Qatar Tribune

Jordanian court jails two to 15 years over ‘sedition plot’

The two are former finance minister and ex-chief of the royal court and member of the royal family

- DPA AMMAN

A Jordanian court on Monday has convicted two senior figures accused of taking part in an alleged sedition plot involving the king’s half-brother and former crown prince, Hamzah.

Each defendant was sentenced to 15 years in prison, military judge Muwafaq alMasaeed said as he read the verdict.

The case erupted in April when Hamzah said the army told him not to leave his house or communicat­e with anyone, revealing a rare public split within the Hashemite ruling family.

Eighteen people were arrested, many of them were close aides to Hamzah. Sixteen were later released after a royal order and two only were referred to a State Security Court.

The two are former finance minister and ex-chief of the royal court Bassem Awadallah and member of the royal family Hassan bin aid.

Prosecutor­s accused them of incitement against the regime, attempting to cause sedition and endangerin­g the security of the society.

The sentences can be appealed at the Court of Cassation.

The trial began three weeks ago behind closed door, during which the defendants pleaded not guilty to the incitement charges. The court refused their lawyers’ request to call for more than 20 witnesses including several of King Abdullah’s brothers.

In his verdict, al-Masaeed said the defendants adopted ideas that opposed and incited against the state and the king and that they wanted to “take advantage of the economic, political and social circumstan­ces” in the country and the region.

Hassan bin aid was sentenced to another year in prison and a 1,000 dinar (1,400 dollars) for drug abuse, Petra news agency reported.

On April 3, Hamzah said in recorded videos that the military chief of staff told him not to leave his house or communicat­e with people, after some publicly criticized the government or the king in his presence.

A day later, authoritie­s said they had foiled a destabiliz­ing plot involving Hamzah and that investigat­ions have led to the arrests of several high-profile figures, who have been in contact with “foreign parties.” Hamzah was never referred to investigat­ion. He pledged support and loyalty to Abdullah following mediation within the royal family and the king declared the sedition attempt was stopped.

The 41-year-old was the crown prince between 1999 and 2004, when Abdullah removed him, before appointing his own son, al-Hussein several years later.

Hamzah, the son of late king Hussein and his fourth wife, Queen Noor, is a popular figure in Jordan and is usually praised on social media for his condemnati­on of corruption in the mostly desert kingdom.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Officers stand guard outside Jordan’s State Security Court in Amman on Monday.
(AFP) Officers stand guard outside Jordan’s State Security Court in Amman on Monday.

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