“What was whispered in closed circles is now out in the open,” said Daoud Kuttab, the director of the Amman-based community media network, who said that low-level protests in Amman have been met with outsize punitive measures in recent months. “The official media is totally silent and we know that there is much more to the story that we are not seeing.”
Those arrested in the Saturday roundup included Sharif Hasan, a member of the royal family, and Bassem Awadullah, a former senior official in Jordan’s Royal Hashemite Court who had also served as special Jordanian representative to the Saudi government.
Most dramatically, the Jordanian military ordered the house arrest of the popular former crown prince Hamzeh bin Hussein.
“Praying that truth and justice will prevail for all the innocent victims of this wicked slander. God bless and keep them safe,” tweeted his American-born mother, Queen Noor Sunday.
Hamzeh, 41, the ruling king’s half brother, served as Jordan’s crown prince for four years until 2004, when the title was transferred to the king’s eldest son, Hussein.
Hamzeh has held multiple positions within the monarchy, including in the army, where he holds the rank of brigadier general. He commands a loyal following in Amman and, with his trim mustache and checkered keffiyeh headdress, often styles himself after his father, the late King Hussein, a revered figure in Jordan.
On Saturday evening, Jordanian army Chief of Staff Maj. Gen. Yousef Huneiti issued a statement saying Hamzeh had not been detained but instead was “asked to stop movements and activities that were being employed to target Jordan’s security and stability,” adding that “all the procedures were conducted within the framework of the law and after extensive investigations.”
Several hours later, Hamzeh passed on a video to the BBC in which he said that he was forbidden from communicating with people or using Twitter after being told that he had participated in meetings in which the king was criticized. The rare video blamed the government for corruption, incompetence and intolerance for public dissent and was viewed as a scathing critique of the ruling monarch — though King Abdullah II was not mentioned by name.
“I am not the person responsible for the breakdown in governance, the corruption and for the incompetence that has been prevalent in our governing structure for the last 15 to 20 years and has been getting worse … and I am not responsible for the lack of faith people have in their institutions,” he said. “It has reached a point where no one is able to speak or express opinion on anything without being bullied, arrested, harassed and threatened.”
Since the news broke Saturday, #Prince_Hamzeh has trended on Twitter, along with messages of solidarity with the prince from followers in Jordan and abroad.
Amid rumors of “foreign” involvement in the alleged plot, Jordan’s regional neighbors were quick to voice support for the monarch.
“The kingdom affirms its full support, with all its capabilities, to all decisions and measures taken by King Abdullah and His Highness Prince Al Hussein bin Abdullah II, the Crown Prince, to maintain security and stability,” the Saudi royal court said in a statement.
Emirati official Anwar Gargash said on Twitter that Jordan’s stability was a priority for the region, and that the country’s “wise policy of building bridges in a turbulent region was not an easy choice but was, and remains, the necessary direction.”
The United States, which considers Jordan a critical ally and has partnered with the country for years on U.S.-led counterterrorism operations, said that Abdullah had its “full support.”
Egypt, Bahrain, Lebanon, the Palestinian Authority, and other regional governments also quickly expressed support for Abdullah in what was seen in part as a testament to Jordan’s strategic significance in the region.
Jordan, which is currently under a nightly covid curfew that is set to expire in mid-May, has been hit hard economically by the coronavirus pandemic as well as by the fallout from massive waves of refugees from neighboring Syria.
Abdullah has ruled the country since his father’s death in 1999. He has cultivated strong ties with several U.S. administrations, but, in recent years, sparred with former president Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu over proposed Israeli plans to annex the West Bank and bypass the Palestinians in a bid for Israeli normalization with the rest Arab world.
Officials from the Israeli Foreign Ministry have declined to comment on the situation.
“If things spin out of control it will be difficult for Israel to contribute to helping that, especially since Israel has not managed its bilateral relations with Jordan very well and has, in fact, added completely unnecessary tensions,” said Asher Susser, a senior fellow at the Moshe Dayan Center for Middle Eastern and African Studies.
In Jordan, that news of the alleged coup has gone public by way of brief statements and virtual silence from the local press has several political observers to speculate that the coup may be a cover story for another political maneuver, said Jordanian political analyst Amer Sabaileh.
“There is a lot of confusion, but in Jordan, everyone is asking for reform, not to topple the government. I don’t see the elements for a plot,” said Sabaileh. “What we do know is that there are some mediocre people who are running the show when it comes to politics and, after yesterday, the government is under even more pressure to make themselves seem credible.”
Dadouch reported from Beirut.