TUE 26 - 11 - 2024
 
Date: Jan 15, 2011
Source: The Daily Star
Jordanians stage protests against poverty and unemployment

Saturday, January 15, 2011


Thousands of demonstrators took to the streets of Amman and other Jordanian cities Friday to protest at soaring commodity prices, unemployment and poverty, calling for the government to be sacked.
Despite government measures to create jobs and control increasing prices, more than 5,000 people took part in peaceful demonstrations.


Carrying national flags and chanting anti-government slogans in downtown Amman, demonstrators including trade unionists and leftist party members called Prime Minister Samir Rifai a “coward” and demanded he resign.
“Jordan is not only for the rich. Bread is a red line. Beware of our starvation and fury,” read one of the banners carried after midday Muslim prayers, amid a heavy police presence.


“Down with Rifai’s government. Unify yourselves because the government wants to eat your flesh. Raise fuel prices to fill your pocket with millions,” the protesters chanted as they marched in the city center.


“He who appoints governments is responsible, fighting corruption starts with the head,” opposition figure Leith Shbeilat told a crowd of demonstrators. Under the Constitution, the king names the prime minister. Rifai, 43, formed his government in December 2009.


“We protest against arbitrary government actions against the Jordanian people. We urge the king to dismiss the government and replace it with a national government,” Deifallah Salem, a retired serviceman, told Agence France Presse in Amman’s city center.


University students, leftists and labor activists staged similar rallies in five other cities – Irbid, Karak, Salt, Dhiban and Maan – waving Jordanian flags, toting placards and chanting for Prime Minister Samir Rifai to step down.

 

In Irbid, protesters chanted that Jordan was “too big” for Rifai. “We are protesting against the government’s economic policies which have made people poorer,” said Nihad Zuhair of the Democratic Youth Rally group in Irbid.
Jordan announced Tuesday a $169-million plan to reduce prices of commodities, including fuel, and create jobs in a bid to face rising popular discontent.


But critics say the measures are not enough, complaining of rising unemployment and poverty as inflation last month hit 6.1 percent. Government economic policies “have made the poor poorer and the rich richer,” they say.


Unemployment is around 14 percent in the country of six million people, 70 percent under 30, but other estimates put the figure at 30 percent, while the minimum wage is $211 dollars a month.
Poverty levels are running at 25 percent in the desert kingdom.


“We want the government to meet people’s fair demands as quickly as possible, ease their burdens and start a dialogue with national powers to launch true and comprehensive reforms,” the powerful Islamist opposition said.


The Muslim Brotherhood, its political arm the Islamic Action Front, and the country’s 14 trade unions said they will hold a sit-in outside Parliament Sunday to “denounce government economic polices.”
“God knows where this tension would lead the country,” the unions said. – Agencies



 
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