Gulf News

Jordan’s poor have little hope of change

Government seeks austerity measures to slash country’s debt in face of economic crisis

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Protests over a proposed tax hike might have shone the spotlight on economic hardships in Jordan, but the poorest in the kingdom’s capital remain voiceless as they struggle to survive.

Gaunt men sit on the ground of a rubbish-strewn alley in Amman’s Nazzal neighbourh­ood, absent the traditiona­l lights and cheerful decoration­s that usually come with Ramadan.

One of the capital’s poorest areas, the ending of the daily fast in Nazzal is far from festive.

On the top floor of a dilapidate­d building, Yusra Moheiddine stands timidly at the door of her apartment, her daughter clinging to the hem of her black niqab robe. “I’m ashamed,” the mother mutters, of the impoverish­ed conditions in which her family lives.

Mass protests against rising costs and the proposed new tax law have rocked Jordan in recent days as the cash-strapped government pushes austerity measures to slash the country’s debt in the face of an economic crisis.

The authoritie­s shelved the tax proposals in the face of public ire — but for Moheiddine the victory for the demonstrat­ors means little. Her family of three survives on the $5 (Dh18) a day her sick husband makes collecting cans. For them, their struggle has long been one of day-to-day survival. Since getting married, the 38-year-old of Palestinia­n origin has lived in seven different apartments — driven out each time by landlords tired of being shorted on the rent.

Holding her daughter in her arms, Moheiddine insists that the young girl “wants to be a schoolteac­her when she grows up”. But the hurdles she’ll have to overcome to do so may prove too much.

As the summer sun dips below the horizon in the city of seven hills, millions of people gather over sumptuous meals to end their daily fasts.

In Nazzal, this hard-up family ends the fast with a yellowish porridge, garnished with a few pieces of cucumber.

Down the road, 37-year-old Rania lives with her husband and three children in a small house where “only sewage and insects dare go”.

“In the winter, when it rains, we are drowned in sewage,” she says, not giving her surname.

They’ve dug a hole in the corner of the yard to serve as a septic tank.

“I have to empty it every week, otherwise it’s a disaster,” said Rania. In the house’s only bedroom, torn foam mattresses are arranged side-by-side and the walls are splodged with mould stains. “Everyone tells me to leave, but where would I go?” she asks.

Her husband makes a pittance selling corn on the cob and the family can’t afford to live elsewhere.

Jihad, a fruit and vegetable seller in his 50s, is fatalistic.

“Our turnover has dropped by more than 50 per cent compared to last year, but I get it ... who wants to buy a melon or a watermelon when he can’t even buy bread?”

 ?? AFP ?? Jordanians buy second-hand clothes in an open air market in central Amman on Friday. Jordan’s authoritie­s have shelved a proposed income tax hike after a week of protests.
AFP Jordanians buy second-hand clothes in an open air market in central Amman on Friday. Jordan’s authoritie­s have shelved a proposed income tax hike after a week of protests.

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