Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Jordan makes high-profile arrests

In video, ex-crown prince says he is being held in his home

- RANA F. SWEIS, ISABEL KERSHNER AND NICHOLAS KULISH

AMMAN, Jordan — The Jordanian government has arrested high-profile figures in the kingdom, including a member of the royal family and a former chief of the royal court, with officials citing “the security and stability of Jordan” as intrigue consumed the country Saturday.

Bassem Awadallah, a longtime confidant of King Abdullah II who later became minister of finance, and Sharif Hassan bin Zaid, a member of the royal family who was the former royal envoy to Saudi Arabia, were detained along with other unnamed figures.

Awadallah helped spearhead economic reforms before leaving as head of the royal court in 2008. More recently, he was an adviser to the Saudi crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman, and he was accused in a corruption case.

The fate of the former crown prince of Jordan, Hamzah bin Hussein, a half brother of Abdullah, was unclear. In a statement published Saturday night by the Petra news agency, the Jordanian army and security services denied reports that Hamzah had been arrested. It said he had been ordered to cease activities and movements aimed at underminin­g “the security and stability of Jordan.”

But in a dramatic video apparently filmed under house arrest, the former crown prince described how he had been ordered to remain in his home incommunic­ado with his wife and children as part of the crackdown by security services.

“Since then, a number of the people I know or my friends have been arrested, my security has been removed, and the internet and phone lines have been cut,” Hamzah said. “This is my last form of communicat­ion, satellite internet, that I have, and I have been informed by the company that they are instructed to cut it, so it may be the last time I am able to communicat­e.”

Hamzah said in the video that he was “making this recording to make it clear that I’m not part of any conspiracy or nefarious organizati­on or foreign-backed group, as is always the claim here for anyone who speaks out,” he said.

Arrests of top officials and royal family members are unusual in Jordan, a normally stable Arab kingdom that has been a stalwart ally of the West, particular­ly when it comes to counterter­rorism cooperatio­n in the Middle East. It borders Israel, the Israeli-occupied West Bank, Syria and Iraq.

“We are closely following the reports and in touch with Jordanian officials,” Ned Price, a State Department spokespers­on, said in a statement. “King Abdullah is a key partner of the United States, and he has our full support.”

Abdullah II, 59, has reigned since 1999, having succeeded his father, King Hussein. In a sign of earlier palace intrigue, Abdullah replaced Hassan bin Talal, a brother of King Hussein, as crown prince just weeks before his father’s death. Hassan had apparently fallen out of favor after making some moves that were widely interprete­d as an attempt to consolidat­e his own power while the king was undergoing treatment for cancer.

The current crown prince is King Abdullah II’s son, Hussein bin Abdullah, 26.

Hamzah is the eldest son of King Hussein and Queen Noor, his fourth wife and widow, who was born to a Syrian American family. Hamzah was named crown prince of Jordan in 1999, but his half-brother, King Abdullah II, transferre­d the title to his son, Prince Hussein, in 2004.

Hamzah is often photograph­ed meeting with tribal figures and is known to be popular, especially among tribal and East Bank Jordanians, for his uncanny resemblanc­e to his father, who was beloved by many in the kingdom.

His recent meetings with tribal leaders across Jordan and posts on Twitter in 2018 that included the rousing words, “Oh my country,” caused a stir in the kingdom. His close ties with tribal figures and visits to tribal elders at their invitation was broadly viewed as his way of showing his relevance and closeness to people.

The situation in Jordan was being watched closely in neighborin­g Israel, which signed a peace treaty with the kingdom in 1994 and maintains close security ties with it.

In his video, Hamzah described a meeting in which he was told that people had been critical of the king or the government at meetings where he was present.

“I asked him if I was the one criticizin­g, and he said no,” he said. “He said but this was a warning from him, from the chief of police and from the chief of the security services, the mukhabarat, that I should not leave my house, that I could only visit family, that I could not tweet and that I could not communicat­e with people,” Hamzah said.

He described Jordan as corrupt, incompeten­t and intolerant of any criticism.

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