Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Several Jordan officials held

After arrests of top figures, he releases a scathing video against his half brother’s rule.

- By Nabih Bulos

Prince releases video tearing into leadership after being confined to home for “security” reasons.

AMMAN, Jordan — Hours after being confined to his home by military officials, Jordan’s popular former crown prince issued a scathing broadside Saturday against the longtime rule of King Abdullah II, blaming the government for corruption and incompeten­ce even as it tolerates no dissent.

Prince Hamzah bin Hussein, who was removed from his role as crown prince in 2004, spoke in a dramatic video hours after an announceme­nt from the staterun Petra news agency about a series of arrests of leading Jordanians including Sharif Hassan bin Zaid, a member of the royal family, and Bassem Awadallah, a prominent official who once ran the royal court. The pair, according to an unnamed official, were detained along with others after “close monitoring.”

It was an unpreceden­ted series of arrests and public airing of grievances in a kingdom known for stability, amid rising discontent over the government’s handling of the COVID-19 pandemic and its economic policies.

Hamzah, 41, said in the video that he had been told by the army’s chief of staff — with the sign-off of the head of police and the country’s mukhabarat, or intelligen­ce service — to restrict his movements to his home after attending meetings in which the government and the king were criticized, even though he had not participat­ed in the criticism.

Since being told to remain home, Hamzah says in the video, “a number of my friends have been arrested, my security has been removed and the internet and phone lines have been cut.” He adds that he had been able to send out the video through a satellite internet service he expected would soon be cut off as well.

“As I said to the chief of staff when he came, I’m not the person responsibl­e for the breakdown in governance, for the corruption, and for the incompeten­ce that have been prevalent in our governing structure for the last 15 to 20 years, and has been getting worse by the year,” he said. “I’m not responsibl­e for the lack of faith that people have in their institutio­ns. They are responsibl­e.”

Earlier Saturday evening, Jordanian army Chief of Staff Maj. Gen. Yousef Huneiti issued a statement saying Hamzah had not been detained but instead was “asked to stop movements and activities that were being employed to target Jordan’s security and stability,” adding that this was done within “the framework of comprehens­ive joint investigat­ions undertaken by the security services.”

“All the procedures were conducted within the framework of the law and after being required as a result of vigorous investigat­ions,” he said. “No one is above the law, and Jordan’s security and stability is above any considerat­ion.”

The prince’s home in a quiet suburb in the capital, Amman, according to observers and activists on social media, had been raided by a 20-vehicle force, which detained members of his security detail. His head of office, Yasser Majali, was picked up after a heavily armed force burst into his relatives’ home, according to Basma Majali, a family member who wrote of the incident on Twitter. “Communicat­ion was lost with him more than three hours ago,” she tweeted.

The news has rocked the tiny desert kingdom, a close regional ally of the U.S. often lauded for its sense of calm in a crisis-ridden neighborho­od. That has made it a major destinatio­n for those fleeing conflict in their own countries, including 600,000 Syrians and more than 2 million registered Palestinia­n refugees. It borders Syria, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Israel and the West Bank.

The Saudi royal court issued a statement in solidarity with Abdullah, asserting it stood with the Jordanian monarch and supported whatever decisions he makes to “preserve the security and stability and frustrate any attempt to tamper with them.” Both Bahrain and the Palestinia­n Authority followed suit, and Egypt said that Jordan’s stability is integral for Egyptian and Arab national security.

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

Jordan’s 59-year-old king came to power in 1999, when King Hussein before his death elevated him from his relatively obscure position as head of Jordan’s special forces to become the new monarch. Since then, Abdullah has been a top U.S. ally, often allowing U.S. troops to stage operations from Jordanian territory and participat­ing in the anti-Islamic State campaign.

The kingdom, which has scant resources, received some $1.5 billion in assistance from the U.S. in 2020 — a result of Abdullah’s popularity among congressio­nal leaders.

Yet he is decidedly less popular at home, where Jordanians often contrast him negatively with his father, a deeply popular, charismati­c figure who steered the country through many convulsion­s, including several regional wars, a military coup and more than a dozen assassinat­ion attempts. Some of that nostalgia rubbed off on Hamzah, who bears a striking resemblanc­e to the former king and was often considered his favorite.

Hamzah was thought to be King Hussein’s top choice as successor; he was passed over because he was still in school. Neverthele­ss, Hussein insisted on putting Hamzah next in line to the throne after Abdullah.

When his half brother removed him from the role in 2004, Hamzah largely receded from the limelight. But in 2012, a year after the Arab Spring uprisings felled neighborin­g regimes, his name was frequently invoked by the country’s main opposition movement as a possible replacemen­t for Abdullah.

Awadallah was a former minister of planning and finance who also once headed Abdullah’s office and his royal court. He served as Jordan’s special envoy to Saudi Arabia, but Abdullah removed him from the role in 2018 over what were said to be his overly close ties to Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman.

In Hamzah’s video, he excoriates the country’s ruling class for putting personal and financial interests above the “lives and dignities and futures of the 10 million people that live here.”

 ?? Hussein Malla Associated Press ?? FORMER Crown Prince Hamzah bin Hussein, with his mother, Queen Noor, in 2004. On Saturday, the military made a series of arrests of leading Jordanians, and Hamzah was told to limit his movements to his home.
Hussein Malla Associated Press FORMER Crown Prince Hamzah bin Hussein, with his mother, Queen Noor, in 2004. On Saturday, the military made a series of arrests of leading Jordanians, and Hamzah was told to limit his movements to his home.

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