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Jordanian protests (2011–present) : ウィキペディア英語版
Jordanian protests (2011–12)

The Jordanian protests is a series of ongoing protests in Jordan that began on January 2011, and resulted in the firing of the cabinet ministers of the government. In its early phase, protests in Jordan were initially against unemployment, inflation, corruption.〔("Protesters demand 'saving' Jordan from corruption" ). ''The Daily Star'' (Lebanon), (2 December 2011).〕 along with demanding for real constitutional monarchy〔 and electoral reforms.〔("Thousands rally to demand reform in Jordan" ). ''The Daily Telegraph'', (5 October 2012).〕 The protestors' demands then escalated to a call for abdication of King Abdullah II, as well as an end to the Hashemite monarchy rule following the government announcement of hiking in the price of fuel on 13 November 2012.〔Spindle, Bill. (16 November 2012) (Jordanians Call for End to Monarchy ). ''The Wall Street Journal''.〕
Food inflation and salaries were a cause for resentment in the country.〔
The 2010-2011 Tunisian Revolution and the 2011 Egyptian Revolution also raised hopes for political change in the region. Together with unrest elsewhere in the Middle East and North Africa, including the disturbances in Syria and Yemen, they were part of the Arab Spring.
==Background==

Jordan's economy continues to struggle, weighed down by a record deficit of $2 billion this year.〔 Inflation in Jordan has risen by 1.5% to 6.1% in December 2010, and unemployment and poverty have become rampant, estimated at 12% and 25% respectively.〔 The government is also accused of impoverishing the working class with regressive tax codes which forced the poor to pay a higher proportion of their income as tax. The parliament is accused of serving as a "rubber stamp" to the executive branch.〔
Jordan has a history of persecuting activists and journalists. The country amended its penal code in August 2010 and passed a Law of Information System Crimes, to regulate the Internet. Revised laws continue to criminalize peaceful expression and extend those provisions to Internet expression. Jordanian authorities prosecuted peaceful dissidents and prohibited peaceful gatherings to protest government policies. Dissidents confined by the General Intelligence Department routinely sign confessions. According to a report by Amnesty International, intelligence agents in Jordan frequently use torture to extract confessions from suspects.
Some analysts suggests that since peninsular Arabic speaking Jordanians form the "bedrock" of the government's support, while self-identifying Palestinians are generally closer to the opposition. Such analysis suggest that many government supporters are worried that if Palestinians are allowed a greater role in the country's politics, they could drag it into the Israeli–Palestinian conflict against Jordan's best interests.〔 Conversely, Palestinian-Jordanian protesters want their degree of political power to reflect their significant demographic share.
However, evidence of historical and recent protests suggests that the backbone of the protests are of peninsular Arabic speaking Jordanians disfranchised by liberal economic policies instituted in the country during the last decades.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=East Bank Jordanians demonstrate as King announces plans for reforms )〕 Specifically, previous mass protests include protests in 1989 in the city of Karak and other southern towns in the country known as April 1989 uprising (هبة نيسان) that led to reintroduction of democratic life. In 1996, bread riots erupted in Ma'an and other southern cities in Jordan as well.〔()〕 Both are predominantly of peninsular Arabic speaking Jordanian origins. More recently, the 2011–2012 uprising started with movements all over the country specially in towns with a predominantly east-Jordanian population known locally as Al-Hirak. Therefore, according to many analysts while protests in Amman might generates a media buzz about a revolution in Jordan, but discontent in rural Jordan among peninsular Arabic speaking Jordanians is what would really tip the scales. Regardless of identity and demographic sensitivities both groups tend to agree on the need for a more robust economy and a cure for Jordan’s crippling unemployment. However, many argue that the sensitive demographic balance in the country will ultimately decide how wide and deep political reforms will go.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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