Oman Daily Observer

Jordan cabinet sworn in

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AMMAN: Jordan’s King Abdullah on Thursday swore in a new government led by a former World Bank economist and mandated to review a disputed tax system after widespread protests against Imf-driven austerity measures.

A government official said the new cabinet decided at a meeting after the swearing-in ceremony to withdraw a contentiou­s personal and corporate tax bill which the previous government had sent to parliament and triggered the protests.

Abdullah appointed Omar al Razzaz, a Harvard-educated economist outside the ranks of the traditiona­l political elite, as prime minister last week.

Razzaz replaces Hani Mulki, a business-friendly politician who was dismissed to defuse public anger that triggered some of the largest popular protests in years.

Thousands of Jordanians took to the streets in Amman and in provincial towns earlier this month against a series of tax rises since the start of the year. Protesters called for sacking the government and scrapping a tax bill which unions and civic groups blamed for worsening poverty and unemployme­nt.

Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi and Interior Minister Samir al Mubaydeen kept their posts in Razzaz’s 28-member cabinet, dominated by a mix of conservati­ve politician­s and Western-leaning technocrat­s, including 7 women.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Jordan’s King Abdullah II stands near Prime Minister Omar al Razzaz during a swearing-in ceremony of the new cabinet in Amman.
— Reuters Jordan’s King Abdullah II stands near Prime Minister Omar al Razzaz during a swearing-in ceremony of the new cabinet in Amman.

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