Khor Fakkan, exclave and port town located in Sharjah emirate, United Arab Emirates. It is on the east coast of the Musandam Peninsula, facing the Gulf of Oman; the port and its hinterland divide the emirate of Fujairah into its two major portions.
Situated on a natural cove (Arabic: khawr), Khor Fakkan was an important port in medieval times. It defied the conquering forces of Afonso de Albuquerque, viceroy and governor of Portuguese India, who reduced it in 1507. In the following two centuries, it was fought over by the Portuguese, the Omanis, and the Persians, with the Omanis finally prevailing. The sheikh of Sharjah, then a nominal ally of the sultan of Muscat and Oman, took advantage of the sultan’s absence in his African possessions (1832) to seize Khor Fakkan and most of the surrounding Shumayliyyah district. When Fujairah was recognized in 1952 by Britain (then protector of the Trucial States) as a separate state, most of the district passed to Fujairah, but the Khor Fakkan area remained part of Sharjah. In addition to its frontiers with Fujairah, it borders a small section of Ras al-Khaimah emirate to the west, while in the south there is a section of undetermined sovereignty claimed by the sultanate of Oman.
Khor Fakkan has one of the few natural harbours in the United Arab Emirates, and certainly the best in Sharjah emirate, but, both because of its isolation and for political reasons, only a few investments in port improvements have been made there, notably a container port. Modernization has been confined chiefly to Sharjah city, the capital of the emirate, on the Persian Gulf. Despite this neglect, it was estimated that when the United Arab Emirates attained independence (1971), Khor Fakkan was the busiest port in Sharjah emirate. It specialized in the smuggling of gold and luxury goods across the Gulf of Oman and the Arabian Sea to Indian and Pakistani ports. It now has a cement factory and pipe works.
From 1964 Sharjah supplemented its then-meagre revenues by issuing many postage stamps labeled “Khor Fakkan”; virtually all of these were printed for sale to collectors and served no legitimate postal purposes. Stamp issues of individual emirates and their dependencies were superseded by the creation of a central United Arab Emirates post office department in 1972. Pop. (2015 est.) 39,151.