FRI 29 - 3 - 2024
 
Date: Jun 5, 2018
Source: The Daily Star
Jordan PM quits over mass protests against tax increases
Associated Press
AMMAN: Jordan’s King Abdullah II Monday accepted the resignation of his embattled prime minister and reportedly tapped a leading reformer as a successor, hoping to quell the largest anti-government protests in recent years that are also seen as a potential challenge to his 2-decade-old rule. Jordan is a staunch military and political ally of the West in a turbulent region, and any threat to the kingdom’s stability is viewed with concern, particularly by neighboring Israel and by the U.S.

Prime Minister Hani Mulki’s resignation came after several days of mass protests across Jordan against a planned tax increase, the latest in a series of economic reforms sought by the International Monetary Fund to get the rising public debt under control. The government has also raised prices for bread, electricity and fuel.

Many Jordanians feel they are being squeezed financially by a government they perceive as corrupt and aloof, and say they are not getting services for the taxes they are asked to pay.

It’s not clear if business-friendly Mulki’s departure will be enough to defuse growing public anger.

“People come and go in this political moziac, it means nothing,” Fadi al-Qadi, a human rights advocate, told The Daily Star.

Government-linked media said Education Minister Omar Razzaz, a Harvard-educated reformer, has been tapped as Mulki’s successor.

Mulki is to serve as caretaker until his replacement has been named, the state news agency Petra said.

In meetings with Jordanian newspaper editors and journalists later Monday, the king promised reforms, saying the country must meet its challenges “away from the traditional approach,” but did not give specifics.

Jordan’s king is the ultimate decision-maker on policy, but also positions himself as a unifying force above the political fray. He has frequently reshuffled or disbanded governments to quiet criticism.

His response to the current crisis fit that pattern.

In his comments Monday, he expressed sympathy for the protesters and the hardships faced by ordinary Jordanians, while criticizing the outgoing Cabinet, saying it had failed to explain the tax bill to citizens.

Yet he stopped short of saying he would meet protesters’ demands for scrapping the bill.

Meanwhile, crowds began gathering late Monday near Mulki’s office for the sixth straight evening of protests against the tax bill and the recent price hikes.

Protest organizer Ali Abous, who also heads an umbrella group for 15 unions and professional associations with half a million members, said a one-day strike set for Wednesday would still take place, despite the Cabinet changes. Hatem Jarrar, a lawyer, said the resignation of Mulki is a “victory for the Jordanian people who demanded to topple the government,” adding that protesters would keep pressing demands for rescinding the tax bill.

Initial responses to Razzaz leading the government appeared positive, with some protesters placing hope in him.

“I think he is an honest man, and will be able to find balanced economic solutions, without being too much of a populist politician,” Mohammad Zwahreh, who participated in Sunday’s demonstrations, told The Daily Star via WhatsApp.

Yet other protesters were concerned that the change would fail to address some of Jordan’s more intractable problems, especially regarding the economy and public services.

“We need a change in the system, not the faces,” said another protestor, who asked to remain anonymous.

Demonstrators who converged near the Cabinet office said they would disband only if the government rescinded the tax bill it sent to parliament last month.

Police chief Maj. Gen. Fadel al-Hamoud earlier said security forces had detained 60 people for breaking the law in protests so far, and 42 security force members had been wounded, but protests remained under control.

The recent protests were largely spontaneous, drawing many young people and members of the middle class, rather than being organized by traditional opposition groups such as the Muslim Brotherhood.

In a show of non-violence, protesters raised their hands in the air as they were being pushed away from the premier’s office by helmeted riot police.

Protest organizers have urged the king to cancel the tax plan, saying it disproportionately targets the poor and the middle class.

Jordan’s government is under pressure from the International Monetary Fund to carry out economic reforms and austerity measures to rein in growing public debt.

The kingdom has experienced an economic downturn in part because of prolonged conflict in neighboring Syria and Iraq, and a large influx of refugees several years ago.

The official unemployment rate has risen above 18 percent, and it’s believed to be double that among young Jordanians.

Abdullah became king in 1999, taking over from his late father, Hussein, and has weathered a series of political crises. During the 2011 Arab Spring uprisings, he promised political reforms, but instead tightened his rule after the outbreak of violent conflicts in the region, including in Syria.

Israel has maintained discreet security ties with Jordan.

Yoav Gallant, a member of Israel’s security Cabinet and retired general, told foreign journalists in a news conference Monday that it’s in Israel’s interest “that stability will go back to Jordan as soon as possible.”


 
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