Amman, Jordan:
Jordan’s Prince Hamzah pledged loyalty to the king on Monday as the monarch accepted mediation more than a rift inside the royal family members that saw the prince placed below home arrest, the palace mentioned.
The government has accused Hamzah, an ex-crown prince and half-brother of King Abdullah II, of a “wicked” plot and involvement in a seditious conspiracy to “destabilise the kingdom’s security”.
Hamzah, detained along with at least 16 other people, had earlier struck a defiant tone saying he had been placed below home arrest inside his Amman palace, but insisting he would not obey orders restricting his movement.
But in an apparent easing of the palace turmoil, the 41-year-old prince pledged his backing to King Abdullah.
“I will remain… faithful to the legacy of my ancestors, walking on their path, loyal to their path and their message and to His Majesty,” he mentioned in a signed letter, quoted by the palace.
“I will always be ready to help and support His Majesty the King and his Crown Prince,” he is quoted as writing.
Hamzah’s statement came shortly immediately after the palace mentioned Abdullah had agreed to enter mediation “to handle the question of Prince Hamzah within the framework of the Hashemite (ruling) family”.
The job of mediator was handed to his uncle, Prince Hassan, himself a former heir to the throne.
Hamzah — whom Abdullah stripped of the title of crown prince in 2004 — has emerged as a vocal critic, accusing Jordan’s leadership of corruption, nepotism and authoritarian rule.
In a video he sent to the BBC on Saturday, he lashed out at “incompetence that has been prevalent in our governing structure for the last 15 to 20 years and has been getting worse”.
“No-one is able to speak or express opinion on anything without being bullied, arrested, harassed and threatened,” he charged.
‘Wicked slander’
Hamzah denied getting involved in any “nefarious” plot, but mentioned he had his phone and world wide web reduce by Jordan’s armed forces chief-of-employees, General Youssef Huneiti.
In the recording released Sunday, Hamzah mentioned: “When the head of the joint chiefs of staff comes and tells you this… I think it’s kind of unacceptable”.
“I recorded what he said and sent it to my friends abroad and to my family, in case anything happens.”
Abdullah, 59, named Hamzah crown prince in 1999, in line with their father’s dying want, but later stripped him of the title and named his personal son Prince Hussein heir to the throne.
Hamzah’s mother, American-born Queen Noor, defended her son, tweeting that she was “praying that truth and justice will prevail for all the innocent victims of this wicked slander”.
Analyst Ahmad Awad mentioned the turbulent events had been “a first” for Jordan.
“This is the beginning of a crisis and not the end,” mentioned the head of the Phenix Center for Economic and Informatics study institute in Amman.
“This shows that there is a need for political, economic and democratic reforms.”
Linchpin of stability
The crisis has laid bare divisions in a nation commonly observed as a bulwark of stability in the Middle East.
Washington, big Gulf powers, Egypt and the Arab League have all pledged help for Abdullah, and a equivalent message came from Russia on Monday.
Jordan has only about 10 million men and women, but it has an outsized strategic value in a turbulent area.
It borders Israel and the occupied West Bank, Syria, Iraq and Saudi Arabia, hosts US troops and is property to millions of exiled Palestinians and more than half a million Syrian refugees.
The Washington Post had initially reported Saturday that Hamzah had been “placed under restriction” amid a probe into an alleged plot.
“This sedition was nipped in the bud,” Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi mentioned Sunday, charging the plotters had linked up with foreign parties.
Safadi declined to determine the alleged foreign parties, but he mentioned an person “with links to foreign intelligence services” had presented to fly Hamzah’s wife out of the nation.
An Israeli who mentioned he is a close pal of Hamzah, Roy Shaposhnik, mentioned he had “extended an invitation for the prince’s wife and children to stay at his home in Europe”.
He mentioned he had created “this benign, humanitarian” give immediately after the prince had voiced “concerns about the safety of his family”.
Shaposhnik stressed he does not work for any intelligence agency and that he had “no knowledge of, or any involvement with” the events in Jordan.
The military chief, Huneiti, mentioned Monday the armed forces and safety agencies had “the capacity, competence and professionalism” required “to face… any attempt to undermine the security of the homeland”.
Barah Mikail, director of consulting firm Stractegia, mentioned Jordan had been “quick in reassuring” the international neighborhood that “the situation is under control”.
(This story has not been edited by TheSpuzz employees and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)