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*- Havana Times.org - http://www.havanatimes.org -*

*Jordan Protest Turns Violent*

Posted By *Havana Times* On March 25, 2011 @ 7:14 pm In *Recent Posts,World*|
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*By Julie Webb, special for HT*
 <http://www.havanatimes.org/?attachment_id=40361> [3]

People of all ages turned out for the protest.

HAVANA TIMES, March 25 — Today I went to Gamal Abdul Nasser Roundabout in
Jabal Hussein, Amman, which is outside the Jordanian Interior Ministry, to
interview participants in the protest encampment set up there on Thursday,
24 March.

The organizers, a collection of youth groups, called themselves the 24 March
movement, and planned to stay in the roundabout until their demands for
political reform are met, despite some 60 being injured and several
hospitalized on the first day as a result of attacks by pro-government
supporters throwing rocks and pieces of concrete.

Undeterred by the previous day’s violence, there were more than four
thousand people there today – men, women, children, all peacefully chanting,
holding banners and placards, singing, and listening to speeches.

As the afternoon wore on, there were several waves of stone-throwing by
pro-government thugs, resulting in numerous injuries and in the protesters
having to confine themselves to beneath the overbridge, as thugs were on the
bridge throwing missiles down on us. The police did nothing for several
hours, but once an ambulance had to be called, they did detain one or two
stone-throwers. At various times it was announced that the police had been
ordered to arrest those throwing stones, and that the mayor was coming to
negotiate – but neither transpired.

Truckloads of pro-government supporters were then permitted by police to
drive through the road blocks, and we were soon surrounded by an ugly mob
shouting abuse. The police and security personnel still did nothing, but
riot police appeared within the grounds of the Interior Ministry. We were
being driven further and further inside the underpass by the thugs, who had
now taken over a nearby building under construction, and were throwing
rocks, pieces of concrete and building materials such as ceramic tiles down
on the people trying to take refuge. Despite their cameraman on the roof of
the Interior Ministry filming what was going on, and it being in full view
of both police and security, and several people in the crowd begging them to
intervene, none did anything to detain the offenders or even to attempt to
stop them.

Thugs then attacked from the other end and one side, forcing over a thousand
protesters, including women and children, into a smaller and smaller space.
People were being crushed, falling and being trampled.

Two banquettes with water cannons appeared, and drove up alongside the
protesters, who cheered, thinking they had come to their rescue.

Instead they opened fire on the protesters, their first victims being the
Red Crescent tent and the doctors, nurses, and injured people inside. This
is a clear breach of humanitarian law.
 <http://www.havanatimes.org/?attachment_id=40368> [4]

The peaceful protest was met with pro-government violence.

Beside them were the tents sheltering women, babies and small children –
these were also blown off the face of the earth by water, showing just how
tough these guys are. Everyone was so crushed together, children were
screaming and crying, people were unable to move in any direction but where
they were blasted by the water cannon, it was impossible to move or breathe,
and I feared for my and others lives.

It was a short relief when everyone pushed past me and I could breathe for a
moment – until I was blasted by another salvo from the water canon which
swept me off my feet, and but for grabbing onto the clothes of others I
would have gone down and been trampled.

I could feel that other people had gone down under my feet, and was calling
for help for them, but everyone was equally under attack and equally
desperately trying to stay upright. When the water canon ceased the riot
police followed, beating all and any in their way – women, children – it was
all the same to them. I and another woman were hit with wood by police as we
tried to assist a 60+ woman who had fallen, and who was also hit. The police
were chasing behind us beating at us, driving us forward into another group
of police who were again beating everyone who came in contact with them,
with pieces of wood, not police issue batons but lengths of undressed pine.
We were being driven straight towards the pro-government thugs who were also
waiting to beat anyone who came their way.

I kept asking the police where I was supposed to go and they just kept
shooting at me with their weapons – once the ones behind me realized I was a
foreign woman they stopped hitting me, and one who hit me with a plank as I
was chased towards him even apologized several times, and herded me to a
concrete staircase. His mates were meanwhile beating the crap out of
everyone around me, and I saw two men beaten and thrown down the stairs
beside me by police. One man landed unconscious at the bottom, the other was
an elderly man who I saw a few minutes later dazed and leaning against a
car, but who refused my offer of help. The unconscious man was tended to by
others and taken to the road, where they waved down a van to take him to
hospital (see pic) – a dangerous thing because there were many vehicles full
of pro-government supporters on the road still attacking protesters.
 <http://www.havanatimes.org/?attachment_id=40363> [5]

The March 24 youth movement organised the protest at Gamal Abdul Nasser
Roundabout in Amman.

I managed to text my friend from whom I had become separated, to find if she
was okay, and she advised me to get off the street as soon as possible
because pro-government supporters were on the rampage. This was difficult as
I had no idea where I was. I asked directions, and was told to go in a
certain direction, but soon discovered they had directed me wrongly and were
following me, as they were pro-government, saw I was drenched and therefore
to them, an enemy. Luckily a woman intervened and took me to a mosque, and
got me a taxi to take me home.

The usual route was blocked by numerous police road blocks, and even the
street that leads to my house, in a very westernized part of town, had a
road block and was inspecting the occupants of all cars, but we passed
through without problem, and I finally reached home. As I walked to the
steps my phone rang, and it was my other friend from whom I had become
separated – he was on his way to hospital with a broken leg.

Half an hour later I received another call telling me that the death toll is
now three, with several in intensive care, and that this friend took injured
to two hospitals which were both overflowing with victims of the violence –
she said hundreds – and that the police are now going to the hospitals and
arresting the injured.

The question has to be asked – why did the security forces and riot police
attack the peaceful protesters, instead of protecting them from and/or
detaining the rock-throwing violent pro-government thugs?

Why were there so few police present at an event which had already attracted
some 4000 people the previous day, and which had been attacked by thugs?

The answer seems to be because the government deliberately ensured that the
protesters would be brutally attacked, thus completely abdicating its
responsibility to maintain public order, let alone conduct itself for the
good of its citizens.

Having experienced this, I can only say I now understand only too well why
the Jordanian people are demanding change.

And it begs the question – who is really running this country?

printed from Havana Times.org: *http://www.havanatimes.org*

URL to article: *http://www.havanatimes.org/?p=40360*

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