Unrest grips Jordan as Hamas leader’s words ignite protests

April 4, 2024 by Baruch Yedid - TPS
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Tensions between Hamas and Jordan have soared in recent days, with officials in Amman suggesting that the Jordanian citizenship of the terror group’s leaders be revoked.

Hamas’ militants during an anti-Israel rally in the streets of Gaza City following the ceasefire after 11 days of fighting between Hamas and Israel. Gaza, May 22, 2021.     Photo by Majdi Fathi/TPS

Raising Amman’s ire was an incendiary speech by Hamas leader Khaled Masha’al. Speaking in Amman on March 27, Masha’al called on Jordanians to “mix Arab blood with Palestinian blood.” The speech sent shockwaves through the kingdom, sparking demonstrations and clashes, particularly in the vicinity of the Israeli embassy in Amman’s Al Tla’a Al Sharqi neighbourhood.

His Jordanian background compounds the kingdom’s anger towards Masha’al. Masha’al family is from the Balqa region between the capital and the Jordan River, but Masha’al has been absent from Jordan for decades, except for attending family funerals.

Demonstrations have spread to the Baqa’a refugee camp, Jordan’s largest, where more than 131,000 Palestinians live in an area of 1.4 sq. km. Concerns persist that the unrest could spread. Estimates suggest that nearly 70 per cent of the people living in Jordan are Palestinian, including two million living in refugee camps.

Despite the kingdom’s efforts to provide aid to Gaza and boost the Palestinian Authority, popular Jordanian support for Hamas exceeds 60%, according to recent polls. This growing support has raised alarms in Amman, where authorities closely monitor social media platforms for pro-Hamas sentiments.

Jordanian officials also accuse leaders the country’s Islamic Action Movement of collaborating with Hamas to incite unrest and exploit tensions. The Islamic Action Movement and Hamas are the Jordanian and Palestinian branches of the Muslim Brotherhood, respectively.

Criticising the growing unrest, Minister of Government Communications Muhannad Al Mubaidin insisted, “Jordan will not accept leaders who deviate from this recognition.”

Former Jordanian Minister of Information Samih Al-Maaytah went even further, telling the Al-Arabiya Network that, “A leader of any Palestinian faction who has Jordanian citizenship — but is inciting against our country and is trying to provoke riots in it — the government should seriously consider revoking his citizenship.”

Comments

2 Responses to “Unrest grips Jordan as Hamas leader’s words ignite protests”
  1. Lynne Newington says:

    Not completely sure why, but my mind is springing back to when , with in a few days of the proclamation of statehood, armies violated frontiers, planes bombed Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, and commandos pounced on undefended settlements and massacred their entire populations………….
    From whence came their help?
    An improvised Israeli army came into force, old and young men and women untrained in the art of war…….

    Ref. Rabbi Brasch
    The Book of David

  2. liatjoy says:

    Hamas really trying to spread its tentacles now … and the world myopic in its narrow perspective of what’s going on. Thinking only of the big baddie Israel and the oppressed ‘terrorists’ having to fight for their lives. They should be backing Israel fully in their efforts to decimate Hamas so that the whole Middle East region can be secure within their own territories.

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