Palestinian Pilgrims arrive in Arab Saudi |
Unfinished journey (74)
(Part seventy-four, Depok, West Java, Indonesia, 13
September 2014, 18:19 pm)
The Royal Government of Jordan finally issued a temporary
passport for Israeli passport holders Muslims so that they could to pilgrimage
to mecca to perform Hajj 2014.
Arab-Israeli pilgrims use temporary Jordan passports
The Jordanian government has confirmed that it issues
temporary passports for Arab-Israeli passport holders so that they can enter
the Kingdom to perform the Haj.
This follows the Saudi government this week rejecting
reports that it would endorse Haj visas on Israeli passports if they were
issued by its consulates abroad.
Every year, nearly 5,000 Arab citizens of Israel, arrive
in the Kingdom to perform the pilgrimage. These citizens are holders of Israeli
passports, which are not recognized by Saudi Arabia or the majority of Arab
states, except for Jordan and Egypt that signed peace treaties with Israel in
1979 and 1994 respectively.
“We understand the problems Arab-Israelis are going
through, therefore we try to facilitate their travel to the Kingdom as much as
we can. We issue them a one-month passport upon their arrival in the Kingdom,
which they use when applying for a visa at the Saudi embassy for the Haj,” Director
General of the Jordanian Passport and Civil Status Department Marqan Qutaishat
told Arab News on Friday.
Qutaishat said these pilgrims would then have to hand in
these temporary passports to the Jordanian government after completing the Haj.
In a statement to the media this week, Saudi Ambassador
to Amman Sami Al-Saleh stressed that the embassy does not accept Israeli
passports. He reiterated that Arab-Israelis traveling from the occupied lands
in Palestine are issued Haj visas in temporary passports issued by the
Jordanian government.
This statement follows reports earlier this week that the
Saudi Passport Department would allow Arabs holding Israeli passports to enter
the Kingdom provided their visas were issued by a consulate abroad and approved
by the Haj Ministry.
Ahmed Luhaidan, spokesman for the passports department,
told Arab News on the phone that the department does not issue visas. The Saudi
Foreign Ministry is mandated to do this, he said.
Earlier, the General Authority of Civil Aviation (GACA)
confirmed there are no direct flights between the airports of the Kingdom and
that of Occupied Palestine for the Haj season.
Khaled Al-Khaibari, spokesman for GACA, denied reports in
Israeli media saying that Saudi Arabia would allow entry to pilgrims traveling
to King Abdulaziz International Airport in Jeddah from Ben-Gurion Airport in
Tel Aviv.
He said Gaza pilgrims travel to Saudi Arabia for
pilgrimage via Egyptian airports, while pilgrims of the West Bank do so by air
or road through Jordan.
History of Jordan
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Part of a series on the
History of Jordan
Jordan Territory |
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History of Jordan refers to the history of the Hashemite
Kingdom of Jordan and the background period of the Emirate of Transjordan under
British protectorate as well as the general history of the region of
Transjordan.
There is evidence of human activity in Transjordan as
early as the Paleolithic period (c. 90,000 BC).[citation needed] The area was
settled by nomadic tribes in the Bronze age, which consolidated in small
kingdoms during the Iron Age - such as the Edomites and Amonites, with partial
areas controlled by the Israelites. In the classic period, Transjordan came
under Greek and later Roman influence. One of the major populations were the
Nabateans, while Jews settled the area of Jordan Valley, within the domain of
Roman Judea. Under the Romans and the Byzantines, Transjordan was home to the
Decapolis in the North, with much of the region being designated as Byzantine
Arabia. Classical kingdoms located in the region of Transjordan, such as the
Roman-era Nabatean kingdom, which had its capital in Petra, left particularly
dramatic ruins popular today with tourists and filmmakers. The history of
Transjordan continued with the Muslim empires starting in the 7th century,
partial crusader control in the mid-Middle Ages (country of Oultrejordain) and
finally, Mamluk Sultanate (Cairo) since 13th century and the Ottoman Empire
from the 16th century until World War I.
With the Great Arab Revolt in 1916 and the consequent
British invasion, the area came under Occupied Enemy Territory Administration
in 1917 and with the British mandate of Transjordan in early 1920s, it became
the Emirate of Transjordan under the Hashemite Emir. In 1946, independent
Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan was formed and shortly admitted to the United
Nations and the Arab League. In 1948, Jordan fought with the newly born state
of Israel over lands of former Mandatory Palestine, effectively gaining control
of the West Bank and annexing it with its Palestinian population. Jordan lost
West Bank in the 1967 War with Israel, and since became the central base of the
PLO in its struggle against Israel. The alliance between the PLO and the
Jordanians, active during the War of Attrition, came to an end in the bloody
Black September in Jordan in 1970, when a civil war between Jordanians and
Palestinians (with Syrian Ba'athist support) took thousands of life. In the
aftermath, defeated PLO was forced out of Jordan together with tens of
thousands of its fighters and their Palestinian families, relocating to South
Lebanon.
King Abdullah II of Jordan |
Ancient history[edit]
This section needs additional citations for verification.
Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources.
Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (April 2014)
Evidence of human activity in Jordan dates back to the
Paleolithic period (500000 - 17000 BC). While there is no architectural
evidence from this era, archaeologists have found tools, such as flint and
basalt hand-axes, knives and scraping implements.
An old Roman Temple in Erak al Amir
In the Neolithic period (8500-4500 BC), three major
shifts occurred. First, people became sedentary, living in small villages, and
discovering and domesticating new food sources such as cereal grains, peas and
lentils, as well as goats. The human population increased to tens of thousands.
Second, this shift in settlement patterns appears to have
been catalyzed by a marked change in climate. The eastern desert, in
particular, grew warmer and drier, eventually to the point where it became
uninhabitable for most of year. This watershed climate change is believed to
have occurred between 6500 and 5500 BC.
Third, beginning sometime between 5500 and 4500 BC, the
inhabitants began to make pottery from clay rather than plaster. Pottery-making
technologies were probably introduced to the area by craftsmen from
Mesopotamia. The largest Neolithic site in Jordan is at Ein Ghazal in Amman.
The many buildings were divided into three distinct districts. Houses were
rectangular and had several rooms, some with plastered floors. Archaeologists
have unearthed skulls covered with plaster and with bitumen in the eye sockets
at sites throughout Jordan, Israel, the Palestinian Territories and Syria. A
statue discovered at Ein Ghazal is thought to be 8,000 years old. Just over one
meter high, it depicts a woman with huge eyes, skinny arms, knobby knees and a
detailed rendering of her toes.
History of the Levant
Stone Age
Kebaran culture Natufian culture Halaf culture Ghassulian
culture Jericho
Ancient history
Ebla Akkadian Empire Canaanites Amorites Arameans
Hittites Israel and Judah Philistines Phoenicians Neo-Assyrian Empire
Neo-Babylonian Empire Achaemenid Empire
Classical antiquity
Wars of Alexander the Great Seleucid Empire Hasmonean
dynasty Nabataeans Roman Empire Herodians Palmyra Byzantine Empire Sassanid
Empire
Middle Ages
Muslim conquest Early Caliphates Umayyads Abbasids
Fatimids Hamdanids Seljuks Crusades Ayyubids Mamluks
Modern history
Ottoman Syria Mount Lebanon Jerusalem Mandatory Syria and
Lebanon Mandatory Palestine Transjordan Syria Lebanon Jordan Israel Palestine
Gaza Strip
v t e
During the Chalcolithic period (4500-3200 BC), copper
began to be smelted and used to make axes, arrowheads and hooks. The
cultivation of barley, dates, olives and lentils, and the domestication of
sheep and goats, rather than hunting, predominated. The lifestyle in the desert
was probably very similar to that of modern Bedouins.
Tuleitat Ghassul is a large Chalcolithic era village
located in the Jordan Valley. The walls of its houses were made of sun-dried
mud bricks; its roofs of wood, reeds and mud. Some had stone foundations, and
many had large central courtyards. The walls are often painted with bright
images of masked men, stars, and geometric motifs, which may have been
connected to religious beliefs.[1]
Many of the villages built during the Early Bronze Age
(3200-1950 BC) included simple water infrastructures, as well as defensive
fortifications probably designed to protect against raids by neighboring
nomadic tribes.
At Bab al-Dhra in Wadi `Araba, archaeologists discovered
more than 20,000 shaft tombs with multiple chambers as well as houses of
mud-brick containing human bones, pots, jewelry and weapons. Hundreds of
dolmens scattered throughout the mountains have been dated to the late
Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Ages.[2]
Although writing was developed before 3000 BC in Egypt
and Mesopotamia, it was generally not used in Jordan, Canaan and Syria until
some thousand years later, even though archeological evidence indicates that
the Jordanians were trading with Egypt and Mesopotamia.
Between 2300 and 1950 BC, many of the large, fortified
hilltop towns were abandoned in favor of either small, unfortified villages or
a pastoral lifestyle. There is no consensus on what caused this shift, though
it is thought to have been a combination of climatic and political changes that
brought an end to the city-state network.
During the Middle Bronze Age (1950-1550 BC), migration
across the Middle East increased. Trading continued to develop between Egypt,
Syria, Arabia, Canaan and Jordan, resulting in the spread of technology and
other hallmarks of civilization. Bronze, forged from copper and tin, enabled
the production of more durable axes, knives, and other tools and weapons.
Large, distinct communities seem to have arisen in northern and central Jordan,
while the south was populated by a nomadic, Bedouin-type of people known as the
Shasu.
New fortifications appeared at sites like Amman's
Citadel, Irbid, and Tabaqat Fahl (or Pella). Towns were surrounded by ramparts
made of earth embankments, and the slopes were covered in hard plaster, making
the climb slippery and difficult. Pella was enclosed by massive walls and watch
towers.
Archaeologists usually date the end of the Middle Bronze
Age to about 1550 BC, when the Hyksos were driven out of Egypt during the 17th
and 18th Dynasties. A number of Middle Bronze Age towns in Canaan and Jordan
were destroyed during this time.
Iron Age[edit]
The most prominent Iron Age kingdoms in Jordan were
Ammon, Moab, and Edom.[3] The Ammonites had their capital in Rabbath Ammon. The
Moabites settled Kerak Governorate with their capital at Kir of Moab (Kerak),[4]
and the kingdom of Edom settled in southern Jordan and southern Israel, and
their capital was in Bozrah in Tafilah Governorate. The kingdom of Ammon
maintained its independence from the Assyrian empire, unlike all other kingdoms
in the region which were conquered.[5]
In about 840 BC, Meshe, the King of the Moabites,
revolted against the "House of David." Moab was a Jordanian tribe
that lived east of the Dead Sea and about 70 kilometers south of Amman. This
battle is recorded in the Bible's 2 Kings chapter 3. The Bible's story is
corroborated by the Mesha Stele, the Moabite Stone that was found in the
Jordanian town of Dhiban in 1868. This find indicated that the Moabites worked
with inscriptions on bluish basalt stone.
Classic period[edit]
Petra, the capital of the Nabatean kingdom, is where the
Nabatean alphabets, the current Arabic language alphabets, were invented.
Later antiquity saw the rise of the Nabatean kingdom with
its capital at Petra, which was a border, client state of the Roman Empire
absorbed into the Empire in 106 CE, and the ancient city of Saltus. During the
Greco-Roman period of influence, a number of semi-independent city-states also
developed in Jordan, grouped as a Decapolis including: Gerasa (Jerash),
Philadelphia (Amman), Raphana (Abila), Dion (Capitolias), Gadara (Umm Qays),
and Pella (Irbid).
Middle Ages[edit]
In the early 7th century, the area of modern Jordan
became integrated into the new Arab-Islamic Umayyad Empire (the first Muslim
dynasty), which ruled much of the Middle East from 661 until 750 CE. At the
time, Amman, now the capital of the Kingdom of Jordan, became a major town in
"Jund Dimashq" (the military district of Damascus) and became the
seat of the provincial governor. In fact, the name "Al-Urdun"
(Jordan) was used on Umayyad post-reform copper coins beginning in the early
8th century and represent the earliest official usage of the name for the
modern state. Additionally, lead seals with the Arabic phrase "Halahil
Ardth Al-Urdun" (Master of the Land of Jordan), dating from the late 7th
to early 8th century CE, have been found in Jordan as well. Additionally,
Arab-Byzantine "Standing Caliph" coins minted under the Umayyads also
have been found bearing the mint-mark of "Amman." Thus, usage of the
names Al-Urdun/Jordan and Amman date back, to at least, the early decades of
the Arab-Muslim takeover of the region
Umayyad post-reform fals, c. 8th century
Under the Umayyad's successors, the Abbasids (750-1258),
Jordan was neglected and began to languish due to the geo-political shift that
occurred when the Abassids moved their capital from Damascus to Kufa and later
to Baghdad.
After the decline of the Abbasids, parts of Jordan were
ruled by various powers and empires including the Mongols, the Crusaders, the
Ayyubids, the Mamlukes as well as the Ottomans, who captured major parts of the
Arab World around 1517.
Ottoman rule[edit]
Main article: Ottoman Syria
[icon] This section
requires expansion. (August 2012)
During the Ottoman period, the area has become largely
under semi-autonomous rule of local Arab lords, with little direct interruption
by the Ottoman authorities.
British protectorate - Transjordan Emirate[edit]
Main article: Emirate of Transjordan
See also: Ikhwan raids on Transjordan, Adwan Rebellion
and Jerash Local Government
With the break-up of the Ottoman Empire at the end of
World War I, the League of Nations and the occupying powers, Britain and
France, redrew the borders of the Middle East. Their decisions, most notably
the Sykes–Picot Agreement, led to the establishment of the French Mandate for
Syria and British Mandate for Palestine. The latter included the territory of
Transjordan, which had been allocated to Abdullah I of Jordan approximately a
year prior to the finalization of the Mandate document (the Mandate officially
introduced in 1923).
One reason was that the British government had at that
point to find a role for Abdullah, after his brother Faisal had lost his
control in Syria and been given the role of the king of Iraq. The British
consequently made Abdullah emir of the newly created Transjordan. At first,
Abdullah was displeased with the territory given to him, and hoped it was only
a temporary allocation, to be replaced by Syria or Palestine.[6] The Permanent
Court of International Justice and an International Court of Arbitration
established by the Council of the League of Nations handed down rulings in 1925
which determined that Palestine and Transjordan were newly created successor
states of the Ottoman Empire as defined by international law.[7]
The most serious threats to Emir Abdullah's position in
Transjordan were repeated Wahhabi incursions from Najd into southern parts of
his territory.[8] The emir was powerless to repel those raids by himself, thus
the British maintained a military base, with a small air force, at Marka, close
to Amman.[8] The British military force was the primary obstacle against the
Wahhabis between 1922–1924, and was also utilized to help emir Abdullah with
the suppression of local rebellions, first at Kura and later by Sultan Adwan,
in 1921 and 1923 respectively.[8]
In 1928, Britain officially provided King Abdullah with
full autonomy, though the British RAF continued to provide security to the
Hashemite Emirate.
Emirate of Transjordan had a population of 200,000 in
1920, 225,000 in 1922 and 400,000 (as Kingdom) in 1948.[9] Almost half of the
population in 1922 (around 103,000) was nomadic.[9]
Kingdom of Jordan[edit]
Further information: Timeline of the Hashemite Kingdom of
Jordan
Establishment[edit]
On 17 January 1946, Ernest Bevin the British Foreign
Secretary, announced in a speech at the General Assembly of the United Nations,
that the British Government intended to take steps in the near future to
establish Transjordan as a fully independent and sovereign state.[10] The
mandate for Transjordan ended on 22 May 1946 with the signing of the Treaty of
London and Transjordan gained full independence. On 25 May 1946 the country
became the Hashemite Kingdom of Transjordan when the ruling 'Amir' was re-designated
as 'King'. Transjordan was one of the Arab states opposed to the second
partition of Palestine and creation of Israel in May 1948. It participated in
the war between the Arab states and the newly founded State of Israel.
Thousands of Palestinians fled the Arab-Israeli fighting to the West Bank and
Jordan. The Armistice Agreements of 3 April 1949 left Jordan in control of the
West Bank and provided that the armistice demarcation lines were without
prejudice to future territorial settlements or boundary lines.
1948 War and annexation of the West Bank[edit]
Jordan 1948-1967. The East Bank is the portion east of
the Jordan river, the West Bank is the part west of the river
Further information: 1948 Arab–Israeli War, 1949
Armistice Agreements, and Jordanian occupation of the West Bank
On 24 April 1950, Jordan formally annexed the West Bank
(including East Jerusalem)[11] declaring "complete unity between the two
sides of the Jordan and their union in one state...at whose head reigns King
Abdullah Ibn al Hussain".[12] All West Bank residents were granted
Jordanian citizenship. The December 1948 Jericho Conference, a meeting of
prominent Palestinian leaders and King Abdullah, voted in favor of annexation
into what was then Transjordan.[13]
Jordan’s annexation was regarded as illegal and void by
the Arab League and others. It was recognized only by Britain, Iraq and
Pakistan.[14][15][16] The annexation of the West Bank more than doubled the
population of Jordan.[17]
On July 20, 1951, King Abdullah I was shot dead in
Jerusalem while visiting the Al-Aqsa Mosque. His assassin, a Palestinian from
the Husseini clan, was angry at Abdullah's apparent collusion with Israel in
the carve-up of Palestine. Abdullah's grandson, Prince Hussein Ibn Talal was
with him at the time and was hit too.
Jordan had two towns with more than 10,000 inhabitants in
1946: Amman (65,754) and Salt (14,479).[9] Following the influx of Palestinian
refugees, Amman's population increased to 108,412 by 1952, and both Irbid and
Zarqa more than doubled their population from less than 10,000 each to more
than, respectively, 23,000 and 28,000.[9]
Reign of King Hussein[edit]
King Abdullah's eldest son, Talal of Jordan, was
proclaimed king in 1951, but he was declared mentally unfit to rule and deposed
in 1952. His son, Hussein Ibn Talal, became king on his eighteenth birthday, in
1953.
The 1950s have been labelled as a time of "Jordan's
Experiment with Liberalism". Freedom of speech, freedom of the press, and
freedom of association were guaranteed in the newly written constitution as
with the already firmly established freedom of religion doctrine. Jordan had
one of the freest and most liberal societies in the Middle East and in the
greater Arab world during the 1950s and early 1960s.
Jordan ended its special defense treaty relationship with
the United Kingdom and British troops completed their withdrawal in 1957. In
February 1958, following announcement of the merger of Syria and Egypt into the
United Arab Republic, Iraq and Jordan announced the Arab Federation of Iraq and
Jordan, also known as the Arab Union. The Union was dissolved in August 1958.
A memorial for all the Jordanian soldiers in Al-Karameh
Image showing the approximate land exchanged between
Jordan (gaining green) and Saudi Arabia (gaining red).
In 1965 Jordan and Saudi Arabia concluded a bilateral
agreement that realigned the border. The realignment resulted in some exchange
of territory, and Jordan's coastline on the Gulf of Aqaba was lengthened by
about eighteen kilometers. The new boundary enabled Jordan to expand its port
facilities and established a zone in which the two parties agreed to share
petroleum revenues equally if oil were discovered. The agreement also protected
the pasturage and watering rights of nomadic tribes inside the exchanged
territories.
File:Gov.archives.arc.652926.ogv
Video of developments regarding Jordan during 1980
Jordan signed a mutual defense pact in May 1967 with
Egypt, and it participated, along with Syria, Egypt, and Iraq in the Six-Day
War of June 1967 against Israel. During the war, Israel took control of East
Jerusalem and West Bank, leading to another major influx of Palestinian
refugees into Jordan. Its Palestinian refugee population—700,000 in 1966—grew
by another 300,000 from the West Bank.
The period following the 1967 war saw an upsurge in the
power and importance of Palestinian militants (fedayeen) in Jordan. Other Arab
governments attempted to work out a peaceful solution, but by September 1970,
known as the Black September in Jordan, continuing fedayeen actions in Jordan —
including the destruction of three international airliners hijacked and held in
the desert east of Amman — prompted the Jordanian government to take action. In
the ensuing heavy fighting, a Syrian tank force took up positions in northern
Jordan to support the fedayeen but was forced to retreat. By September 22, Arab
foreign ministers meeting at Cairo had arranged a cease-fire beginning the
following day. Sporadic violence continued, however, until Jordanian forces won
a decisive victory over the fedayeen in July 1971, expelling them from the
country.
An attempted military coup was thwarted in 1972. No
fighting occurred along the 1967 cease-fire line during the Yom Kippur War in
1973, but Jordan sent a brigade to Syria to fight Israeli units on Syrian
territory.
In 1974, King Hussein recognised the PLO as the sole
legitimate representative of the Palestinian people. However, in 1986, Hussein
severed political links with the PLO and ordered its main offices to be closed.
In 1988, Jordan renounced all claims to the West Bank but retained an
administrative role pending a final settlement. Hussein also publicly backed
the Palestinian uprising, or First Intifada, against Israeli rule.
Jordan witnessed some of the most severe protests and
social upheavals in its history during the 1980s, protests in Jordanian
universities especially Yarmouk University and urban areas protested inflation
and lack of political freedom. A massive upheaval occurred in the southern city
of Ma'an. There was rioting in several cities over price increases in 1989. The
same year saw the first general election since 1967. It was contested only by
independent candidates because of the ban on political parties in 1963. Martial
law was lifted and a period of rapid political liberalization began. Parliament
was restored and some thirty political parties, including the Islamic Action
Front, were created.
Jordan did not participate directly in the Gulf War of
1990-1991, but it broke with the Arab majority and supported the Iraqi position
of Saddam Hussein. This position led to the temporary repeal of U.S. aid to
Jordan. As a result, Jordan came under severe economic and diplomatic strain.
After the Iraqi defeat in 1991, Jordan, along with Syria, Lebanon, and
Palestinian representatives, agreed to participate in direct peace negotiations
with Israel sponsored by the U.S. and Russia. Eventually, Jordan negotiated an
end to hostilities with Israel and signed a declaration to that effect on July
25, 1994; the Israel-Jordan Peace Treaty was concluded on October 26, 1994,
ending 46-year official state of war.
Amman City |
Food price riots occurred in 1996, after subsidies were
removed under an economic plan supervised by the International Monetary Fund.
By the late 1990s, Jordan's unemployment rate was almost 25%, while nearly 50%
of those who were employed were on the government payroll. The 1997
parliamentary elections were boycotted by several parties, associations and
leading figures.
In 1998, King Hussein was treated for lymphatic cancer in
the United States. After six months of treatment he returned home to a rousing
welcome in January 1999. Soon after, however, he had to fly back to the US for
further treatment. King Hussein died in February 1999. More than 50 heads of
state attended his funeral. His eldest son Crown Prince Abdullah succeeded to
the throne.[18]
Reign of King Abdullah II[edit]
Economy[edit]
Economic liberalization policies under King Abdullah II
have helped to create one of the freest economies in the Middle East.
In March 2001, King Abdullah and presidents Bashar
al-Assad of Syria and Hosni Mubarak of Egypt inaugurated a $300m (£207m)
electricity line linking the grids of the three countries. In September 2002,
Jordan and Israel agreed on a plan to pipe water from the Red Sea to the
shrinking Dead Sea. The project, costing $800m, is the two nations' biggest
joint venture to date. King Abdullah and Syrian President Bashar al-Assad
launched the Wahdah Dam project at a ceremony on the Yarmuk River in February
2004.
Foreign relations[edit]
Jordan has sought to remain at peace with all of its
neighbors. In September 2000, a military court sentenced six men to death for
plotting attacks against Israeli and US targets. Following the outbreak of
Israeli-Palestinian fighting in September 2000, Amman withdrew its ambassador
to Israel for four years. In 2003, Jordan's Central Bank retracted an earlier
decision to freeze accounts belonging to leaders of Hamas. When senior US
diplomat Laurence Foley was gunned down outside his home in Amman in October
2002, in the first assassination of a Western diplomat in Jordan, scores of
political activists were rounded up. Eight militants were later found guilty
and executed in 2004. King Abdullah did, however, criticise the United States
and Israel over the fighting in Lebanon in 2006.
Politics[edit]
Jordan's gradual institution of political and civil
liberty has continued, but the slow pace of reform has led to increasing
discontent. Following the death of a youth in custody, riots erupted in the
southern town of Maan in January 2002, the worst public disturbances in more
than three years.
The first parliamentary elections under King Abdullah II
were held in June 2003. Independent candidates loyal to the king won two-thirds
of the seats. A new cabinet was appointed in October 2003 following the
resignation of Prime Minister Ali Abu al-Ragheb. Faisal al-Fayez was appointed
prime minister. The king also appointed three female ministers. However, in
April 2005, amid reports of the king's dissatisfaction with the slow pace of
reforms, the government resigned and a new cabinet was sworn in, led by Prime
Minister Adnan Badran.
The first local elections since 1999 were held in July
2007. The main opposition party, the Islamist Action Front, withdrew after
accusing the government of vote-rigging. The parliamentary elections of
November 2007 strengthened the position of tribal leaders and other
pro-government candidates. Support for the opposition Islamic Action Front
declined. Political moderate Nader Dahabi was appointed prime minister.
In November 2009, the King once more dissolved parliament
half-way through its four-year term. The following month, he appointed a new
premier to push through economic reform. A new electoral law was introduced May
2010, but pro-reform campaigners said it did little to make system more
representational. The parliamentary elections of November 2010 were boycotted
by the opposition Islamic Action Front. Riots broke out after it was announced
that pro-government candidates had won a sweeping victory.
Arab Spring[edit]
On 14 January, the Jordanian protests began in Jordan's
capital Amman, and at Ma'an, Al Karak, Salt and Irbid, and other cities. The
following month, King Abdullah appointed a new prime minister, former army
general Marouf Bakhit, and charged him with quelling the protests whilst
carrying out political reforms. The street protests continued through the
summer, albeit on a smaller scale, prompting the King to replace Bakhit with
Awn al-Khasawneh, a judge at the International Court of Justice (October 2011).
However, Prime Minister Awn al-Khasawneh resigned abruptly after just six
months having been unable to satisfy either the demands for reform or allay
establishment fears of empowering the Islamist opposition. King Abdullah appointed
former prime minister Fayez al-Tarawneh to succeed him.
In October 2012, King Abdullah called for early
parliamentary elections, to be held at some time in 2013. The Islamic Action
Front, continued in its calls for broader political representation and a more
democratic parliament. The King appointed has Abdullah Ensour, a former
minister and vocal advocate of democratic reform, as prime minister.
Mass demonstrations took place in Amman (November 2012)
against the lifting of fuel subsidies. Public calls for the end of the monarchy
were heard. Clashes between protesters and supporters of the king followed. The
government reversed the fuel price rise following the protest.[19] Al Jazeera
stated that protests are expected to continue for several weeks because of
increasing food prices.[19]
During Arab Winter[edit]
Main article: June 2014 Northern Iraq offensive
With the rapid expansion of the Islamic State of Iraq and
the Levant into northern and eastern Iraq in summer of 2014, Jordan became
threatened by the radical Johadist organization, boosting troops on the Iraqi
and Syrian borders. (Continoe)
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