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March 8, 2011 Special Dispatch No. 3650

Salafi-Jihadists Demonstrate in Jordan's Capital with Al-Qaeda Banners, Jihadist Slogans

March 8, 2011
Jordan | Special Dispatch No. 3650

The recent days have seen an increase in the activity of the Salafi-jihadist movement in Jordan, which has begun to hold large protests in central locations in the capital. Two protest rallies were held in Amman over the past week, and another is planned for Sunday (March 13, 2011). The Salafi-jihadist activists are demanding the release of their prisoners from Jordanian jails and the implementation of shari'a law in the country. The protests featured blatant jihadist symbols, such as the banner of the Islamic State of Iraq organization (aka Al-Qaeda in Iraq), which has not been seen before in Jordanian demonstrations (see images below).

The first Salafi-jihadist protest, which took place on March 1 outside Amman's largest mosque, was attended by some 500 people who demanded a pardon for Salafi-jihadi prisoners. They called out slogans against democracy and secularism and in favor of shari'a law and jihad, such as "The Is No Alternative to Allah's Law" and "Jihad Is Our Path." According to reports, the demonstrators clashed with police and accused them of being funded by the EU and U.S.

A prominent figure at the demonstration was Abu Muhammad Al-Tahawi, one of the leaders of the Salafi-jihadist movement in Jordan. He is known for his close ties with the movement's spiritual leader, Abu Muhammad Al-Maqdisi, who was arrested several months ago by the Jordan authorities.[1]

The second demonstration took place only five days later, on March 6, outside the King's offices and the government headquarters. It was attended by 300 people, who waved Al-Qaeda flags, reiterated the demand for the release of prisoners, and also attacked the U.S. and Israel and called on "the jihad fighters in Egypt, Tunisia, Libya, and Yemen to implement the [laws of] the shari'a and the Koran." They shouted slogans in support of Abu Muhammad Al-Maqdisi and other slogans, such as "The People Want Koranic Law," and "Khaybar, Khaybar, oh Jews, the army of Muhammad will return."[2] Among the demonstrators were released prisoners who protested against the tortures and humiliations which, they said, are suffered by Islamists in Jordanian jails, including whippings and the shaving of their head and beard.

Abu Muhammad Al-Tahawi, who attended this demonstration as well, called for the release of Jordanian prisoners held in Iraq and Syria, and denounced the ongoing detention of Abu Muhammad Al-Maqdisi, saying that it "served [the interests of] the U.S., its proxies, and the Jewish state." In a an interview on Al-Jazeera, he said that officers from the Jordanian intelligence apparatus had told him to cancel the demonstration, and had even threatened to break his arms and legs, and to do the same to other Salafi-jihadist leaders, if the demonstration took place. Al-Tahawi promised that the movement would continue to demonstrate until its prisoners were released, and announced that the next protest would take place on March 13 outside the government headquarters.

Another speaker at the demonstration lambasted the Jordanian king, without explicitly mentioning his name, saying: "We will [denounce] the tyrants for what they are... They are the ones who have corrupted the [Muslim] nation." He added that Salafi-jihadists were rotting in prisons for no reason, while "those who stole the lands of the [Jordanian] tribes and gave them to their Christian wives... those who plundered the land and are loyal to the Christians and Jews... live in palaces."[3] The demonstration lasted an hour, and the Jordanian security apparatuses observed from the side and refrained from intervening.[4]


Protesters holding up banner of Islamic State of Iraq
Image source: Al-Sabil (Jordan), March 6, 2011


Image source: Al-Sabil (Jordan), March 6, 2011


Image source: www.aljazeera.net, March 6, 2011


Image source: www.jordantimes.com March 7, 2011

Endnotes:

[1] Al-Hayat, Al-Sharq Al-Awsat (London), March 2, 2011. Al-Maqdisi is currently on trial on terrorism-related charges. For details about the suspicions against him, see MEMRI JTTM report:" In Advance Of Trial of Prominent Salafi-Jihadi Cleric Al-Maqdisi, 'Al-Sharq Al-Awsat' Report Reveals Mujahideen Recruitment, Money Transfers, Jihadi Communications – And Possible Al-Maqdisi-Taliban Link." December 30, 2010, http://www.memrijttm.org/content/en/blog_personal.htm?id=4252¶m=GJN.

[2] The Battle of Khaybar was fought in the year 629 between Muhammad's army and the Jews living in the oasis of Khaybar in the north-west of the Arabian Peninsula.

[3] Al-Hayat (London), March 7, 2011; Al-Sabil (Jordan), Aljazeera.net, March 6, 2011.

[4] Al-Hayat (London), March 7, 2011.

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