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King Abdullah II Attacked? Conflicting Accounts From Jordan

King Abdullah Ii Attacked

JAMAL HALABY   06/13/11 09:59 AM ET   AP

AMMAN, Jordan — King Abdullah II was met by either tossed bottles and stones, or a warm welcome, on a visit to Jordan's south on Monday, according to conflicting reports from government officials.

A security official said a crowd of youths flung objects at the monarch's motorcade in two incidents in the town of Tafila, 200 kilometers (125 miles) south of Amman, just a day after Abdullah bowed to popular demands for an elected prime minister. This official, insisting on anonymity because he is not authorized to discuss royal matters, said the king was unharmed.

Government spokesman Taher Edwan later called the report "totally baseless."

"There was no attack whatsoever with empty bottles and stones," he said. "What happened is that a group of young Jordanians thronged the monarch's motorcade to shake hands with him." He said when police "pushed them away, there was a lot of shoving."

A Royal Palace official who accompanied Abdullah gave a similar account: "It was a gesture of welcome, not an attack."

It wasn't immediately possible to reconcile the two versions, and further details of any attack were not immediately available.

Abdullah was on a fact-finding trip to inspect infrastructure projects and hear his subjects' demands.

As violence has rocked other authoritarian countries across the Arab world, it has been rare in Jordan, where pro-democracy protests in recent months have generally been confined to relatively small and peaceful demonstrations in this key U.S.-allied nation.

On Sunday, acceding to a major demand of those protests, Abdullah announced he would accept elected Cabinets in the future, replacing a system under which the king appointed the prime minister and other ministers. He did not give a timetable, saying that sudden change could lead to "chaos and unrest" in Jordan.

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It was the first time that King Abdullah II has made such a concession to demands he loosen the monarchy's absolute grip on power.

In the televised speech, marking his 12th year as ruler, Abdullah said that future Cabinets would be formed according to an elected parliamentary majority. He did not say when the change would take place, but suggested that it would come after relevant laws are in place.

Political analyst Labib Kamhawi, usually an outspoken critic, said the king's remarks were a "step forward, but we have to wait and see the final outcome." He added that "we want to see more being done for wider civil liberties and less security interference in the affairs of the state."

Without elaborating, the king did promise further changes, saying a royal commission is exploring "possible amendments" to the constitution appropriate for Jordan's "present and future."

When Abdullah ascended to the throne in 1999, he floated the idea of a constitutional monarchy similar to the British model, but little was said in the intervening years. As pro-democracy revolutions swept through the region this year, however, he, too, faced increasing pressure to speed up reforms or risk serious unrest in his tiny kingdom.

A similar movement in Morocco is also calling for reducing the monarch's powers there and strengthening the prime minister's position.

Many Jordanians are demanding a new parliament to replace one viewed as docile, based on an electoral system skewed to support the Hashemite monarchy.

A small dissident group wants the king to relinquish all his power and become a figurehead. But major political parties, such as the powerful Muslim Brotherhood, reject that call, describing the king a "stabilizing influence." Brotherhood spokesman Jamil Abu Bakr had warned, however, that reforms were needed to "avoid the tragedies taking place in the region."

In the past, Abdullah has said that he wants to see Jordan's splintered 33 political parties merge into three blocs from which Cabinets could be formed.

Abdullah said Sunday the changes would be implemented based on the recommendations of a national dialogue committee, which recently proposed laws governing elections and political parties. The committee is also reviewing economic legislation to tackle official corruption, nepotism and bureaucracy.

The Jordanian government has lifted restrictions on public assembly, allowing protesters to demonstrate freely. But it has said it needs time to enact laws on political freedoms, including those addressing elections and political parties.

In February, at the outset of protests, Abdullah sacked his prime minister, responding to protesters' demands that he was insensitive to their economic hardships.

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AMMAN, Jordan — Stone-throwing youths in a poor southern town exploded in anger at rough handling by police during a visit by King Abdullah II on Monday, a symptom of simmering popular frustrati...
AMMAN, Jordan — Stone-throwing youths in a poor southern town exploded in anger at rough handling by police during a visit by King Abdullah II on Monday, a symptom of simmering popular frustrati...
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7 hours ago (7:14 PM)
sounds like the bama white house, confusion reigns supremo.
02:31 AM on 6/14/2011
If the alleged attack was directed at Saddam Hussein the former dictator of Iraq, or at Bashar al Assad the current dictator of Syria or at Muammar Ghaddafi the dictator of Libya or even Omar Basheer the dictator of Sudan, we would have seen a massacre and executions of suspects without trial. This what differenti­ate Jordan from the Arab dictatorsh­ips..
7 hours ago (7:15 PM)
you must be joking
49 minutes ago (1:45 AM)
Thanks bealebkk. This is serious stuff I know what I am talking about.
09:05 PM on 6/13/2011
does anyone really expect the truth?
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Dec2086Lover
Wish for a better world.
07:44 PM on 6/13/2011
We will have to wait and see,only time will tell.But he has to eventually become a figurehead­,with limited powers,sim­ilar to the monarchs of Norway,UK,­Sweden,etc­.

Either that,or many will want to overthrow him.
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SURFER DUDE
Semper Fi
05:29 PM on 6/13/2011
King. Time to take your American step mom, your Palestinia­n wife, grab the kids and get out of Dodge. Your place in Sunriver, Oregon awaits. You might not last much longer where you are now.
06:53 PM on 6/13/2011
Sunriver is really nice this time of year.
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Dec2086Lover
Wish for a better world.
07:44 PM on 6/13/2011
Lol,love your comment.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
MizLiz
Yellow Dog Democrat
05:00 PM on 6/13/2011
Guess everybody has spin doctors...­.
04:57 PM on 6/13/2011
Ya so what is the USA supposed to do run over there and give weapons to the bottlethro­wing terrorists and give them a better weapon to fight with?? This is just another example of its not our concer and not the USA those are hispeople and they have his laws and rules. They are not entitled to have the American constituti­on there..Its not the USA...We should not get involved its not our country nor our bussiness.
17 hours ago (10:01 AM)
Jordan is a crucial country for US interest, besides it has a long border with Isre-al.
04:50 PM on 6/13/2011
I'm neither here nor there about Jordan's monarchy, but his assertion that it was a warm welcome when they were throwing bottles, sounds suspicious­ly like ghadafi's rants insisting his people love him.
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Dec2086Lover
Wish for a better world.
07:46 PM on 6/13/2011
I have a deep down feeling that something did happen.All these rulers assume their peoples love them.
04:49 PM on 6/13/2011
I think our president should record and send a singing message to any leader in the middle east that he will do his best to understand their plights.
When your down and troubled and you need some love and care and nothing, nothing is going right. Close your eyes and think of me and soon I will be there to brighten up even your darkest nights. You just call out my name and you know where ever I am, I'll come running. Winter, Spring , Summer or Fall. All you gotta do is call and I'll be there. Oh yes I will. You got a friend.
04:16 PM on 6/13/2011
As far as despotic, illegitima­te, dictatoria­l bloodthirs­ty Arab monarchs go, he's seemingly reasonable­. Seemingly because he wears a suit and speaks good English. But who knows how he treats dissidents back home? I'm glad he's moving to have an elected PM, but a neutered PM with no powers is little more than the rubber stamp kangaroo parliament they have now.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jason Gene Hartz
04:06 PM on 6/13/2011
I realize Abdullah may be a more likable leader than those of the past, but he is still a dictator. Just because he happens to be more likable in public and he has an attractive wife, does not mean it is ok for him to rule under an authoritat­ive government­. People in the middle east are getting tired of authoritat­ive rule and crappy economic conditions where a handfull of people get all the resources and everybody else fights for the scraps. The main stream media needs to stop sympathizi­ng with this despot and cover the real story about the people of Jordan and their desire for democracy.
07:21 PM on 6/13/2011
In all fairness, under Abdullah's rule the conditions of Jordan have improved greatly, he has increased education and the citizen's right to vote, he has made a lot of progress in equality between the sexes, and he's well known for his liberal beliefs. King Abdullah is actually well loved among the country's populace, sadly a small sector of it beliefs that there is no point to all of this without true democracy.
17 hours ago (10:03 AM)
Still a dictator.
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Dec2086Lover
Wish for a better world.
07:47 PM on 6/13/2011
Jason

You nailed it on the head.
03:57 PM on 6/13/2011
Not to worry...th­e USA will throw a couple billion dollars at him to make up for any loss this KING will endure..
03:47 PM on 6/13/2011
What is Queen Noor up to these days? Anyone?
04:11 PM on 6/13/2011
Masqueradi­ng around the world acting like she cares about democracy in the Arab world.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Galilee
Pro-democracy, pro-west, pro-Zion
04:30 PM on 6/13/2011
LOL, exactly!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Galilee
Pro-democracy, pro-west, pro-Zion
03:38 PM on 6/13/2011
In 1970 in Jordan there was an "Arab Spring". However, it was called "Black September" because it failed like today in Syria.
03:29 PM on 6/13/2011
King Abdullah is a wise & astute monarch. He's trying to manage and bring democratic reforms to a difficult and poor country, beset with countless problems..­.not the least of which is a huge influx of refugees from Iraq, to say nothing about the countless Palestinia­n refugees. Anyone who has been monitoring events in Jordan will understand why the king is well-loved by the vast majority.
04:14 PM on 6/13/2011
Do you work for the Jordanian ministry of informatio­n?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nycpaladin
Have truth will travel
04:33 PM on 6/13/2011
Do you work for Hezbollah?
04:34 PM on 6/13/2011
Nope...but I've traveled across Jordan and do pay attention to events affecting the region. King Abdullah's regime is nothing like that in Syria, which is why Jordan may remain somewhat stable.