17-05-2024 06:58 AM Jerusalem Timing

Jordanians Protest Poverty, Call for Government Sacking

Jordanians Protest Poverty, Call for Government Sacking

Carrying national flags and chanting anti-government slogans in downtown Amman,demonstrators called Prime Minister Samir Rifai a "coward" and demanded he resign.

Thousands of Jordanian marched in Amman streets, calling for the sacking of the government in protest of commodity prices, unemployment and poverty.

Carrying national flags and chanting anti-government slogans in downtown Amman, demonstrators that included trade unionists and leftist party members, called Prime Minister Samir Rifai a "coward" and demanded he resign.

"Jordan is not only for the rich. Bread is a red line. Beware of our starvation and fury," read one of the banners carried after mid-day Muslim prayers, amid a heavy police presence, according to an AFP reporter.
"Down with Rifai's government. Unify yourselves because the government wants to eat your flesh. Raise fuel prices to fill your pocket with millions," the protesters chanted as they marched in the city centre.

Similar demonstrations took place in the cities of Maan, Karak, Slat and Irbid, as well as other parts of the country.
On Tuesday, Jordan announced a 169-million-dollar plan to reduce prices of commodities, including fuel, and create jobs in a bid to face rising popular discontent.

But the protesters say these measures are not enough, complaining of growing unemployment and poverty as inflation last month reached 6.1 percent.
They say government economic policies "have made the poor poorer and the rich richer."
The measures to control prices and create jobs follow widespread violent protests and fatal clashes with police in Algeria and Tunisia over inflation.

The Muslim Brotherhood, its political arm the Islamic Action Front (IAF), and the country's 14 trade unions said they will hold a sit-in outside parliament on Sunday to "denounce government economic policies."
"We demand a solution to this problem to avert any negative repercussions through reforming policies and carry out true and fair economic and political reforms," the unions said.