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Jordan Revokes Restrictions On Public Gatherings

Jordan Protests

JAMAL HALABY   02/15/11 07:25 AM ET   AP

AMMAN, Jordan — Protest marches in Jordan will no longer need government permission, Jordan's interior minister said Tuesday, bowing to growing pressure to allow wider freedoms.

In street protests in the past five weeks, Muslim opposition groups, their leftist allies and independent rights activists demanded that the government remove restrictions on free speech and assembly.

Jordan's King Abdullah II responded by promising changes to pertinent laws, including a controversial election law which critics say allows the king's loyalists to dominate the legislature, the only elected national decision-making body.

Srour said Tuesday that protesters would still have to inform authorities of any gathering two days in advance to "ensure public safety" and that they would have to observe public order. However, he stressed that the government would no longer interfere in such matters.

Opposition leader Hamza Mansour said the change was a step in the right direction. "We're still waiting to see changes made to the election law and to have early elections held based on the new bill," added Mansour, the leader of the Islamic Action Front, the political arm of the Muslim Brotherhood.

The Brotherhood, Jordan's largest opposition group, boycotted a November vote, alleging the election law was weighed against it.

Meanwhile, about 3,000 tribal leaders and key figures – including lawmakers, retired security personnel and academicians – renewed their allegiance to the king in an emotional letter, praising his reform efforts.

The letter assured Abdullah that Jordan will "survive regional turbulence, the way it did in the last 60 years," referring to the Egyptian uprising which sent shock waves across the volatile Mideast.

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AMMAN, Jordan — Protest marches in Jordan will no longer need government permission, Jordan's interior minister said Tuesday, bowing to growing pressure to allow wider freedoms. In street prote...
AMMAN, Jordan — Protest marches in Jordan will no longer need government permission, Jordan's interior minister said Tuesday, bowing to growing pressure to allow wider freedoms. In street prote...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Zutroy
03:58 PM on 02/15/2011
Hashemites. What a useless family.
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03:12 PM on 02/15/2011
Jordan is still a police state, the police structures there are just as they were in Egypt and the general public lived in fear of being taken to the state security offices, where abuse and torture is a norm
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03:04 PM on 02/15/2011
So we see that the Arab nations are more inclined towards democracy than the worse case scenario of the day that is always spouted by western administrations and media. Western governments never feared that Arab nations would be hostile and dangerous they feared that they would become unified and powerful economically and financially.
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UnknownSolider
02:07 PM on 02/15/2011
I just hope the TeaParty doesn't start asking for the same thing
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wooper
02:37 PM on 02/15/2011
For the most part, the people in the streets in the middle east are young and educated. The tea party participants are neither.
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UnknownSolider
02:51 PM on 02/15/2011
great observation, I had forgotten that
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03:03 PM on 02/15/2011
The poor rioting in the middle east are nothing like the rich white Republican Tea Partiers who are sick of paying all the taxies, ie doing all the work in this country.
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Alex Croley
One Nation, Indivisible, for Liberty and Justice f
02:57 PM on 02/15/2011
I'm actually answering something that has shown up as a reply but the moderators haven't released to the main list... which is odd.

/when did Egypt try to crush the protest? I think they tried to ignore them more than crush them

if you want to know what a crushed protest looks like some examples may be: Hungary 1957, China Tienimen Square, Tehran 2009.

Egypt didn't look like any of the above /

They didn't look like any above, however they tried to stop the protest, by two ways:

First was the media, by shutting down the Internet and cellphones; censoring/hararrassing/arresting journalists; and showing on state television with no protest or protest that is pro-government.

Second, the police, the violence (such as the whippings; running over people with cars; arresting; killing people via snippers; letting the thugs out of prison to intimidate the protestors.

Third, the pro-government protestors that threw cocktails, and beat protestor in the square who where unlike most of the peaceful protestors in the square had weapons with them.
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UnknownSolider
03:31 PM on 02/15/2011
so when the media in America shows wall to wall coverage of a Glen Beck rally, but does its absolute best to ignore and avoid the Stewart/Colbert rally that means what?
 
how are the Egyptian police (although we are now learning the Military) any different than the NYPD at the Republican National Convention, or the 68 Democratic Party Convention, or Kent State?
 
What about the Quakers (pacifist) being put on the terrAhrist watch list?
 
If Egypt (govt) wanted to crush the protest it could have very easily, so you have no idea what you are talking about when you say they tried to stopt he protest, they were trying to get the prostest to stop, but they didn't go out of their way to stop them.
 
How do you know this gov't supporters weren't acting on their own, do you have any evidence that says Mubarak told anyone to do anything to a reporter? I haven't seen anything that said that.
 
It would be like me saying that the POTUS orders cops to sh00t and k1// unarmed black men
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eclub
яεsτяιcτєd
01:40 PM on 02/15/2011
It ain't democracy if it's got a monarch. Keep marching!
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RedRat
Ignorance is fixable, stupidty is forever
01:58 PM on 02/15/2011
Er, what about the United Kingdom?
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eclub
яεsτяιcτєd
02:09 PM on 02/15/2011
I said it ain't democracy if it's got a monarch in it!!
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Alex Croley
One Nation, Indivisible, for Liberty and Justice f
01:28 PM on 02/15/2011
Jordan is not going to make the same mistake that Egypt did. Instead of trying to crush the protests they are allowing them to assemble and voice their opinions. This will, they hope, lower tensions a bit and allow for changes to come at a slower pace.
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jokamachi
You're doing it wrong.
01:55 PM on 02/15/2011
They hope.
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RedRat
Ignorance is fixable, stupidty is forever
02:08 PM on 02/15/2011
When tensions rise to high a level, frustration sets in and then people begin to vent with hyperbole. Demands can then escalate to such a high level nothing can be achieved and rational discussion on the practicalities of governance fly out the window. Look what happened here in the U.S.A. Rational discussion between hardline Republicans (just say no and Obama is wrong) can dissolve civil discourse with the help of the tea party.

Jordan at least has a half a chance at getting a new order in that country. it doesn't have a Mubarak in charge who did it his way.
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Opinionated1111
12:47 PM on 02/15/2011
Jordanian citizens should thank Allah for what they DO have in their country.....an intelligent, well-educated king - and royal family.....who have done progressive wonders for the country and people....

It could be a tyrannical dictatorship......with no 'wiggle-room'......
12:59 PM on 02/15/2011
Substitute Jordanian citizens with American's and Allah with God.
Yeah way to go... they should be happy with what they have been given and not what are "Unalienable rights".

Sometimes I wonder.... really...
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Yenzer
The moose out front should of told you.
01:46 PM on 02/15/2011
You should put that on a T-shirt. "Jordan: We're not the worst."
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RedRat
Ignorance is fixable, stupidty is forever
01:59 PM on 02/15/2011
LOL
12:31 PM on 02/15/2011
One small step...
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12:16 PM on 02/15/2011
It is interesting to note that the group is called the Muslim "Brotherhood".
01:53 PM on 02/15/2011
The "brotherhood" began in Hawaii on the same date President Obama was born in Kenya. There was a massive religious march across the ocean, most couldn't swim...but one of the brothers carried the young Barack to the coastal city of Los Angeles. That's how the Brotherhood was created.
03:05 PM on 02/15/2011
And I was on the boat next to the swimmers....
12:15 PM on 02/15/2011
Congratulations to the people of Jordan! Keep moving!