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Two Die As Fighting Flares Again in Jordanian Town

King Abdullah in Maan 

AMMAN, November 24 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - At least two people were killed and seven others wounded, including a policeman, as fresh clashes erupted Sunday, November 24, in the southern Jordanian town of Maan which had been shaken by fighting between Islamic residents and the army earlier this month, according to witnesses.

The men were shot when a gunfight broke out following a quarrel between residents and police stationed outside the mayor's offices, witnesses told Agence France-Presse (AFP).

The number of casualties was unclear, with some witnesses claiming two men had been shot dead, while others said only one was killed. Some witnesses put the number of wounded at eight and others said seven.

"One of the injured is in a critical case but has not died," a Maan resident said.

The army immediately imposed a curfew on the flashpoint town as the security situation remained confused and police deployed reinforcements in the town, 215 kilometers (135 miles) south of Amman, the witnesses said.

Six people were killed, including a soldier and a policeman, in clashes between security forces and gunmen earlier this month in Maan as the authorities launched a crackdown on a gang of armed bandits.

Around 130 people were arrested in the crackdown, eight of them foreigners.

However, the alleged ringleader Mohammad Shalabi, alias Abu Sayyaf, who belongs to an Islamic group still remains at large.

His main accomplices, including the alleged arms and drug trafficker Khamis Abu Darwish and his brothers Asri and Ahmad, are behind bars and were formally charged Thursday of "terrorist" activities by the state prosecutor.

Anger and defiance gripped the Islamic stronghold of Maan Friday, November 15, even though authorities eased a five-day clampdown and lifted a curfew on the southern Jordanian city after rounding up dozens of wanted "outlaws".

Foreign media representatives, including AFP, met with Maan's governor and the police chief Friday on a tour organized by the Information Ministry, but a visit to one of the town's hot spots was scrapped at the last moment.

"It is for your own safety. You saw what happened on Palestine street," an Interior Ministry official told the journalists.

An angry mob of residents swarmed around the bus, banging on it and demanding journalists report the truth and take pictures of "our homes which they burned and our shops which they destroyed."

"The people must be allowed to speak their mind and you should let the journalists listen and tour the city freely," a young man shouted over and over at the officials escorting the reporters.

According to analysts, the deadly Jordanian crackdown on the impoverished Islamic stronghold is intended to send a stark warning to potential dissidents as the authorities prepare to take a deeply unpopular pro-U.S. tilt against Iraq.

Analysts said the intensity of the security action was a clear signal from the authorities that they would brook no protest from a generally pro-Iraq population as they prepare to side with the United States in any military action against Baghdad.

Despite public statements opposing any U.S.-led strike, King Abdullah II clearly believes that his impoverished kingdom cannot afford the luxury of a repeat of its 1991 Gulf War refusal to join the U.S.-led coalition against Iraq, when it paid dearly for being seen to side with Iraq, they said, reported AFP.

"As war with Iraq looms, Jordan has every intention of backing the winner, that is to say the United States, which is going to inflame the Islamists who violently condemn U.S. policy in the region," one academic told AFP.

The Maan operation was "a preventative measure to limit the impact on internal stability of a military strike against a country which is enormously popular in Jordan," an official acknowledged.

Jordanian troops surround Maan

Islamic currents form the main opposition group in parliament and although the moderate Islamic Action Front (IAF) has no connection with the hardliners of the banned Takfir wal-Hijra (Atonement and Flight) group being hunted down in Maan, the movement could clearly see the writing on the wall.

Both the IAF and the Muslim Brotherhood, demanded that the security forces "end the siege" of the town, describing the casualty toll as "deplorable" and a symptom of the government's "martial mentality".

However, analysts say it is not just the Islamists who are targeted by the government's warning shots, but also groups which take a pan-Arabic or internationalist stance in a country where Palestinian refugees make up a significant proportion of the population.

One of the poorest towns in Jordan, Maan threatened to create a "dangerous alliance" between Islamists and Arab nationalists which the authorities were determined to stop, another analyst told AFP.

"The message is clear - the state will no longer tolerate troublemakers and is determined to impose its authority over the whole country."

Jordanian officials from King Abdullah II down have been hammering home the message for weeks, warning that they will no longer tolerate the pro-Iraq or pro-Palestinian sympathies of either Islamists or pan-Arabists taking precedence over the interests of the kingdom.

In an interview with the Saudi-based television statement MBC on October 11, the king criticized what he called the "unacceptable" foreign ties of most of Jordan's historic political parties, including the communist and Baath parties as well as the IAF.

"The presence in Jordan of parties with non-Jordanian references or that receive orders or financing from abroad is unacceptable," he said.

Analysts said the aim was to get rid of parties with such "non-Jordanian" parties and replace them by a "loyal opposition" which would cooperate in the "responsible" and "constructive" development of the country.

 

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