Los Angeles Times

Prince declares loyalty to king

In a reversal, the half brother who just made a scathing video signs a letter affirming his support of leadership.

- By Nabih Bulos

In a reversal, Jordan’s former crown prince says he would rally behind the royal as country’s leader.

AMMAN, Jordan — Jordan’s former crown prince said Monday that he would place himself in the hands of King Abdullah II and rally behind him as the country’s leader, a reversal from his recent withering diatribes.

Jordan has been in the thrall of palace intrigue since the government announced it had thwarted “sinful plans” to destabiliz­e the country involving outside groups and Prince Hamzah bin Hussein, onetime crown prince and half brother to Abdullah.

Authoritie­s placed the prince under house arrest and rounded up at least 16 of his associates, including another relative of the royal family and a number of officials.

In a statement issued by the royal court Monday night and signed by the prince, Hamzah said he would adhere to the kingdom’s constituti­on and affirmed his support to his half brother.

“The interests of the nation must be above all considerat­ion, and we must all stand behind his majesty the

king, in his efforts to protect Jordan and its national interests,” said the statement. “In light of the developmen­ts of the last two days, I place myself in the hands of his majesty the king.”

The statement, which bore the handwritte­n words “at my uncle’s house his royal highness Prince Hassan,” ended with a verse from the Quran related to obeying “those in authority among you.”

Hours before, Abdullah tasked Hassan, paternal uncle to both royals, to “deal with the issue of ” Hamzah, who in turn “confirmed his commitment to the approach” of Jordan’s ruling Hashemite family, according

to a statement issued by the palace.

Four other princes joined Hassan in the mediation effort, including Hamzah’s brother, Hashem.

The conciliato­ry words came in counterpoi­nt to the prince’s fiery rhetoric from Saturday, when he excoriated his half brother in two leaked videos for the country becoming “stymied in corruption, nepotism and misrule.”

“I’m not the person responsibl­e for the breakdown in governance, for the corruption, and for the incompeten­ce that has been prevalent in our governing structure for the last 15 to 20 years, and has been getting worse by the year,” he said.

“I’m not responsibl­e for the lack of faith that people have in their institutio­ns. They are responsibl­e,” he said, in an oblique reference to the king and his government.

He added that, contrary to what his accusers were sure to allege, he was not involved in any foreign plot and was instead speaking out against corruption and the inability to dissent.

Hamzah leaked the videos through his lawyer, who then gave them to the BBC.

Speaking in English and Arabic, the prince says most of his communicat­ions had been cut off and his armed guard withdrawn after a visit to his home by the army’s chief of staff, Maj. Gen. Yousef Huneiti, who asked him to stop all “movements and activities that were being employed to target Jordan’s security and stability.”

In an audio message released Monday on social media and recorded after the army chief ’s visit two days prior, the prince says that Huneiti had threatened him but that he would defy his injunction­s. The voice in the recording matches that of the prince.

“I’m now waiting to see what they will do. I don’t want to mobilize because I don’t want to escalate now, but for sure I won’t adhere when they say ‘you can’t go out, you can’t tweet, you can’t communicat­e with people and you’re only allowed to see the family,’ ” Hamzah says in the recording.

“For a chief of staff to come tell you these words, I think that this is not acceptable in any way.”

On Sunday, Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi said the prince was at the center of a plot to destabiliz­e the kingdom. Also accused were Bassem Awadallah, a former confidant to Abdullah who had occupied several high-ranking roles in government; and Sharif Hassan bin Zaid, a relative of the royal family who succeeded Awadallah as special envoy to Saudi Arabia.

Safadi did not provide any particular­s on the plot but said foreign entities as well as members of the Jordanian opposition abroad were involved. The investigat­ion was ongoing, he said. There was no mention of the word “coup.”

The royal family’s fracas has upended the stability that Jordan has long touted as an achievemen­t in a difficult part of the world.

The kingdom, which is mostly desert and has few resources to sustain its 10 million people, has for decades relied on its strategic location and the largesse of its allies; that includes the U.S., which counts Jordan as one of its top counter-terrorism partners in the region. Jordan borders Israel, the West Bank, Syria, Iraq and Saudi Arabia.

Washington quickly came out in support of Abdullah, joining the regional countries backing any move the monarch took to maintain Jordan’s stability and security.

Before he died in 1999, King Hussein, father to both Abdullah and Hamzah, appointed the former as monarch and the latter as crown prince.

At the time, Hussein’s move was seen as a wise one, with Abdullah able to take the country past its recent divisions, while Hamzah — who bears a strong resemblanc­e to his father — maintained relations with the tribal leaders who were the monarchy’s power base.

But Abdullah removed Hamzah from the role in 2004 and handed it to his own son, also named Hussein.

The public airing of grievances has surprised Jordanians unused to the royal drama seen in neighborin­g countries. Although the situation had reached a denouement, said Bessma Momani, a professor of internatio­nal relations at Waterloo University in Ontario, the fight had caused some damage to the monarchy’s image.

“They created an internal division in the country,” she said in reference to the two royal figures. “Had they been able to manage this quietly, they would have done a better service to everyone.”

 ?? Yousef Allan Associated Press ?? KING ABDULLAH II, left, and his half brother Prince Hamzah bin Hussein, pictured in 2001.
Yousef Allan Associated Press KING ABDULLAH II, left, and his half brother Prince Hamzah bin Hussein, pictured in 2001.

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