Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Jordan's King Abdullah denounces half-brother

- SARAH DADOUCH

• King Abdullah II of Jordan issued a royal decree Thursday restrictin­g the communicat­ions and movements of his half-brother Prince Hamzah bin Hussein, whom Jordanian authoritie­s accused last year of taking part in a coup attempt against the king.

In a lengthy, scathing letter explaining the decree to the Jordanian public, the king excoriated his half-brother, calling him “arrogant,” “erratic” and seditious. Hamzah, the monarch wrote, had “exhausted all opportunit­ies to restore himself on the right path” and clung to delusion, believing himself to be the sole guardian of the family's legacy.

The letter — an extraordin­ary public airing of a family conflict — was the latest twist in a royal drama that began more than a year ago, when Hamzah was placed under house arrest and accused of fomenting a coup along with Bassem Awadallah, a former top aide to the king, and Sharif Hasan, a little-known member of the royal family. The decree issued Thursday appeared to formalize the restrictio­ns placed on Hamzah's movements.

The allegation­s were followed by sweeping arrests that targeted nearly 20 high-ranking Jordanian officials. In July, a Jordanian court found Awadallah and Hasan guilty of sedition and incitement for their involvemen­t in the “discord scheme.”

The court did not address the role of Hamzah, whose case would be resolved within the family, the king said.

Then, last month, on the anniversar­y of the arrests, Hamzah posted a letter on Twitter announcing he was relinquish­ing his title — a move that apparently offended the king. In his letter Thursday, Abdullah rejected Hamzah's action, saying only the king had the authority to grant and strip titles, according to the Jordanian constituti­on. Abdullah added that his half-brother, after renouncing his title, sent him a private letter “asking to maintain the financial and logistical privileges.”

Behind the ferocity and public nature of Abdullah's allegation­s was the suggestion that Hamzah was not simply a traitor: Rather, as the son of King Hussein and Queen Noor, he was a prominent royal whose accusation­s, including that the king was enriching himself as Jordanians suffered, had found an audience. Economic hardship, a bloated public sector and rising unemployme­nt have posed growing challenges to Abdullah and served as rallying points for critics, including some who have called for the king to be replaced by Hamzah.

In a video Hamzah posted online during his detention, he said that the well-being of ordinary Jordanians “has been put second by a ruling system (that) has decided that its personal interests, that its financial interests, that its corruption is more important than the lives and dignity and futures of the more than 10 million people that live here.”

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