FRI 29 - 3 - 2024
 
Date: Jun 14, 2011
Source: The Daily Star
Anti-police violence mars Jordan king’s visit to southern town

By Jamal Halaby

Associated Press 
 

AMMAN: Angry young Jordanians attacked anti-riot police guarding the motorcade of King Abdullah II Monday, officials and eyewitnesses reported, saying the monarch wasn’t the target of the violence in a poor southern town.
The spurt of violence, unusual here during months of unrest elsewhere in the Arab world, pointed up the simmering tensions in Jordan, even a day after the monarch bowed to popular protests and endorsed the idea of an elected government.


Eyewitnesses said a crowd of about 60 people, mostly in their 20s, were enraged by the Tafila mayor barring the young unemployed from a town meeting with Abdullah, and at the harsh treatment by anti-riot police, who beat them as they tried to line the sidewalk for the motorcade and present petitions to the king.
A security official had said earlier that youths flung bottles and stones at the motorcade in two incidents in Tafila, 200 kilometers south of Amman.


The king was unharmed in the incidents, but 25 police were injured, said this official, insisting on anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to discuss royal matters.
Government spokesman Taher Edwan insisted it was not an attack on Abdullah. “What happened is that a group of young Jordanians thronged the monarch’s motorcade to shake hands with him,” he said.
When police “pushed them away, there was a lot of shoving.”


The incident came a day after Abdullah, in a nationally televised speech, acceded to a major demand of months of protests and announced he would accept Cabinets formed by elected parliamentary majorities.
That would replace a system under which the king appointed the prime minister and other ministers.


Four eyewitnesses said the violence was directed at the police, not Abdullah. One witness, Tafila shopkeeper Yazan Abu Yousef, 26, said that as crowds approached the motorcade leaving Tafila, to hand-deliver petitions to the king, anti-riot police pushed them away “savagely” and people responded with stones.
Another suggested Tafila’s youth were upset that Mayor Salim Rawahneh didn’t allow them to attend the meeting with the king.


“The mayor invited people he favors and who live far away in Amman, but not us,” said the young unemployed man, who declined to be identified. “We wanted to give petitions to the king, we wanted to tell him about our difficulties in not finding jobs, but we were beaten and humiliated.”
Similar accounts flooded the Internet, including Facebook. Officials said Abdullah was on a fact-finding trip to inspect infrastructure projects and hear his subjects’ demands.


A royal palace official said Abdullah pledged 15 million Jordanian dinars ($21 million) for a Tafila development fund, ordered free medical treatment for the townspeople for the coming year, and announced that 1,000 townsmen would be conscripted into the army, positions that bring medical and other benefits.
The palace official, who declined to be identified, said the king was unaware of what happened until he left the area.
As violence has rocked other authoritarian countries across the Arab world, it has been rare in Jordan, a key U.S.-allied nation where pro-democracy protests in recent months have generally been confined to relatively small and peaceful demonstrations.


The desert town of Tafila, which has received little state support in the past, has high unemployment and lacks the shopping malls, movie theaters and modern services found in the capital.
In announcing the parliamentary reform Sunday, Abdullah did not give a timetable, saying that sudden change could lead to “chaos and unrest” in Jordan. It was the first time he has made such a concession to demands he loosen the monarchy’s absolute grip on power.



 
Readers Comments (0)
Add your comment

Enter the security code below*

 Can't read this? Try Another.
 
Related News
Rights groups call for release of Jordanian cartoonist
Jordan should free teachers held after protests: HRW
Jordan announces smoking crackdown in virus fight
Jordan to reopen hotels, cafes in further easing of COVID-19 lockdown
Jordan's civil servants return to work after two months break
Related Articles
How can U.K. best aid Jordan’s security?
Is renewable energy in Jordan victim of its success?
Policing and protection for Syrian refugees in Jordan
Jordan’s interest in seeing a stable Syria
Razzaz faces rough road ahead in Jordan
Copyright 2024 . All rights reserved