The Arizona Republic

Jordan prince says he is under house arrest

Ex-officials held amid criticism of government

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AMMAN, Jordan – The half-brother of Jordan’s King Abdullah said Saturday he has been placed under house arrest by Jordanian authoritie­s and accused the country’s leadership of corruption and incompeten­ce.

In a videotaped statement leaked to the British Broadcasti­ng Corp., Prince Hamzah said he was visited early Saturday by the country’s military chief and told, “I was not allowed to go out, to communicat­e with people or to meet with them.”

He said his security detail was removed, and his phone and Internet service had been cut. He said he was speaking over satellite Internet but expected that service to be cut as well. The BBC said it received the statement from Hamzah’s attorney.

In the statement, Hamzah said he had been informed he was being punished for taking in part in meetings in which the king had been criticized, though he himself was not accused of being a direct critic.

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

The country’s top general had earlier denied that Hamzah — a former crown prince stripped of the title in 2004 — was arrested or under house arrest, even as authoritie­s announced the arrests of former senior officials close to the ruling monarchy.

Hamzah was asked to “stop some movements and activities that are being used to target Jordan’s security and stability,” said Gen. Yousef Huneiti, the army chief of staff.

He said an investigat­ion was continuing and its results would be made public “in a transparen­t and clear form.”

“No one is above the law and Jordan’s security and stability are above all,” he told the official Petra news agency.

Petra had earlier reported that two senior officials who formerly worked for the palace, along with other suspects, had been arrested for “security reasons,” without providing further details.

The Petra report said Sharif Hassan bin Zaid, a member of the royal family, and Bassem Ibrahim Awadallah, a former head of the royal court, were detained. Awadallah also previously served as planning minister and finance minister and has private business interests throughout the Gulf region.

The agency did not provide further details or name the others who were arrested.

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

Saudi Arabia’s official news agency said the kingdom “confirmed its full support to Jordan and its king and crown prince in all decisions and procedures to maintain security and stability and defuse any attempt to affect them.”

Abdullah has ruled Jordan since the 1999 death of his father, King Hussein, who ruled the country for close to a halfcentur­y. The king has cultivated close relations with U.S. and other Western leaders over the years, and Jordan was a key ally in the war against the Islamic State group. The country borders Israel, the occupied West Bank, Syria, Iraq and Saudi Arabia.

Jordan’s economy has been battered by the coronaviru­s pandemic. The country, with a population of about 10 million, also has more than 600,000 Syrian refugees.

Jordan made peace with Israel in 1994. The countries maintain close security ties, but relations have otherwise been tense in recent years, largely because of difference­s linked to Israel’s conflict with the Palestinia­ns. Jordan is home to more than 2 million Palestinia­n refugees, most of whom have Jordanian citizenshi­p.

Stability in Jordan and the status of the king has long been a matter of concern, particular­ly during the Trump administra­tion, which gave unpreceden­ted support to Israel and sought to isolate the Palestinia­ns, including by slashing funding for Palestinia­n refugees.

In early 2018, as President Donald Trump was threatenin­g to cut aid to countries that did not support U.S. policies, the administra­tion boosted assistance to Jordan by more than $1 billion over five years.

Abdullah stripped his half-brother Hamzah of his title as crown prince in 2004, saying he had decided to “free” him from the “constraint­s of the position” in order to allow him to take on other responsibi­lities. The move was seen at the time as part of Abdullah’s consolidat­ion of power five years after the succession.

The current crown prince is Abdullah’s oldest son, Hussein, who is 26.

Jordan’s ruling family traces its lineage back to Islam’s Prophet Muhammad. Abdullah had chosen Hamzah as his crown prince hours after their father died of cancer in February 1999. The designatio­n was out of respect for King Hussein, who was known to have favored Hamzah the most among his 11 children from four marriages.

Abdullah and Hamzah have not displayed any open rivalry over the years.

 ?? JORDANIAN ROYAL PALACE/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? King Abdullah II of Jordan, left, has had no obvious difference­s with his half-brother, Prince Hamzah.
JORDANIAN ROYAL PALACE/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES King Abdullah II of Jordan, left, has had no obvious difference­s with his half-brother, Prince Hamzah.

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