It was Sunday morning, the start of the work week after the
long Eid al-Adha holiday, when residents of the Jordanian capital,
Amman, woke to reports of the killing of Nahedh Hattar.
A
journalist and commentator, Hattar was long known for his controversial
secularist views and vocal support of Syrian President Bashar Assad
.
The killing made Hattar, 56, the most recent casualty in a
country-wide duel between Islamists and secularists, clashes that
threatens to rock the stability of the perennially fragile kingdom,
which has been a key U.S. ally in the region.
Hattar,
according to local media outlets, was killed on the steps of Amman’s
main courthouse, where he was set to go on trial on charges of inciting
strife and insulting Islam.
Weeks earlier, he had enraged Muslims across the country by posting a cartoon, “The God of Daesh,” on his Facebook page.
Daesh is the Arabic acronym of Islamic State, and is considered pejorative by the group’s adherents.
The
cartoon depicted a bearded man, presumably an Islamic State militant,
lying in bed with two women while asking God to bring him wine and
cashews. The man also asks God to have someone clean up the mess,
install a door for his tent and to knock before entering in the future.
In
Islam, those who die in combat in the name of God are rewarded with
Hoor, beautiful women with lustrous eyes, and can enjoy rivers of wine. The cartoon portrayed the militant as taking that to ridiculous extremes, and also broke a taboo by portraying God.
In
the ensuing backlash, some conservative Muslims called for his
execution. Hattar quickly took the cartoon down, saying that he was
merely “mocking the terrorists and their depiction of God and heaven.”
But
he was soon arrested. The government said it had imprisoned him for his
own protection, but Prime Minister Hani Mulki also said he would not
allow the crossing of red lines when it came to holy issues and would
deal “firmly” with the incident. The government also issued a gag order,
a tactic it has frequently used in the last year in what critics say is
a method of stifling necessary debate.
Hattar was released on bail earlier this month and was to appear in court on Sunday.
As
he arrived, a gunman walked up to him and shot him three times,
according to Petra, the state news agency. Security officials nearby
quickly arrested the attacker, the agency said.
Government spokesman Mohammad Momani condemned Hattar’s
killing as an “ugly crime,” adding that the “law will be firmly applied
to the perpetrator,” according to Petra.
Momani added:
“The government will respond with an iron fist against anyone who tries
to use this crime to spread hate rhetoric in our society.”
Video
taken by a bystander and posted on social media depicts the aftermath
of the shooting. It shows Hattar lying on the ground, ringed by security
officials while people shout frantically for an ambulance.
The
killing comes at a contentious time in the country, which, although
stable, has long been thought to be a tinderbox of extremism.
A
significant portion of its citizens have snuck into neighboring Syria,
to take up command positions in the Al Qaeda-affiliated Front for the
Conquest of Syria (formerly called Al Nusra Front) and its one-time ally
turned nemesis, Islamic State. Jordan’s population, overwhelmingly
Sunni Muslim, is deeply conservative.
In June, the U.S.
State Department’s Bureau of Counterterrorism and Countering Violent
Extremism released a report saying that, although Jordan had “sought to
confront and weaken the violent idea that underpins [Islamic State] and
other violent extremist organizations,” anti-extremist programs remain
“under-resourced and staffed,” and that its leaders “are reticent to
acknowledge domestic radicalization, including self-radicalization.”
In
years past, the government has toughened its anti-terrorism laws,
hauling in hundreds of Jordanians for the slightest connection to
Islamic State, including spreading or liking its propaganda on social
media.
Yet its critics accuse it of turning a blind eye
to extremism and allowing Islamists to take over vital government
ministries, including the Ministry of Education.
Hattar’s
family also blamed the government for his death, saying it had informed
the Ministry of Interior of the death threats and that the government
had done nothing.
“This rat who killed Nahedh…
represents the government of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan in its
entirety. Who killed Nahedh Hattar was the prime minister on the first
day when he put Nahedh on trial,” Hattar’s brother Majed said in a
statement to a local news outlet, Khaberni.
The family
refused to receive the body and hold a funeral, he added, until Mulki,
the prime minister, “is fired and put on trial.”
Later in
the day, Mulki offered the government’s resignation, in what was framed
by government officials as a procedural move following parliamentary
elections held on Tuesday.
King Abdullah, Jordan’s
ruler, “asked the outgoing government to continue in a caretaker
capacity until a royal decree approves the new government,” according to
Petra.
A prominent blogger, Naseem Tarawneh, said in a
post on Sunday on his blog, the Black Iris, that the government had to
do more to counter “extremism’s raging fire.”
“It is no
longer enough for the King to give a speech about national unity, or for
the Queen to send out a tweet, or for the government, political
parties, the Jordan Press Association, the Senate, and every other State
entity to come out and merely condemn this,” he wrote.
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