Kuwait Times

Jordan prince remains defiant amid turmoil

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AMMAN: Jordan’s Prince Hamzah, accused of a “wicked” plot against his elder half-brother King Abdullah II, has struck a defiant tone, insisting he will not obey orders restrictin­g his movement. The government has accused Hamzah of involvemen­t in a seditious conspiracy to “destabiliz­e the kingdom’s security”, placed him under house arrest and detained at least 16 more people.

But 41-year-old Hamzah, who says he has been ordered to stay inside his Amman palace, vowed he would defy limits on his movement and communicat­ions, in an audio recording posted on Twitter late Sunday. “I don’t want to make moves and escalate now, but of course I’m not going to obey when they say you can’t go out, you can’t tweet, you can’t communicat­e with people, you’re only allowed to see your family,” he said.

Hamzah - a former crown prince who was stripped of that title by Abdullah in 2004 - has emerged as a vocal critic of the monarchy, accusing Jordan’s leadership of corruption, nepotism and authoritar­ian rule. In a video he sent to the BBC Saturday, he bemoaned “incompeten­ce that has been prevalent in our governing structure for the last 15 to 20 years and has been getting worse”. He charged that “no-one is able to speak or express opinion on anything without being bullied, arrested, harassed and threatened”.

‘Wicked slander’

Hamzah denied being involved in any “nefarious” plot, but said he had been placed under house arrest, with his phone and internet cut, by Jordan’s military chief, General Youssef Huneiti. In the recording released Sunday, Hamzah said that “when the head of the joint chiefs of staff comes and tells you this... I think it’s kind of unacceptab­le”.

He added that when Huneiti visited his home, “I recorded what he said and sent it to my friends abroad and to my family, in case anything happens”. According to residents, the internet has been cut off for two days in the posh district of Dabouq, in the west of the capital Amman, where Prince Hamzah and other royals live.

King Abdullah, 59, named Hamzah crown prince in 1999, in line with their father’s dying wish, but stripped him of that title five years later and named his own son Prince Hussein, now 26, heir to the throne. Hamzah’s mother, American-born Queen Noor, defended her son, tweeting that she was “praying that truth and justice will prevail for all the innocent victims of this wicked slander”.

Analyst Ahmad Awad said the turbulent events were “a first” in Jordan’s history. “This is the beginning of a crisis and not the end,” said the head of the Phenix Center for Economic and Informatic­s research institute in Amman. “This shows that there is a need for political, economic and democratic reforms.”

Linchpin of stability

The crisis has laid bare divisions in a country usually seen as a bulwark of stability in the Middle East. Washington, major Gulf powers, Egypt and the Arab League were all quick to pledge their support for Abdullah and all his steps to ensure stability, and a similar message came from Russia yesterday. Jordan has only about 10 million people, but outsized strategic importance in a turbulent region.

It borders Israel and the occupied West Bank, Syria, Iraq and Saudi Arabia, hosts US troops and is home to millions of exiled Palestinia­ns and more than half a million Syrian refugees. The Washington Post had first reported Saturday that Hamzah had been “placed under restrictio­n” amid a probe into an alleged plot.

“This sedition was nipped in the bud,” Jordan’s Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi said Sunday, charging that the plotters had linked up with foreign parties “to carry out wicked plans” to destabiliz­e the kingdom. Among those arrested were a former finance minister, Bassem Awadallah, who was chief of the royal court in 2007-08, and Sherif Hassan bin Zaid, a junior member of the royal family.

Safadi declined to identify the alleged foreign parties, but also charged that an individual “with links to foreign intelligen­ce services” had offered to spirit Hamzah’s wife out of the country by plane. An Israeli who said he is a close friend of Hamzah, Roy Shaposhnik, said he had “extended an invitation for the prince’s wife and children to stay at his home in Europe”.

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