The New Zealand Herald

Jordan even after PM resigns

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widely reported that the current Education Minister, Omar Razzaz, was tapped as Mulki’s successor. Razzaz had previously held senior positions in the World Bank and is considered a reformer.

Still, there has been no official announceme­nt, and it was not clear when and if Razzaz would be appointed.

Protest organisers have said they seek real change, including a rescinding of the tax bill, and that personnel changes at the top are irrelevant without fundamenta­l reforms.

It’s not clear whether Mulki’s eventual replacemen­t would have such a mandate.

In the march, some of the protesters chanted, “No to Mulki, No to Razzaz.”

An umbrella organisati­on for more than a dozen unions and profession­al organisati­ons said it would go ahead with a planned one-day strike today, while several other unions said they would suspend their protests to give the country a chance to solve its problems after Mulki’s resignatio­n.

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 the conflict in neighbouri­ng Syria and Iraq, and a large influx of refugees. The official unemployme­nt rate has risen to above 18 per cent, and it’s believed to be double that among young Jordanians.

 ?? Photo / AP ?? The protests over economic reforms being pushed by the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund entered their fifth day yesterday,with thousands gathering outside the Prime Minister’s office in Amman.
Photo / AP The protests over economic reforms being pushed by the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund entered their fifth day yesterday,with thousands gathering outside the Prime Minister’s office in Amman.

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