Times of Oman

Jordan unions strike after new PM appointed

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AMMAN: Shops and pharmacies closed in Jordan’s capital on Wednesday as some unions pressed ahead with a strike protesting against tax hikes, after King Abdullah replaced his prime minister to try to defuse public anger.

A draft law to raise income taxes and Internatio­nal Monetary Funddriven reforms that have pushed up prices have sparked the country’s largest protests in years.

Last week, more than 30 unions, representi­ng tens of thousands of public and private sector employees, held mass rallies in Amman and other cities.

Many of them pulled out of Wednesday’s walkout after the king appointed former World Bank economist Omar Al Razzaz on Tuesday to form a new government and urged talks over the law.

Razzaz replaces Hani Mulki, who resigned after refusing to scrap the tax reform bill. Harvardedu­cated Razzaz, who was education minister, will start consultati­ons on Wednesday to form a new government. Some businesses in Amman were shut and hospital employees staged a protest, while hundreds of men and women converged outside the headquarte­rs of the Profession­al Unions Associatio­n, although in smaller numbers than last week.

The protests have shaken Jordan, a US ally that has mostly escaped the turmoil that has buffeted its neighbours in the Middle East in recent years. Often seen as a unifying figure in Jordan, the king said the new cabinet must review the entire tax system and immediatel­y start a dialogue over the tax law, which the government sent to parliament last month.

He called for political parties, unions and civil society groups to take part in the talks. Protesters had pressed on overnight, with hundreds rallying amid tight security in the capital though turnout appeared lower than for the past few nights. Police blocked the roads to stop the sea of demonstrat­ors with their picket signs from reaching the Cabinet office. “We don’t want a change of names, we want a change in policy,” one banner read.

“Bring back bread subsidies,” another said. Some celebrated the change in leadership and said they would wait to see if the steps would stop price hikes which they said hit the poor.

“I personally feel optimistic and we started to feel the beginning of change,” Murad Yaghan said at a late night protest as people around him chanted against the government’s economic policies. “We will continue public pressure.”

On Wednesday, closed shops hung signs saying “I’m taking part in the strike” but life in the capital mostly went on as usual. The doctors’, engineers’, and lawyers’ unions were the main ones taking part in the walkout.

Full story @ timesofoma­n.com/world

 ?? - Reuters ?? UP IN ARMS: Protesters chant slogans and wave flags in front of the Labour Union offices in Amman, Jordan, June 6, 2018.
- Reuters UP IN ARMS: Protesters chant slogans and wave flags in front of the Labour Union offices in Amman, Jordan, June 6, 2018.

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