Jordan’s Prince vows to defy ‘house arrest’ orders

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The former crown prince of Jordan has said he will defy government orders to stop communicating with the outside world and remain indoors.
Prince Hamzah bin Hussein, 41, claimed to have been placed under house arrest on Saturday in videos given to the BBC.
He was accused of plotting with “foreign entities” to destabilise the kingdom.
The former heir to the throne denies conspiracy, but he has accused Jordan’s leaders of corruption and incompetence. On Sunday, Jordan’s opposition released a recording in which a defiant Prince Hamzah said he would not obey orders from the authorities.
“I don’t want to make moves and escalate now,” he said in the audio recording posted on Twitter.
“But I’m not going to obey when they say you can’t go out, you can’t tweet, you can’t communicate with people [and] you’re only allowed to see your family.”
“I think it’s a bit unacceptable,” he added.
Prince Hamzah is the half-brother of King Abdullah, and the public rift between the pair is unprecedented. Tensions within the royal household, however, have reportedly been present for some time.
Prince Hamzah’s message in full
Jordan is a constitutional monarchy, but the royals play a major role in public life and King Abdullah has extensive powers. He can appoint governments, approve legislation and dissolve parliament.
The country is also a key Western ally, and reports of Prince Hamzah’s detention raised fears that the wider region could be destabilised. However, regional powers and Western allies, including the US and UK, have all voiced support for the king.
On Saturday, Prince Hamzah released two videos to the BBC in which he claimed he had been placed under house arrest.
In the video, Prince Hamzah said a senior official had told him he was not allowed to go out or communicate with people because of criticisms of the government or king voiced at meetings where he had been present.
The apparent arrest is thought to have followed a visit by the prince to tribal leaders, where he is said to have garnered some support.
“I am not responsible for the lack of faith people have in their institutions,” Prince Hamzah said in one of the videos given to the BBC.
On Sunday, Deputy Prime Minister Ayman Safadi told a news conference that the prince had been liaising with foreign parties about destabilising the country and had been monitored for some time.
He accused the prince of seeking to mobilise “clan leaders” against the government, adding that the plot had been “nipped in the bud” at the “zero hour”.
Mr Safadi said officials had tried to discourage the prince rather than take legal action against him, but Prince Hamzah had “dealt with this request negatively”.
He added that at least 16 people, including a former adviser to King Abdullah and another member of the royal family, had been arrested over the plot to “undermine the security” of the country.
But no members of the armed forces were said to be among those detained.
High-level political arrests are rare in Jordan. The country’s powerful intelligence agency, however, has gained extra powers since the pandemic began which has drawn criticism from rights groups.
The oldest son of the late King Hussein and his favourite wife Queen Noor, Prince Hamzah is a graduate of the UK’s Harrow School and the Royal Military Academy at Sandhurst. He also attended Harvard University in the US and has served in the Jordanian armed forces.
He was named crown prince of Jordan in 1999 and was a favourite of King Hussein, who often described him in public as the “delight of my eye”.
However, he was seen as too young and inexperienced to be named successor at the time of King Hussein’s death.
Instead his older half-brother, Abdullah, ascended the throne and stripped Hamzah of the title of crown prince in 2004, giving it to his own son.
The move was seen as a blow to Queen Noor, who had hoped to see her eldest son become king.

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