SSC still investigating ‘sedition case’
By Rana Husseini - Jun 01,2021 - Last updated at Jun 01,2021
AMMAN The State Security Court’s (SSC) prosecution office is still investigating what is known as the “sedition case” involving a former royal court chief and other defendants, their attorneys said on Monday.
Former minister Bassem Awadallah, Sharif Hassan Bin Zeid and other suspects in the case were arrested in April for “security reasons”.
“We visited the SSC prosecution office today and were informed that the charge sheet is still not ready,” former SSC judge Mohammad Afif, who became a lawyer after retirement, told The Jordan Times.
Fresh Israeli strikes on Gaza killed a top military official Monday of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad, a group the State Department considers an Iranian-backed terrorist group blamed for some of the thousands of rockets launched at Israeli in recent days.
SSC’ prosecution office completes investigations in ‘sedition case’
Bassem Awadallah, Sharif Hassan Bin Zeid appoint lawyers
By Rana Husseini - Apr 21,2021 - Last updated at Apr 21,2021
AMMAN Public Prosecutor of the State Security Court (SSC) Brig. Gen. Hazim Majali on Tuesday announced that the Public Prosecution office has completed its investigations into the “sedition case”, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.
Majali added that the results of the investigation have revealed that involved individuals “adopted different roles, which would constitute a clear threat to the security and stability of the Kingdom”.
Upon completion of the final stages of the investigation, the State Security Prosecution will refer all findings to the SSC, he noted.
Author and known conspiracy theorist Naomi Wolf claimed during an April 19 interview on Fox News Primetime that Dr. Anthony.
Already, there are differences in attitudes among the Bedouins. The southern tribes in the provinces of Karak, Ma’an and Tufeila, which provide soldiers to the infantry, have been restive for several years. They have been rioting against the government installations, setting fire to government offices, police stations and officials’ cars. The tribes of the center and the north do not exhibit this unrest.
The Jordanian Army tries not to concentrate members of one or another tribe in any single unit, but mixes them all so that there is no military concentration of one tribe.