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Jordanian protesters shout anti government slogans in the streets of downtown in Amman/AFP

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Demo planned after Jordan king calls early polls

Jordanian protesters shout anti government slogans in the streets of downtown in Amman/AFP

AMMAN, Oct 5 – Jordan’s Islamist opposition was to hold a rally calling for reform on Friday, hours after King Abdullah II dissolved parliament and called early polls, defying calls for major changes to the political system.

The demonstration is the latest in a series of protests to have taken place in Jordan since January 2011 to call for political and economic reforms and demand an end to corruption.

“The king has decided to dissolve the chamber of deputies from this Thursday and to call early elections,” a statement from the royal palace said. It gave no date, but the monarch has said he wants polls to be held by the end of 2012.

The opposition Muslim Brotherhood said earlier it was going ahead with its planned rally in central Amman after Friday prayers, with the group predicting an estimated 50,000 supporters would attend.

A planned rival demonstration in support of the king’s plans, due to be held in the same location as the opposition protest, was meanwhile “postponed indefinitely … to avoid any problems,” said Jihad al-Sheik, head of an Internet-based youth group that organised the planned event.

The cancellation came “after a request to that effect from the director of general security, Hussein al-Majali, MPs and tribal leaders” to prevent unrest.

Around 200,000 people had been expected to turn up at the demonstration in Amman to show their support for the king’s efforts to bring in reforms.

The king has repeatedly voiced calls for early elections, but the Brotherhood has said it would boycott the polls as it did in 2010 to protest the lack of meaningful reforms, while calling for a parliamentary system where the prime minister is elected, rather than named by the king.

In an exclusive interview with AFP last month, the king said a decision by the Islamists to boycott the vote was “a tremendous miscalculation.”

“As constitutional monarch, my mandate is to be the umbrella for all political groupings and all segments of our society, and as part of that responsibility, I am telling the Muslim Brotherhood that they are making a tremendous miscalculation,” he said.

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“The countdown to the elections has already started. Registration is under way. We have already crossed the one-million person mark. Parliament will be dissolved. The elections date will be announced. And we will have a new parliament by the new year.”

The Islamists and other opposition parties had said they were considering a boycott over a new electoral law under which voters cast two ballots — one for individual candidates in their constituencies and one for nationwide party lists.

King Abdullah ordered parliament to increase the number of seats reserved for party candidates in a bid to persuade the Islamists to take part in the polls.

MPs raised the number from 17 to 27, but that did not go far enough for the opposition.

“This elections law is not perfect. We all understand that. But there is no better consensus on an alternative. What is critical is that we keep going forward, and — mark my words — we will have a new parliament by the new year,” the king said.

“So I am telling the Muslim Brotherhood, you have a choice. To stay in the street or to help build the new democratic Jordan.”

According to the constitution, elections take place every four years, but Jordan held early polls in 2010 after the king dissolved parliament.

The Islamists boycotted those elections in protest at constituency boundaries, saying they over-represented loyalist rural areas at the expense of urban areas seen as Islamist strongholds.

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