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Middle East Protests: Syria, Jordan Demonstrations Turn Violent (VIDEO)

Jordan

First Posted: 07/15/11 02:39 PM ET Updated: 09/14/11 06:12 AM ET

WASHINGTON -- Journalists in Jordan say they were given orange vests by government officials in order to help them safely cover protests there today -- and then attacked by government security forces.

The AFP reported that one of their photographers was among several reporters and protesters injured when police swept into a square in central Amman where pro-reform activists were holding their first open-ended sit-in since a similar gathering in the city in March turned violent.

"We were beaten by police, although we were wearing special press vests," the photographer told the AFP. "We thought we would be safe when we stood next to the police and away from the clashes."

New York Times reporter Kareem Fahim was also beaten by multiple police officers while covering the protest. Michael Slackman, deputy foreign editor, confirmed this to HuffPost, reporting, "When he was approached by police, he identified himself as a journalist and was knocked to the ground and beaten with wooden clubs. I am not sure how many police were involved, I believe he said four. He said he was rescued when a Reuters reporter intervened. He said he was bruised, but otherwise fine."

Reporters from Reuters and Al Jazeera also reported being attacked by baton-wielding policemen.


The handing out of specially designated vests to protect journalists had been hailed on Thursday as an indication that the Jordanian regime was taking steps to accommodate what was expected to be the largest peaceful protests since an uprising there began six months ago.

Some reports indicated that several journalists refused to wear the special outfits.

@ calperryAJ : Some jornos and civilians beaten badly in #Amman - some jornos refused to wear bright orange jackets. #Jordan


Jordan’s King Abdullah II said last month that he would agree to the demands of protesters that Cabinet members and prime ministers be elected by parliamentary majorities, but later said it might take several years for the changes to be implemented.

Protests in Jordan have been largely under-reported by the press amid the massive scenes of turmoil in neighboring countries, but protests after noon prayers on Fridays have become a regular feature of life in the nation.

Nevertheless, early reports indicate that this Friday -- a day off across the Arab world that, lately, has become synonymous with anti-government protests -- turned out to be one of the more violent days of the Arab uprising.

In Syria, where protesters designated the day “freedom for prisoners” Friday, reports indicate that several people were killed when security forces opened fire on protesters in Damascus and other cities around the country.


Reuters is calling today’s activities “the biggest protests so far against President Bashar al-Assad,” as the uprising extends into its fifth month:

Police fired live ammunition and teargas in the capital, Damascus, killing five people, and in southern Syria near the Jordanian border, where four people were killed, witnesses and activists said. Three protesters were shot dead in the northern city of Idlibm, they said.

"We are in Midan and they are firing teargas on us, people are chanting," a witness said by telephone from the center of Damascus.

In the city of Hama, scene of a 1982 massacre by the military, live video footage by residents showed a huge crowd in the main Orontos Square shouting "the people want the overthrow of the regime."

Hama has been the site of large protests for months now, and recently came to renewed prominence after American Ambassador to Syria Robert Ford visited the city to offer public support to the pro-democracy activists there.

Activists say that 1,400 people have been killed so far in the Syrian uprising, which has thus far been met with crushing resistance from the government.

The Syrian government has repeatedly said they are responding to a violent uprising, with state television reportedly claiming today that violent gangs were firing on the security forces in downtown Damascus.

This raw video purportedly shows a large gathering in the central al-Midan neighborhood of Damascus shortly before police fired tear gas into the crowd:

VIDEO: Homs, police attack protesters, beat with sticks:

The BBC, citing human rights activists, reported earlier that over 300,000 people took part in protests in the eastern city of Deir al-Zour -- near the border with Jordan -- and another 20,000 demonstrated in Damascus before security forces arrived and opened fire.

A Syrian activist reported on Twitter that the police in some places were attacking protesters with hand grenades:

@ MalathAumran : Homs: security forces are randomly throwing grenades at protestors in Cairo street #Syria


On the heels of their original, successful protest to oust dictator Hosni Mubarak, reformers recently returned to Cairo’s Tahrir Square to press the military government to meet their democratic demands.

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WASHINGTON -- Journalists in Jordan say they were given orange vests by government officials in order to help them safely cover protests there today -- and then attacked by government security forces.
WASHINGTON -- Journalists in Jordan say they were given orange vests by government officials in order to help them safely cover protests there today -- and then attacked by government security forces.
 
 
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05:41 AM on 07/17/2011
It seems that double standard is on work here. Nobody even here mentiones the 3 Georgian fotoreporters charged with treason (i.e. spying for Russia) for taking pictures of protestor beatings on may indepandance day domonstrations. Their names are Irakli Gedenidze (president's personal fotografer), Giorgi Abdaladze (fotografer of oposition media group Alia), Zurab Kurtsikidze (European Press Agency). The only proof being that EPA bought the photos sent by regular channels and that they had photografic equipment.
It also seems that when world was incensed by additional 7 years for Khodorkovski everybody missed "tank cue" 2009 defendants (no tanks acctually left the barracks) that got collectively 225 years in prison for insubordination.
Huffpost should do some articles on them as well
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lackofoversight
A nickel isn't worth a dime today... Y. Berra
05:17 AM on 07/17/2011
Quick .... somebody hand Rupert Murdoch an orange vest!
05:43 AM on 07/17/2011
Excellent comment. ;-{)
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lackofoversight
A nickel isn't worth a dime today... Y. Berra
05:50 AM on 07/17/2011
Thanks GM .... and back at ya!
03:04 PM on 07/16/2011
HA HA HA, that's funny!! Here, take these vests and wear them so we know who you are --- SUCKERS!!!! Too bad that doesn't happen over here, where the MEDIA MORONS get away with lying all of the time. That could work!!! Beat them until they STOP LYING AND SLANTING THEIR STORIES AND JUST REPORT THE FACTS --- AND ONLY THE FACTS!!!
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Erewhon7
Join atheists, our non-prophet organization
11:35 PM on 07/16/2011
Ah, remedial middle schools are on summer vacation. Charming.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cornel
wuf wuf
01:24 PM on 07/16/2011
Shame on the tyrant Abdullah, wearing western clothes do not make you civilized !
11:53 AM on 07/16/2011
Well pretty foolish to not realize they gve you the orange vest, so they could pick you out better, in order to attack you and have those on the government side attack yu as well. Geeze get some kind of disguise not a target.
11:51 AM on 07/16/2011
Indeed, the "little" Monarch has sold his body and soul to the Western governments, he's solely at their mercy and his people must be made to suffer.. there cannot be a hostile government on Israel's border. So, let us as rapidly as possible create instability and bring change to all those who won independence during the mid fifties to late seventies. These people must be made to understand who's in charge.
11:27 AM on 07/16/2011
Maybe the King and Queen should hang out on the New York cocktail circuit till all this blows over.
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10:54 AM on 07/16/2011
Time to expel the Feudal yuppies.
09:35 AM on 07/16/2011
Another one of our allies.
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Erewhon7
Join atheists, our non-prophet organization
10:08 AM on 07/16/2011
This is fallacy. ALL Arab governments treat their citizens this way. Our allies like Jordan or our adversaries like Syria and Hezbollah-controlled Lebanon.
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StevieTheK
On n'oublie rien, rien du tout
08:05 AM on 07/16/2011
"We were beaten by police, although we were wearing special press vests," the photographer told the AFP. "We thought we would be safe when we stood next to the police and away from the clashes."

You mean.... they LIED?! No WAY!!
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Erewhon7
Join atheists, our non-prophet organization
10:08 AM on 07/16/2011
You mean you lie? No way.
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StevieTheK
On n'oublie rien, rien du tout
01:45 PM on 07/16/2011
huh?
10:16 PM on 07/15/2011
We see Jordan as the friendly, seemingly peaceful government because of its half white King and his American wife. They couldn't be any more illegitimate. The "royal" family were small time feudal lords during the British occupation. Given arms and control by the British they quickly established their illegitimate rule. They're dictatorial, King Abdullahs's shiny suits and his pretty wife have a better PR machine than the Israeli military. Nothing short of the removal of this family will bring any peace to Jordan.

If he had any sense he would follow King Juan and declare himself a constitutional monarch.
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Boduognat
Lasciate ogne speranza, voi ch'entrate.
04:15 AM on 07/16/2011
Well, I was about to give a similar comment but you beat me to it.
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07:56 AM on 07/16/2011
The Queen Rainia is Palestinian, not American.
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RockyMissouri
'You must be carefully taught to hate'...
10:47 AM on 07/16/2011
Maybe they meant Noor...
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wom122
Primum non nocere
07:59 PM on 07/15/2011
Demostrators in Jordan have thus far demanded reform and some are calling for the fall of the government (no big deal in and of itself as the prime ministre has always been expendable). Thus far the person of the King is not targeted but with what's going on in neighboring Syria and elswhere it is understandable the the Jordanian monarh would want to nip the rebellion in the bud before things get out of control.
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05:42 PM on 07/15/2011
We have been drawing cheap oil and alliances
on the backs of others,
at the cost of their freedoms.
Their complaints have now even reached our hearts.

Now the voice is spreading.
In a dozen Arab nations,
the people want their rights,
the people want their freedoms.
The regimes answer only with repression.
This is not a dialogue.

Notice how the repressive regimes are often from a nation's minority?

Iraq
Syria
Bahrain

The people are greater than they know.
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RockyMissouri
'You must be carefully taught to hate'...
10:59 AM on 07/16/2011
They have, indeed, touched our hearts...
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05:33 PM on 07/15/2011
Spring -
Liberty, Freedom -
These are nice words, in old countries,
where many people are too tired to stand for their rights.

In other countries, where the people have long been loyal and quiet beneath oppressive regimes, the meanings of these words are growing deeper by the day.
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