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The Nabataeans were the first known inhabitants of the
area that is now Jordan. The Romans absorbed it into their empire, as
part of the province of Arabia, in AD 106. Shortly after the death of
the Prophet Muhammad in AD 632, Arab armies entered the region and
established the Umayyad dynasty. However, this became something of a
provincial backwater after the conquest of Baghdad. During the 11th
and 12th centuries, Jordan was the scene of some of the major
conflicts between the Christian Crusaders and Islamic forces. Salah ad
Din (known in the West as Saladin) and his successors ruled Jordan
from
his main seat of power in
Egypt from the late 12th century until they were displaced by the
Mamluks, a race of mostly Kurdish and Circassian origin.
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The Mamluks repelled the Mongol
invasion of the 14th century but were eventually overthrown by the
Ottoman Turks in 1517. Jordan was governed along with modern-day
Palestine and Syria as a single administrative entity (called a
vilayet). Turkish rule lasted, in an increasingly anaemic form,
until the beginning of the 20th century. After World War I, when the
major Western powers began to dismember the old Ottoman Empire and
distribute its territories among themselves, the area east of the
Jordan River, known as Transjordania, fell to the British. Like
neighboring Palestine, Transjordania came under a League of Nations
mandate under which the British maintained control. The mandate
ceased in 1946, at which point Transjordania attained full
independence under the present constitution. |
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The country came
under the rule of King Abdullah ibn Hussein, a member of the Arabian
Hashemite Dynasty who had held the position of Emir since the 1920s.
When King Abdullah was assassinated in 1951, the crown passed to his
son Hussein ibn Talal. King Hussein assumed the throne in 1952 and
ruled the country until early 1999. Jordanian history and politics
since independence have been dominated by the Palestinian issue and
relations with Israel. When war broke out in 1948 between the
newly-declared state of Israel and the Palestinians, backed by the
forces from neighboring Arab countries, the Jordanian army occupied a
6000sq km area of Palestine bounded by the west bank of the River
Jordan.
Until a major change in Jordanian policy in 1988, the West Bank
comprised three of Jordan’s eight provinces, while over half of the
Jordanian population claimed Palestinian origin. Relations between
King Hussein and the Palestinians were difficult from the very start:
his father was murdered by a Palestinian extremist. Jordan lost the
West Bank after the Six-Day War of 1967, and gained thousands of
Palestinian refugees who fled across to Jordan. Many of them joined
one of the myriad of guerrilla groups organized under the umbrella
title of the Palestine Liberation Organization (the modern PLO is a
coalition of seven main factions, the largest of which is Al-Fatah
headed by the PLO’s overall leader Yasser Arafat). |
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Hussein ultimately
came to feel that they constituted a major threat to his authority
and, in September 1970, he deployed the Jordanian army to expel them.
In 1973, Israel again defeated a combined Arab force, including a
small Jordanian contingent, in the Yom Kippur war: Jordan lost no
territory on this occasion. Throughout the late 1970s and early 1980s
Jordan pulled back from regional politics to concentrate more on
domestic matters. After 1967, political power in Jordan was
concentrated fully in the hands of the King and his Council of
Ministers. Political parties and almost all political activity were
banned.
This prohibition has been substantially relaxed since the mid-1980s to
the point where political parties can now campaign openly for
election. Nevertheless, the government continues to restrict their
activities and is especially wary of any manifestations of Islamic
fundamentalism which, as elsewhere in the Arab world, has been growing
in Jordan. Most political parties boycotted the most recent
parliamentary poll in November 1997 – the only officially represented
political party is the small Ba’ath party – and the National Assembly
remains, as previously, dominated by supporters of the King. There |
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The Palestinian
problem re-emerged as a major factor in Jordanian politics with the
onset of the first Intifada (the uprising by Palestinians
living in Israeli-occupied areas) in 1987. This led, in July the
following year, to a surprise decision by Hussein to cede the
residual Jordanian interest in the internal affairs of the occupied
West Bank (notably the financing of public services such as
education). Then in 1990, another of Jordan’s other neighbors, Iraq,
became the cause of major problems for the Jordanians when Saddam
Hussein invaded Kuwait. The ensuing Gulf War of 1991 proved a
political and economic disaster for Jordan. Traditionally friendly
to both the US and Iraq and, in different ways, economically reliant
on both, Jordan was forced into an unwelcome choice. Inevitably,
Jordan lost out with both sides through its failure to give
wholehearted support for the US-led coalition which defeated the
Iraqis, and by accepting large numbers of Iraqi refugees. During the
rest of the 1990s, Jordan suffered badly from the UN sanctions
imposed upon Baghdad and it has benefited significantly from the
gradual disintegration of the sanctions regime. |
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The Iraqi
situation also had the effect of pushing King Hussein into a peace
agreement with the Israelis, allowing for security and economic
cooperation, which was concluded in 1991. Since 2000, and the second
Palestinian Intifada, this agreement has come under serious strain.
By this time, moreover, there had been an important change in
Jordan. King Hussein’s health had been in decline throughout the
1990s and he died of cancer in February 1999. The King’s brother,
Crown Prince Hassan, had long been the heir apparent. But the King
had stipulated before his death that one of his sons, Prince
Abdullah, had been chosen to take over upon his death (Hassan
remains an important figure in the regime). During his first year in
office, Abdullah adopted a more populist style than his father but
there has been little change in the substance of policy. A new Prime
Minister, Ali Abu al-Ragheb, took office during 2000 at the head of
a government composed of independents and members of the main
Islamic bloc.
During 2002, Abdullah was confronted by the same dilemma as his
father as, once again, the Americans have Iraq in their sights.
There is strong anti-American feeling in the country due to the Bush
administration’s support for Israel and its proposed assault on
fellow Arabs. The government is also deeply concerned about the
economic consequences of a second Gulf War. The regional situation
lay behind Jordan’s decision to cancel the planned Non-Aligned
Summit, scheduled in Amman in April 2002. Jordan’s planned takeover
of the presidency of the movement from South Africa is now in
jeopardy.
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Elsewhere, Jordan
has cut diplomatic relations with Qatar over a broadcast by the al-Jazeera
television station (famous as the main outlet for the al-Qaeda
terrorist set-up) which criticized alleged corruption within the
Jordanian government. |
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Government
Jordan is a constitutional monarchy with a bicameral legislature. The
House of Representatives has 80 members elected by universal adult
suffrage for a four-year term. The second chamber, the House of
Notables, has 40 members appointed by the king for an eight-year term.
Executive power is held by the king, who governs with the assistance
of a Council of Ministers. Until 1988, the Israeli-occupied West Bank
was considered to comprise three of Jordan’s eight administrative
provinces. |
Economy
Jordan’s agricultural sector produces tomatoes, citrus fruit,
cucumbers, watermelons, aubergines and wheat, mostly grown in the
fertile ground along the Jordan Valley. Phosphate mining and potash
extraction are the traditional industries, but oil refining, chemical
manufacturing, food processing, and the production of metals and
minerals also contribute to this sector.
The service sector accounts for around two-thirds of total output and
covers wholesale and retail trading, finance, transport and tourism.
During the latter years of King Hussein’s rule, some economic reforms
based on the customary package of deregulation and privatization were
instituted. These brought the country’s rampant inflation under
control but failed to dent the country’s massive unemployment problem.
These reforms have, by and large, continued under King Abdullah.
Many Jordanian workers have moved abroad in search of employment and
their remittances are an essential means of support for many families.
Jordan is a member of various pan-Arab economic bodies, notably the
Council of Arab Economic Co-operation and the Arab Monetary Fund. The
government liberalized the trade regime sufficiently to secure
Jordan’s membership of the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 2000, a
free trade accord with the USA and an association agreement with the
EU in 2001; these measures have helped to improve productivity.
Inflation in 2005 was 3.5%, while annual growth was expected to reach
7.7% in 2006. |
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