Bangkok Post

Jordanians protest fuel price rises

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>>AMMAN: Jordanians staged sit-ins on Friday and activists called for more protests over fuel price rises that have added to a cost-of-living squeeze, a day after riots in a southern city left one police officer dead, witnesses and security sources said.

Authoritie­s said the policeman was killed on Thursday night by a gunshot fired by an unidentifi­ed individual when armed officers entered a neighbourh­ood of Maan to quell riots.

Tensions have mounted in Maan and several cities in southern Jordan in particular after sporadic strikes by truck drivers protesting against high fuel prices and demanding cuts in diesel prices.

Interior Minister Mazen Farrayeh told a news conference that the government will take tough steps and redeploy more anti-riot police against people who protest violently.

“We have seen a large jump in violent acts,” he said. “After what happened, there will be tougher security measures to reinforce the security forces in the areas that witness such acts.”

Police said in a statement that 40 officers were wounded by gunshots last night and that protesters smashed cars. The force later said it had arrested 44 people in connection with the unrest.

Streets were quieter during the day on Friday, but sporadic protests continued with a sit-in in front of Maan’s main mosque and a mosque in the capital Amman after prayers, while activists called for more demonstrat­ions.

By the evening, there were no reports of the full-blown confrontat­ions seen the previous night when riot police chased scores of youths throwing stones in Amman, Zarqa, Irbid and other cities in some of the most widespread civil unrest seen in recent years.

In the most significan­t unrest, security forces used tear gas to disperse angry crowds in Zarqa city, and protesters set fire to tyres on highways in the southern city of Karak and several other towns, disrupting traffic, witnesses said.

Internet users and activists said internet services slowed in several regions, disrupting the social media platforms activists used to share footage of clashes with police.

The government has promised to examine truck strikers’ demands but says it has already paid 500 million dinars ($700 million) to cap fuel prices this year.

Jordan says it needs to maintain fiscal prudence under an IMF-backed economic reform programme that has helped the economy.

 ?? ?? SPIKE IN VIOLENCE: Jordanian military personnel walk Friday in the city of Jerash in the funeral procession of a police officer killed in riots the previous day.
SPIKE IN VIOLENCE: Jordanian military personnel walk Friday in the city of Jerash in the funeral procession of a police officer killed in riots the previous day.

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