Jordan Protest Remains Remarkably Peaceful After King Calls Early Elections

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Jordan Protest Remains Remarkably Peaceful After King Calls Early Elections
by Darius Kadivar
05-Oct-2012
 

Thousands of Jordanians have attended a protest demanding political reforms in Amman, hours after King Abdullah called early parliamentary elections. The opposition says parliament, rather than the king, should have the right to appoint prime ministers. (Source: persianrealm.com)

Massive street protests in Jordan (cnn, Oct 5, 2012):

Street protests are under way in Amman, Jordan, where the Muslim Brotherhood is rallying for democratic reforms. 

(Video Courtesy :CNNInternational)


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The King and the People 

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Al Jazeera's The Cafe : The king and the people! (Jul 28, 2012 by AlJazeeraEnglish:

Bordering the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the turmoil in Syria, and with internal pressure for greater reforms, how will Jordan's monarchy respond? It has a population of less than seven million people, no oil, and it relies on aid from its rich neighbours and its friends in the West. But a combination of geography and history has blessed or, depending on your perspective, cursed the Hashemite kingdom of Jordan, with a critical role in the politics of the Middle East, the Israel-Palestine conflict and, of course, the Arab Spring. The Café this week is in Amman to discover what the future holds for a country plagued by corruption and economic stagnation and with a population divided between ethnic Jordanians and marginalised Palestinians. But it is not just the Palestinians who are disgruntled. The opposition to the regime ranges from the Muslim Brotherhood, to the middle classes to the former army generals and Bedouin tribal leaders that the ruling royal family has traditionally relied on for support. Criticism of King Abdullah and his wife, the glamorous queen Rania, is now commonplace here in the capital city. But the question is: Do Jordanians want reform or a revolution?

 

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Protests Remain Peaceful Despite Rising Demands

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Jordan protests after king calls early elections (bbc)

 

Thousands of Jordanians have attended a protest demanding political reforms in Amman, hours after King Abdullah called early parliamentary elections.

The Muslim Brotherhood's political wing, the Islamic Action Front, called for broader political representation and a more democratic parliament.

People at the protest chanted: "The people want to reform the regime."

On Thursday evening, the king dissolved parliament and called early elections, though he did not specify a date.

He has said he wants polls to be held by the end of the year.

Electoral law dispute

The IAF said it expected 50,000 people to take part in the protest outside the capital's al-Husseini mosque after Friday prayers. But the BBC's Wyre Davies put the turnout at 10,000 people, which he said was the biggest protest seen in Jordan for several years.

Video footage showed protesters chanting slogans and waving flags. The AFP news agency quoted people as shouting: "We demand constitutional reform before the people revolt. The people want to reform the regime."

A counter-rally, in support of King Abdullah, which organisers had predicted would attract 200,000 supporters, was cancelled late on Thursday in order to prevent clashes between the two groups.

Earlier, police said they had detained eight people travelling towards the rally and had seized three vehicles containing sticks, knives and guns.

Friday's protest in the capital and the dissolution of parliament come amid mounting opposition anger at the electoral law passed in July by the government of the conservative Prime Minister Fayez al-Tarawneh.

The electoral law increased the number of seats in the House of Representatives from 120 to 140 seats and gave the electorate two votes - one for a district representative and one for national level lists that include political parties - replacing the single non-transferable vote.

The IAF's leader, Hamza Mansour, dismissed the legislation as "just a cosmetic change meant to buy time and insufficient for real reforms".

Opposition parties demanded that 50% of seats be allocated to party lists, but the new electoral law gave them just 17 seats, or 12%.

They also complained that the new law would strengthen supporters of the king by allowing members of the security forces to vote for the first time, and allocating three more seats for women from Bedouin districts.

This, they argued, would continue to marginalise Jordanians of Palestinian origin - who make up 60% of the population but have little political power - in favour of those descended from Jordan's original Bedouin inhabitants - whose tribes dominate the government and security forces and are the bedrock of the Hashemite monarchy.

Traditionally, many of the IAF's supporters have been Jordanians of Palestinian origin.

The opposition also demanded that parliament, rather than the king, should have the right to appoint and dismiss the prime minister.

Despite the call for reforms, Jordan has so far avoided the unrest and political upheaval that rocked much of the Arab world last year. Protests have been relatively small and have not gained the same level of political momentum as those in Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, Yemen and Syria.

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