird place (2012)
Arabian Gulf Cup
Appearances24 (first in 1974)
Best resultChampions (2009, 2017)

History

The mid 1990s under the OFA chairmanship of Sheikh Saif bin Hashil Al-Maskary saw Oman achieve higher results on the Asian stage. Former Omani captain, Hani Al-Dhabit was awarded the RSSSF 2001 World Top Scorer, with 22 goals;[3] the most goals scored by a player who won the World Top Scorer award till date and also being the third Arab and only the first Omani to win the award.[4]

The senior team has never qualified for the World Cup but has qualified for the Asian Cup in the years 2004, 2007, 2015 and 2019. They also have reached the Arabian Gulf Cup final four times and have won it for the first time on their third attempt as hosts in 2009. They had to wait for the 2017 edition to win the tournament for the second time in their history.

Gulf Cup performance

Prior to the newer millennium, Oman generally struggled more in the Gulf Cup, usually finishing in 6th or 7th place even when the cup was held in Oman. It was in 1998 when the national team began to improve its performance and in the 2003 and 2004 Gulf Cups, new talents like Amad Al-Hosni, Ali Al-Habsi, Sultan Al-Touqi, Badr Al-Maimani and Khalifa Ayil may have made the team more successful.

In the 2002 Gulf Cup which was held in Saudi Arabia, Oman had once again finished at 5th place but under the captaincy of Dhofar F.C.'s Hani Al-Dhabit, Oman had accomplished something which was never done before in the team's history in the Gulf Cup, defeating 9-time winners[5] Kuwait. The match had ended 3–1 with captain Hani Al-Dhabit scoring a hat-trick. Hani also netted a goal against Bahrain and a consolation goal in a 2–1 loss against Qatar.[6] At the end of the competition, Hani was the only Omani to score goals and was also awarded the "Top Goalscorer" of the competition with a total of 5 goals.[7]

In the 2004 Gulf Cup which was held in Doha, Oman reached the final for the first time in the team's history which was eventually lost to the hosts Qatar in a penalty shootout after the goalkeeping sensation Ali Al-Habsi missed a penalty. Qatar won the match 6–5 on penalties after the match had ended 1–1 at normal time. Amad Al-Hosni was awarded the "Top Goalscorer" award of the competition with a total of 4 goals.[8]

In the 2007 Gulf Cup which was held in the United Arab Emirates, the national team again reached the final for a second consecutive time and again lost 1–0 to the hosts United Arab Emirates. Although Oman lost to the Emirates in the final, they had maintained an undefeated record throughout the competition excluding the final.[9] Once again Ali Al-Habsi had received the "Best Goalkeeper of the Gulf Cup" award[10] for the third consecutive time in a row, the most won by any goalkeeper in the 40 years of the Gulf Cup tournament. Oman had tied United Arab Emirates in goal-scoring with nine goals each after the competition.[11]

Omani players during 2019 AFC Asian Cup

Eventually after losing twice in the Gulf Cup final consecutively, Oman had managed to win the 2009 Gulf Cup tournament as hosts by defeating Saudi Arabia in a penalty shootout. Oman won the match 6–5 on penalties after the match had ended 0–0 at extra time. Oman maintained a clean-sheet throughout the whole competition.[12] The competition in Muscat was the first for Hassan Rabia, and despite this, he managed to score 4 goals making him receive the "Top Goalscorer" award.[13] Ali Al-Habsi also received his fourth consecutive "Best Goalkeeper Award".[14]

However, Ali Al-Habsi would not go on to feature in the next two Gulf Cup's due to his commitments with his English club team Wigan Athletic F.C. at the time. In the 2010 Gulf Cup which was held in Yemen, Oman drew all the three matches of the group stage against Bahrain, United Arab Emirates and Iraq. Oman could manage to score only one goal in the tournament against Bahrain which was scored by Amad Al-Hosni and hence could not go further in the tournament. Following these performances of the team in the regional tournament, the Oman Football Association sacked their then-manager Claude Le Roy on 9 January 2011 who won them their maiden tournament in 2009.

In the 2013 Gulf Cup which was held in Bahrain, Oman could manage to draw only one match against the hosts Bahrain and lost in their other two matches against Qatar and United Arab Emirates. Oman again could score only one goal and this time it was from the spot by Hussain Al-Hadhri in the match against Qatar which Oman eventually lost 2–1.

In the 2017 Gulf Cup which was held in Kuwait, Oman started the tournament with a loss to the United Arab Emirates by one goal from a penalty kick by Ali Mabkhout. Afterwards, Oman won the two remaining matches of the group stage, first against the hosts Kuwait 1–0 with a penalty kick by Ahmed Kano then against Saudi Arabia 2–0. Oman qualified to the semi-final match which was against Bahrain and won it 1–0 with an own goal by the Bahraini Mahdi Abduljabbar. Eventually, and after nine years from its first title, Oman managed to win the tournament for the second time in its history by defeating United Arab Emirates in the final in a penalty shootout. Oman won the match 5–4 on penalties after it had ended 0–0 after extra time. The Omani Ahmed Mubarak Kano was awarded the most valuable player award for his role in the results of the Omani team campaign.

Kits and sponsors

The "confettied" kit provided by Thai firm Grand Sport during Oman's attempted qualification for the 1998 World Cup

Over the years Oman has had multiple kit providers of which Grand Sport held the contract for the longest period. Oman has also worn kits provided by Puma, Umbro, Lotto and Adidas.

The national team signed a contract in 2006 with Gulf Air[15][16] but the deal ended in 2008 and was replaced with a signed sponsorship by Omantel's Oman Mobile.

On 9 May 2012, the Oman Football Association launched the new official team kit to be worn by Oman in their push for 2014 FIFA World Cup qualification – AFC fourth round. The new kit was launched together with a new OFA logo. The new kit was designed for Oman by Taj Oman, an Oman-based company.[17] Later in June 2012, Oman's airline Oman Air became the official carrier of the Oman Football Association.[18]

On 8 February 2014, the Omani Football Association confirmed the tie-up with Italian sports apparel manufacturer Kappa. A joint venture agreement was signed by sportswear Kappa and the OFA's apparel brand Taj Oman. In a 4-year deal, Kappa will produce the kit worn by all the Oman National football teams bearing the Taj mark and will provide Oman with a range of sportswear specific for the country. The deal will see both the names (Kappa & Taj) on the kit worn by the National teams and on all retail items.[19] Oman Air also renewed its deal on the same day with the OFA till the end of the 2013–14 season. On 16 September 2014, the Omani Football Association announced that they had signed an agreement with Asia Sports Marketing to become the exclusive sales agent for the Association.[20]

On 9 September 2015, the Omani Football Association signed a one-year contract extension with Oman Air as the official carrier of the national team. The association said that although Oman Air's ticket allocation in the deal is primarily meant for the senior national team's tours, OFA has availed the privilege for club teams' trips to Salalah for Omantel Professional League (OPL) matches and also for overseas travel of the national age-group squads.[21][22] On 18 October 2015, the Omani Football Association announced a partnership with a new mental energizer Energy Drinks Partner, Effect.[23][24]

In 2018, the OFA signed a contract with German sports company Jako.

Period Kit Manufacturer
1978–1996 Germany Puma
1996–2005 Thailand Grand Sport
2005–2006 United Kingdom Umbro
2006–2008 Italy Lotto
2008–2012 Germany Adidas
2012–2014 Oman Taj Oman
2014–2018 Italy Kappa
2018– Germany Jako

Results and fixtures

The following is a list of match results in the last 12 months, as well as any future matches that have been scheduled.

  Win   Draw   Loss   Fixture

2022

16 November Friendly Oman  0–1  Germany Muscat, Oman
Report
  • Füllkrug 80'
Stadium: Sultan Qaboos Sports Complex
Attendance: 25,654
Referee: Mohammed Al-Hoish (Saudi Arabia)
20 November Friendly Oman  2–0  Belarus Al Ain, United Arab Emirates
18:00 UTC+4 Report Stadium: Khalifa bin Zayed Stadium
Attendance: 150
Referee: Adel Ali Al Naqbi (United Arab Emirates)
30 December Friendly Syria  0–1  Oman Dubai, United Arab Emirates
--:-- UTC+4 Report Al-Braiki 85' Stadium: Dubai Police Club Stadium

2023

9 January Arabian Gulf Cup GS Oman  3–2  Yemen Basra, Iraq
16:15 UTC+3
Report Stadium: Basra International Stadium
Referee: Abdullah Jamali (Kuwait)
16 January Arabian Gulf Cup SF Bahrain  0–1  Oman Basra, Iraq
20:15 UTC+3 Report Al-Yahmadi 83' Stadium: Al-Minaa Olympic Stadium
Referee: Adel Al-Naqbi (United Arab Emirates)
19 January Gulf Cup F Iraq  3–2 (a.e.t.)  Oman Basra, Iraq
19:00 UTC+3
Report
Stadium: Basra International Stadium
Attendance: 64,570
27 March Friendly Oman  2–0  Lebanon Muscat, Oman
22:00 UTC+4
Stadium: Sultan Qaboos Sports Complex
11 June 2023 2023 CAFA Nations Cup Uzbekistan  3–0  Oman Tashkent, Uzbekistan
20:30 UTC+5 Masharipov 7', 24' Alijonov 89' Report Stadium: Milliy Stadium
Attendance: 12,912
Referee: Dayirbek Abdilaev (Kyrgyzstan)
14 June 2023 2023 CAFA Nations Cup Oman  1–1  Tajikistan Tashkent, Uzbekistan
Stadium: Pakhtakor Central Stadium
6 September 2023 (2023-09-06) Friendly Oman  2–1  Palestine Muscat, Oman
Stadium: Sultan Qaboos Sports Complex
12 September 2023 (2023-09-12) Friendly United States  4–0  Oman Saint Paul, Minnesota
20:30 EDT
Stadium: Allianz Field
16 November 2026 WCQ / 2027 ACQ Oman  v  Chinese Taipei Muscat, Oman
21 November 2026 WCQ / 2027 ACQ Kyrgyzstan  v  Oman Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan
Stadium: Dolen Omurzakov Stadium

2024

21 January 2024 2023 AC GS Oman  v  Thailand Doha, Qatar
17:30 UTC+3 Stadium: Abdullah bin Khalifa Stadium
21 March 2026 WCQ / 2027 ACQ Oman  v  Malaysia Oman
11 June 2026 WCQ / 2027 ACQ Oman  v  Kyrgyzstan Oman

Coaching staff

As of February 2020[25]
Position Name
Technical director Serbia Slobodan Pavković
Head coach Croatia Branko Ivanković
Assistant coach Croatia Mario Tokić
Goalkeeping coach Croatia Igor Panadić
Fitness coach Croatia Marko Stilinović
Performance analyst Iran Farzad Habibollahi
Croatia Zlatko Ivankovic
Team Manager Oman Maqbool Al-Balushi
Players Relations Manager Oman Ahmed Hadid Al-Mukhaini
Task Manager Oman Ahmed Al-Owaisi
Operations Manager Oman Kamil Al-Balushi
Team Doctor Oman Dr. Mohammed Moulou
Physiotherapist Oman Said Al-Balushi
Physiotherapist Oman Yaqoob Al-Mahrouqi
Masseur Slovakia Pavol Skoda
Ukraine Hennadiy Ryabovol

Coaching history

Caretaker managers are listed in italics.

Players

Current squad

  • The following players were called up for the friendly matches.[27]
  • Match dates: 6 – 11 September 2023
  • Opposition:  Palestine and  United States
  • Caps and goals correct as of: 20 June 2023, after the match against  Kyrgyzstan
No. Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club
1GK Ahmed Al-Rawahi (1994-05-05) 5 May 1994 5 0 Oman Al-Seeb
1GK Faiz Al-Rushaidi (1988-07-19) 19 July 1988 62 0 Oman Al-Suwaiq
1GK Ibrahim Al-Mukhaini (1997-06-20) 20 June 1997 20 0 Oman Al-Nahda

2DF Mahmood Al-Mushaifri (1993-01-14) 14 January 1993 25 0 Oman Al-Suwaiq
2DF Ahmed Al-Kaabi (1996-09-15) 15 September 1996 26 0 Oman Al-Nahda
2DF Khalid Al-Braiki (1993-07-03) 3 July 1993 27 0 Oman Al-Suwaiq
2DF Ahmed Al-Khamisi (1991-11-26) 26 November 1991 27 0 Oman Al-Seeb
2DF Ahmed Al-Matrooshi (1997-05-26) 26 May 1997 2 0 Oman Al-Nahda
2DF Fahmi Durbin (1993-10-10) 10 October 1993 23 0 Oman Al-Nasr
2DF Juma Al-Habsi (1996-01-28) 28 January 1996 27 0 Oman Ibri

3MF Mataz Saleh (1996-05-28) 28 May 1996 15 1 Oman Dhofar
3MF Musab Al-Mamari (2000-01-22) 22 January 2000 10 0 Oman Al-Nasr
3MF Tamim Al-Balushi (1999-11-03) 3 November 1999 0 0 Oman Al-Seeb
3MF Harib Al-Saadi (captain) (1990-02-01) 1 February 1990 56 1 Oman Al-Nahda
3MF Ali Al-Hinai (1998-01-16) 16 January 1998 0 0 Oman Al-Nahda
3MF Abdullah Fawaz (1996-10-03) 3 October 1996 24 5 Oman Al-Nahda
3MF Omar Al-Malki (1994-01-04) 4 January 1994 7 2 Oman Al-Nahda

4FW Ahmed Al-Adawi (1995-01-01) 1 January 1995 0 0 Oman Al-Rustaq
4FW Salaah Al-Yahyaei (1998-08-17) 17 August 1998 37 6 Oman Al-Seeb
4FW Issam Al-Sabhi (1997-05-01) 1 May 1997 27 8 Oman Al-Suwaiq
4FW Abdulrahman Al-Mushaifri (1997-11-28) 28 November 1997 0 0 Oman Al-Seeb
4FW Jameel Al-Yahmadi (1996-07-27) 27 July 1996 40 2 Unattached
4FW Muhsen Al-Ghassani (1997-03-27) 27 March 1997 41 8 Oman Al-Seeb
4FW Zahir Al-Aghbari (1999-05-28) 28 May 1999 28 0 Oman Al-Seeb

Recent call-ups

The following players have also been called up to the squad within the last 12 months.

Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Goals Club Latest call-up
DF Awad Al-Shehri (2000-01-12) 12 January 2000 0 0 Oman Dhofar v.  Syria, 23 December 2022
DF Mohammed Al-Musalami (1990-04-27) 27 April 1990 98 3 Oman Al-Seeb 25th Arabian Gulf Cup
DF Amjad Al-Harthi (1994-01-01) 1 January 1994 22 1 Oman Al-Seeb 25th Arabian Gulf Cup

MF Hatem Al-Rushadi (1996-02-15) 15 February 1996 1 0 Jordan Al-Faisaly v.  Syria, 23 December 2022
MF Mohamed Al-Amri (1994-09-20) 20 September 1994 3 0 Oman Al-Seeb v.  Belarus, 20 November 2022
MF Arshad Al-Alawi (2000-04-12) 12 April 2000 30 6 Oman Al-Seeb 25th Arabian Gulf Cup

FW Yazed Al-Maashani (1998-05-13) 13 May 1998 5 0 Oman Dhofar v.  Syria, 23 December 2022
FW Aiman Ibrahim (1997-02-28) 28 February 1997 0 0 Oman Sur v.  Syria, 23 December 2022
FW Rabia Al-Alawi (1995-03-31) 31 March 1995 26 7 Oman Al-Nahda 25th Arabian Gulf Cup

Records

As of 31 January 2023[28]
Players in bold are still active with Oman.

Most appearances

Ahmed Mubarak is Oman's most capped player with 180 appearances.
Rank Name Caps Goals Career
1 Ahmed Mubarak 180 23 2003–2019
2 Fawzi Bashir 150 30 2001–2013
3 Ali Al-Habsi 138 0 2001–2019
4 Hassan Mudhafar 128 6 2003–2015
5 Amad Al-Hosni 127 38 2003–2015
6 Saad Al-Mukhaini 116 1 2006–2019
7 Mohammed Al-Musalami 108 3 2010–present
8 Ahmed Hadid 103 9 2003–2013
9 Hani Al-Dhabit 102 43 1997–2014
10 Ismail Al-Ajmi 101 14 2003–2013

Top goalscorers

Hani Al-Dhabit is Oman's top scorer with 43 goals.
Rank Name Goals Caps Average Career
1 Hani Al-Dhabit 43 102 0.42 1997–2014
2 Amad Al-Hosni 38 127 0.3 2003–2015
3 Abdulaziz Al-Muqbali 34 99 0.34 2011–2021
Fawzi Bashir 30 150 0.2 2000–2013
5 Ahmed Mubarak 23 180 0.13 2003–2019
6 Khalid Al-Hajri 18 45 0.4 2017–present
Hashim Saleh 75 0.24 2001–2010
8 Badar Al-Maimani 17 71 0.24 2003–2012
9 Ismail Al-Ajmi 14 101 0.14 2003–2013
10 Qasim Said 13 84 0.15 2009–2017

Competition records

FIFA World Cup

FIFA World Cup record FIFA World Cup qualification record
YearResultPositionPldWDLGFGASquadPldWDLGFGA
Uruguay 1930 to Spain 1982Did not enter Did not enter
Mexico 1986Withdrew Withdrew
Italy 1990Did not qualify 6024211
United States 1994 6222105
France 1998 6411142
South Korea Japan 2002 146444019
Germany 2006 6312143
South Africa 2010 842297
Brazil 2014 166551516
Russia 2018 8422117
Qatar 2022 1810262716
Canada Mexico United States 2026To be determined To be determined
Total0/22 8839212814286

AFC Asian Cup

AFC Asian Cup record AFC Asian Cup qualification record
YearResultPositionPldWDLGFGASquadPldWDLGFGA
British Hong Kong 1956 to Kuwait 1980Not an AFC member Not an AFC member
Singapore 1984Did not qualify 4112915
Qatar 1988Withdrew Withdrew
Japan 1992Did not qualify 200205
United Arab Emirates 1996 6402235
Lebanon 2000 310244
China 2004Group stage9th311143Squad 6501242
Indonesia Malaysia Thailand Vietnam 2007Group stage15th302113Squad 6402146
Qatar 2011Did not qualify 622244
Australia 2015Group stage12th310215Squad 642071
United Arab Emirates 2019Round of 1616th410346Squad 149233912
Qatar 2023 Qualified 8602166
Saudi Arabia 2027To be determined To be determined
TotalRound of 165/18133371017 613671814060

Arab Cup

FIFA Arab Cup record
YearResultPositionPldWDLGFGA
1963–1964Did not enter
Iraq 1966Group stage10th1001121
1985–1992Did not enter
Qatar 1998Withdrew
2002–2012Did not enter
Qatar 2021Quarter-finals8th411265
TotalQuarter-finals2/105113726

Gulf Cup

Gulf Cup record
YearResultPositionPldWDLGFGASquad
Bahrain 1970Did not enter
Saudi Arabia 1972
Kuwait 1974Round 16th200209
Qatar 1976Seventh place7th6015321
Iraq 1979Seventh place7th6006121
United Arab Emirates 1982Sixth place6th5005215
Oman 1984Seventh place7th602439
Bahrain 1986Seventh place7th6015411
Saudi Arabia 1988Seventh place7th611439
Kuwait 1990Fourth place4th403146
Qatar 1992Sixth place6th5005110
United Arab Emirates 1994Sixth place6th502349
Oman 1996Sixth place6th502327
Bahrain 1998Fourth place4th5113612
Saudi Arabia 2002Fifth place5th511357
Kuwait 2003Fourth place4th622264
Qatar 2004Runners-up2nd5311107
United Arab Emirates 2007Runners-up2nd540174
Oman 2009Champions1st532070Squad
Yemen 2010Group stage6th303011
Bahrain 2013Group stage7th301214Squad
Saudi Arabia 2014Fourth place4th512275Squad
Kuwait 2017Champions1st531141Squad
Qatar 2019Group stage5th311134Squad
Iraq 2023Runners-up2nd531186Squad
Total2 titles22/2411123295991180

WAFF Championship

WAFF Championship record
Year Result Pld W D L GF GA GD
Jordan 2000Not a WAFF Member
Syria 2002
Iran 2004
Jordan 2007
Iran 2008Group stage200225−3
Jordan 2010Group stage201124−2
Kuwait 2012Third place530253+2
Qatar 2014Group stage2020000
Iraq 2019Did not enter
2023Qualified
Total5/1011335912−3

CAFA Nations Cup

CAFA Nations Cup record
Year Result Pld W D L GF GA GD
KyrgyzstanUzbekistan 2023Third place[lower-alpha 1]4211440
Total1/14211440
  1. Not a CAFA member, participated as invitee.

Asian Games

Asian Games record
YearResultPldWDLGFGA
1951–1978Did not participate
India 1982Withdrew
1986-1990Did not participate
Japan 199411th311144
Thailand 199811th52121413
2002–present See Oman national under-23 football team
Total2/1383231817

Arab Games

Arab Games record
YearResultPositionPldWDLGFGA
1953–1961Did not enter
United Arab Emirates 1965Group stage10th4004245
1976–1985Did not enter
Lebanon 1997Group stage7th302146
Jordan 1999Group stage8th402227
Egypt 2007Did not enter
Qatar 2011Group stage9th201102
2023–present See Oman national under-23 football team
TotalGroup stage4/1013058860

Head-to-head record

Updated on 12 September 2023 after match against  United States.[29]

  Positive Record   Neutral Record   Negative Record

Opponent
Pld
W
D
L
GF
GA
GD
 Afghanistan4400121+11
 Algeria300316−5
 Australia11146823−15
 Azerbaijan220030+3
 Bahrain461517144551−6
 Bangladesh3300102+8
 Belarus210124−2
 Benin110020+2
 Bhutan2200182+16
 Bosnia and Herzegovina100112−1
 Brazil100102−2
 Burkina Faso321062+4
 Bulgaria1010110
 Chile100101−1
 China8314915−6
 Chinese Taipei220092+7
 Costa Rica100134−1
 DR Congo1010220
 Ecuador3111220
 Egypt201112−1
 Estonia210143+1
 Finland603327−5
 Gabon110010+1
 Germany200203−3
 Guam211010+1
 Haiti110030+3
 Hong Kong110060+6
 India10730236+17
 Indonesia431062+4
 Iran132471526−11
 Iraq29610132549−24
 Japan141310521−16
 Jordan2649131534−19
 Kazakhstan100113−2
 Kenya523085+3
 Kosovo100101−1
 Kuwait30810122446−22
 Kyrgyzstan330060+6
 Laos2200190+19
 Latvia2101440
 Lebanon135531412+2
 Liberia110010+1
 Libya3012338−35
 Macau220060+6
 North Macedonia110020+2
 Maldives9900263+23
 Mali211021+1
 Malaysia6411134+9
 Mauritania1010000
 Morocco1010000
 Mozambique100102−2
 Myanmar330070+7
   Nepal131300523+49
 New Zealand712447−3
 North Korea211043+1
 Norway100112−1
 Palestine430164+2
 Pakistan4310122+10
 Paraguay100101−1
 Philippines3210101+9
 Qatar36610203164−33
 Republic of Ireland3003110−9
 Saudi Arabia2635181346−33
 Senegal430152+3
 Singapore11821267+19
 Slovenia2002011−11
 South Korea6114410−6
 Somalia110021+1
 Sri Lanka3210141+13
 Sudan7133620−14
 Sweden100101−1
  Switzerland200226−4
 Syria269892839−11
 Tajikistan7421159+6
 Thailand126151011−1
 Togo100101−1
 Tunisia2111330
 Turkmenistan6501125+7
 United Arab Emirates33612152445−21
 United States100104−4
 Uruguay100103−3
 Uzbekistan7403912−3
 Vietnam4400121+11
 Yemen12921227+15
 Zambia312031+2
 Zimbabwe110032+1
Total543202139203696724−28

    See also

    References

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    4. – 3rd Arab to receive the award, and first Omani.
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