- Associated Press - Thursday, March 24, 2011

AMMAN, Jordan (AP) — Hundreds of Jordanians set up a protest camp in a main square in the capital on Thursday to press demands for the ouster of the prime minister and for wider public freedoms.

The 500 protesters appeared to be mostly university students or unemployed graduates unaffiliated with any political party. Many said they met through Facebook last month to launch a group called the Jordanian Youth Movement.

Group spokesman Ziad al-Khawaldeh said protesters would remain outdoors until Prime Minister Marouf al-Bakhit departs. Other demands include dissolving what is widely seen as a docile parliament, dismantling the largely feared intelligence department and giving greater powers to the people.

The group changed its name Thursday to “Youth of March 24” — marking what members said was the start of an open-ended demonstration.

“Today is the dawning of the Jordanian revolution,” group spokesman Ziad al-Khawaldeh, 23, said.

“We will not move an inch from here until our demands are met,” he said under pouring rain at the Interior Ministry Circle in the heart of Amman, the Jordanian capital. The district houses the Interior Ministry and police, financial and other government offices as well as Western hotels.

Protesters waved banners that called for a “new Jordan, clean of corruption and corrupt officials.”

“Intelligence Department, we want your hands off politics!” they chanted.

Mr. al-Khawaldeh said that two protesters were detained for questioning but that he did not know the reason. While one of them was released hours later, the other remained in detention, he said.

Police officials were not immediately available for comment.

Mr. al-Khawaldeh said the protesters want Mr. al-Bakhit to be “instantly replaced with a liberal government that would quickly implement reforms.”

Mr. al-Bakhit, a former army general, is widely regarded as a tough military officer incapable of introducing changes demanded by protesters. Those reforms include an election law replacing a one seen as favoring the king’s loyalists and blamed for producing a docile parliament, the only elected body in Jordan’s government.

Jordan’s opposition also wants to strip the king of some of his powers, specifically in appointing the prime minister. Instead, they want the premier to be elected by a popular vote.

Protester Mohammed al-Qaisi, 23, said the protesters want parliament to be dissolved and new elections to be held under a new election law, giving more proportional representation to Jordanians and reducing the number of votes in districts inhabited by tribesmen, who form the bedrock of support for the king.

“Enough is enough,” said Mr. al-Qaisi, an unemployed sociologist. “We don’t want the king to go, but we want him to listen to us. We’re fed up with al-Bakhit, with parliament and with Jordan being a police state ruled by the intelligence department.”

Taxi driver Haitham Yassin, 29, said he joined the protest because “I want the king to know that I became a taxi driver because I couldn’t find a job as an electronic engineer.”

“My degree went to waste,” he said. “Still, I can barely make ends meet now. I have three children, and I can’t meet all their needs because prices are constantly increasing, while my salary remains the same.”

In a separate protest, about 100 pro-government loyalists stood near the youth waving portraits of the king and chanting, “Our lives and souls, we sacrifice for you, King Abdullah!”

Police formed lines to separate the protesters. No clashes were reported.

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