Gulf News

Truckers’ strike exposes woes of Jordan’s poor south

MAAN RESIDENTS SAY HIGH FUEL PRICES HAVE DESTROYED LIVELIHOOD

-

Striking Jordanian trucker Sulaiman Abu Al Zait spent several long nights on a national highway along his native city of Maan, manning a picket line that created havoc to overland trade.

“Diesel is my lifeline,” said 54-year-old Abu Al Zait, who has seen his livelihood thrown into jeopardy by high fuel price rises since Russia launched attacks on Ukraine.

The month-long sit-in cost Jordan tens of millions of dollars in losses when it paralysed unloading at the Red Sea port of Arabia, according to officials and industrial­ists.

The stoppage petered out late last year, after a security clampdown to stop disgruntle­d Bedouin youths from desert hamlets near Maan throwing stones at tourist coaches and trailers.

The crackdown led to four deaths among security forces and one man whom authoritie­s said was a militant fugitive, as well as scores of injuries and hundreds of arrests.

Violent protests

It was the latest bout of unrest in Maan, a poor tribal stronghold about 250km south of the capital.

Its location between Aqaba and a main pilgrimage route along the old Hejaz railway to Makkah had made it an important transport hub.

Known for its defiance of central authority, the southern region around Maan has repeatedly erupted into violent protests in recent years against Internatio­nal Monetary Fund-backed reforms to cut fuel subsidies.

Fuel price rises, combined with high taxes and spiralling food costs in a nation that imports most goods, has made life unaffordab­le for many.

“Spare parts, motor oil and operating costs have gone up — this is putting pressure on us,” said Salamah Abdullah, a truck owner in Maan. “A truck used to have value. In better times you would put the trailer in front of your house to boast in front of people. Now it’s like you have a bicycle.”

Drivers’ demands

Though adamant that diesel price cuts would imperil reforms crucial for fiscal prudence, the government sought to meet drivers’ demands halfway by raising rates they could charge for commercial haulage and transport.

“We seek in all directions to ease the intensity of the economic situation on citizens,” Interior Minister Mazen Farrayeh said after troops quelled the December rioting.

Like many Arab states, Jordan has in the last decade seen widespread unrest as it reduced food and fuel subsidies.

Its aid-dependent economy — already reeling from $40 billion public debt and high unemployme­nt — is seeing its once-bustling transit business to neighbours Iraq and Saudi Arabia shrink.

Bedouin tribes in Maan and outlying areas have been hit hard by dwindling grazing ground for livestock.

In the wake of the troubles, King Abdullah, whose modernisat­ion drive faces tribal pressure for more economic largesse, toured state-sponsored farming and tourist projects in the south.

The monarch, in casual wear, chatted with women from Bedouin villages in the Disi aquifer region near Saudi Arabia where authoritie­s hope developmen­t could take stone-throwing unemployed youths off the streets.

But long-delayed investment projects appear to be not enough to assuage anger at a cash-strapped state unable to give more perks and jobs.

Spare parts, motor oil and operating costs have gone up — this is putting pressure on us. A truck used to have value. In better times you would put the trailer in front of your house to boast in front of people. Now it’s like you have a bicycle.”

Salamah Abdullah | A truck owner in Maan

 ?? Reuters ?? Trailer owner Sulaiman Abu al Zait has seen his livelihood thrown into jeopardy by high fuel prices since Russia attacked Ukraine. ‘Diesel is my lifeline’, he said.
Reuters Trailer owner Sulaiman Abu al Zait has seen his livelihood thrown into jeopardy by high fuel prices since Russia attacked Ukraine. ‘Diesel is my lifeline’, he said.
 ?? Reuters ?? Truckers gather during a strike over fuel price rises, which petered out at the end of 2022 after a security clampdown, in the city of Maan, Jordan.
Reuters Truckers gather during a strike over fuel price rises, which petered out at the end of 2022 after a security clampdown, in the city of Maan, Jordan.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates