Khaleej Times

Teachers’ union leaders rounded up in Jordan

- CRACKDOWN ON OPPOSITION

amman — Jordanian security forces arrested leading members of the opposition-run teachers union on Saturday, raided its offices and shut it down for two years, escalating a confrontat­ion with a group that has become a leading source of dissent.

Prosecutor­s charged Nasser Nawasreh, the acting head of the Jordanian Teachers Syndicate, with incitement over a speech to supporters last Wednesday that criticised Prime Minister Omar Al Razzaz’s government. State media said other charges related to allegation­s of financial and administra­tive wrongdoing.

Riot police reinforcem­ents were deployed on Saturday near the seat of government in the capital and in other areas where teacher activists were planning protests. Security forces raided the union’s headquarte­rs in the city of Karak.

Political opposition is often marginalis­ed in Jordan, but protests have grown in recent years over eroding living standards, corruption and slow pace of political reforms.

Saturday’s crackdown on the union would “only further aggravate political tensions by the government at a time people are choked under hard economic conditions,” said Murad Adailah, head of Islamic Action Front, the largest opposition party.

The 100,000-strong union went on strike last year, shutting down schools across Jordan for a month in one of the longest and most disruptive public sector strikes in the country’s history.

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