The Daily Star, November 30, 2012
AMMAN:
Former premier and intelligence chief Ahmad Obeidat joined thousands of
Jordanians to protest fuel price hikes, demanding regime reform and the
resignation of Prime Minister Abdullah Nsur.
"The
people want to reform the regime. We demand reform and change. Nsur, out before
the people revolt," chanted the protesters led by Obeidat's National
Reform Front which includes opposition Islamists.
"The
people want the downfall of the (fuel) prices. Together, let's reject the
decision to raise the prices," read a banner carried by the demonstrators,
gathered near Gamal Abdel Nasser Circle, close to the city centre.
Police said
3,000 people took part in the protest, while Islamists put the number at around
20,000. According to an AFP estimate, the demonstrators numbered around 10,000.
Demonstrators
gave police flowers, but a limited number called for "the fall of
regime," which is punishable by imprisonment under Jordanian law.
Obeidat
however stopped them.
"We
did not come here today to flex muscle. We came here to defend our
constitutional rights. We will stick to our demand of reforming the
regime," he told the crowds.
"We
want comprehensive reform. We insist on rejecting the general election and any
polls under this current bad electoral law."
The
National Reform Front and Muslim Brotherhood have said they will boycott
Jordan's January 23 vote.
Earlier in
November, the government raised fuel prices by up to 53 percent, sparking a
series of nationwide protests, rioting and clashes that killed one person and
wounded dozens.
Nsur, who
formed his government on October 11, has defended the price hike as
"unavoidable" given Jordan's $5-billion (3.9-billion-euro) budget
deficit and said the measures would save $42 million by year end.
Jordanians
have held Arab Spring-inspired protests since last year, demanding reforms and
a tough anti-corruption fight.

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