
A
whole city full of misunderstanders of Islam. How did this happen —
particularly in modern, moderate Jordan? “Pro-ISIS sympathies simmer in
Jordanian city,” by Samira Said, Jomana Karadsheh and Laura Smith-Spark,
CNN, September 30, 2014 (thanks to Mike):
Ma’an, Jordan (CNN) — The quiet, sandy streets of the
southern Jordanian city of Ma’an belie the pro-jihadi sentiments
simmering just under the surface.
Black graffiti showing the ISIS flag defaces walls and shopfronts on
the main road, the backstreets where children walk to school, and
roundabouts where cars packed with families speed past.
One hundred and fifty miles south of the capital, Amman, Ma’an has
always been known as a rebellious city in Jordan. For decades it has
been at the center of repeated episodes of violent riots and
confrontations with the security forces.
But Ma’an is also an important city, historically a key base of tribal support for Jordan’s Hashemite monarchy.
In recent months, videos of small but vocal pro-ISIS demonstrations
have circulated on social media, with some Ma’an residents waving the
black flag of the hardline extremist group which has taken massive
swaths of land in Syria and Iraq.
Demonstrators brazenly called for an Islamic state and chanted anti-government slogans.
The government says it has the situation in Ma’an under control, despite the apparent tensions.
“The very few Jordanians who carried ISIS flag were arrested,”
government spokesman Mohammad al-Momani told CNN on Tuesday of the
demonstrations.
According to a government official who spoke on condition of
anonymity, “the majority of people who showed sympathy with ISIS were
arrested.” The official said a total of 71 sympathizers had been
arrested over the past couple of weeks across the country.
Key U.S. ally.
For years Jordanians have joined the ranks of extremist groups like
al-Qaeda in the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and more recently in Syria.
Jordan, a key U.S. ally, has been on high alert along its borders
with both Iraq and Syria, beefing up security and foiling a number of
infiltration attempts, according to the government.
But many in the kingdom fear the threat from within is now only going
to rise after Jordan joined the U.S.-led coalition in its fight against
the terror group in Iraq and Syria.
Like many Jordanians, the mayor of Ma’an is concerned about the
repercussions of the country going on the offensive against ISIS in
neighboring countries.
“The Salafi jihadi movement has been in Jordan for years, not just in
Ma’an but also in other cities … if this movement in Iraq or Syria
declares a war on Jordan, they will not hesitate to carry out operations
in Jordan,” Mayor Majed al-Sharari told CNN in his office on Monday….
A few minutes into any conversation, residents will insist on buying juice or soda for visitors, even offer a lunch invitation.
But their famous hospitality does not mask the dark message emanating from the graffiti on the city walls.
“The Islamic State is here to stay,” states one. Another, referring
to the leader of ISIS, reads, “Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi is our prince.”
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