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Jordanian Armed Forces JAF

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Next time you respect the soldiers of other nations you motherfucker.

Rebels murdered by Jordan today(which claims to support Syrian opposition):

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Jordanian army murders Syrian refugees:

 
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Oh now you're innocent after disrespecting the Palestinians killed this morning and wishing more death upon our soldiers, people that I know personally had their son killed and you're celebrating you evil coward. You reap what you sow:


Jordan: A Long History of Collaboration  --  MER FlashBack

Jordan, under the Hashemite regime originally installed by British imperialism, has been working closely with the Zionist movement ever since World War II, and subsequently with the American CIA. For those interested in the detailed history of how this collaboration began, the excellent book, COLLABORATION ACROSS THE JORDAN by Professor Avi Schlaim at Oxford University, makes for fascinating reading. It is widely believed, in fact, that King Hussein tried to give the Israelis secret warning of Arab plans to attack before the 1973 war, and had been secretly working ever-more closely with the Israelis personally ever since the 1967 war.

After a period of public caution, including at the time of the Gulf War, the Hashemite Regime has clearly decided to defy its own people and turn on the Arab world by making its alliance with Israel and the U.S. de jure rather than de facto. This period began with the very public signing of the Israeli-Jordanian Peace Treaty a few years ago, King Hussein's public visits to Israel, and a major shift in economic and political priorities in recent years. Last month's Jordanian involvement in the first-ever joint Israeli/Turkish/American military maneuvers in the region was one more clear indication of Hashemite intentions. Increasingly close collaboration with senior officials of the Israeli government, including the Defense Minister and Ariel Sharon, one of the most notorious anti-Palestinian Israelis, has been escalating in the past two years.

Meanwhile of course the Jordanian secret police, the Muhabarat, have been increasingly active in undermining and repressing all who oppose these policies in talk or deed. A few months ago MER published a first-hand description of what is done to university students who even dared to discuss the possibility of organizing an independent student union -- they were seriously threatened and intimidated and hundreds of heavily armed troops showed up at the university to prevent any meeting. Subsequently MER was also threatened and disinformation has been spread about MER.

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Army officers torture anybody who speaks against the British installed regime:

Jordan: Torture in Prisons Routine and Widespread | Human Rights Watch

(Amman, October 8, 2008) - Jordan should end routine and widespread torture in its prisons, Human Rights Watch said in a new report released today. Human Rights Watch called on the government to overhaul mechanisms for investigating, disciplining and prosecuting abusers, and in particular to transfer prosecutor's investigations into prison abuse from police to civilian prosecutors.

The 95-page report, "Torture and Impunity in Jordan's Prisons: Reforms Fail to Tackle Widespread Abuse," documents credible allegations of ill-treatment, often amounting to torture, from 66 out of 110 prisoners interviewed at random in 2007 and 2008, and in each of the seven of Jordan's 10 prisons visited. Human Rights Watch's evidence suggests that five prison directors personally participated in torturing detainees.

"Torture in Jordan's prison system is widespread even two years after King Abdullah called for reforms to stop it once and for all," said Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. "The mechanisms for preventing torture by holding torturers accountable are simply not working."

The most common forms of torture include beatings with cables and sticks and the suspension by the wrists from metal grates for hours at a time, during which guards flog a defenseless prisoner. Prison guards also torture prisoners for perceived infractions of prison rules. Human Rights Watch found evidence that at times Islamists accused or convicted of crimes against national security (Tanzimat) were punished en masse.

Prison officials say beatings and other ill-treatment are isolated incidents and that a prison reform program initiated in 2006 is improving prison conditions and accountability for abuse. Human Rights Watch's research shows that while the reform program may well be improving the chief areas of its focus - health services, overcrowding, visitation, and recreation facilities - impunity for physical abuse remains the norm.

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Oh now you're innocent after disrespecting the Palestinians killed this morning and wishing more death upon our soldiers, people that I know personally had their son killed and you're celebrating you evil coward. You reap what you sow:


Jordan: A Long History of Collaboration -- MER FlashBack

Jordan, under the Hashemite regime originally installed by British imperialism, has been working closely with the Zionist movement ever since World War II, and subsequently with the American CIA. For those interested in the detailed history of how this collaboration began, the excellent book, COLLABORATION ACROSS THE JORDAN by Professor Avi Schlaim at Oxford University, makes for fascinating reading. It is widely believed, in fact, that King Hussein tried to give the Israelis secret warning of Arab plans to attack before the 1973 war, and had been secretly working ever-more closely with the Israelis personally ever since the 1967 war.

After a period of public caution, including at the time of the Gulf War, the Hashemite Regime has clearly decided to defy its own people and turn on the Arab world by making its alliance with Israel and the U.S. de jure rather than de facto. This period began with the very public signing of the Israeli-Jordanian Peace Treaty a few years ago, King Hussein's public visits to Israel, and a major shift in economic and political priorities in recent years. Last month's Jordanian involvement in the first-ever joint Israeli/Turkish/American military maneuvers in the region was one more clear indication of Hashemite intentions. Increasingly close collaboration with senior officials of the Israeli government, including the Defense Minister and Ariel Sharon, one of the most notorious anti-Palestinian Israelis, has been escalating in the past two years.

Meanwhile of course the Jordanian secret police, the Muhabarat, have been increasingly active in undermining and repressing all who oppose these policies in talk or deed. A few months ago MER published a first-hand description of what is done to university students who even dared to discuss the possibility of organizing an independent student union -- they were seriously threatened and intimidated and hundreds of heavily armed troops showed up at the university to prevent any meeting. Subsequently MER was also threatened and disinformation has been spread about MER.

..................

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Army officers torture anybody who speaks against the British installed regime:

Jordan: Torture in Prisons Routine and Widespread | Human Rights Watch

(Amman, October 8, 2008) - Jordan should end routine and widespread torture in its prisons, Human Rights Watch said in a new report released today. Human Rights Watch called on the government to overhaul mechanisms for investigating, disciplining and prosecuting abusers, and in particular to transfer prosecutor's investigations into prison abuse from police to civilian prosecutors.

The 95-page report, "Torture and Impunity in Jordan's Prisons: Reforms Fail to Tackle Widespread Abuse," documents credible allegations of ill-treatment, often amounting to torture, from 66 out of 110 prisoners interviewed at random in 2007 and 2008, and in each of the seven of Jordan's 10 prisons visited. Human Rights Watch's evidence suggests that five prison directors personally participated in torturing detainees.

"Torture in Jordan's prison system is widespread even two years after King Abdullah called for reforms to stop it once and for all," said Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. "The mechanisms for preventing torture by holding torturers accountable are simply not working."

The most common forms of torture include beatings with cables and sticks and the suspension by the wrists from metal grates for hours at a time, during which guards flog a defenseless prisoner. Prison guards also torture prisoners for perceived infractions of prison rules. Human Rights Watch found evidence that at times Islamists accused or convicted of crimes against national security (Tanzimat) were punished en masse.

Prison officials say beatings and other ill-treatment are isolated incidents and that a prison reform program initiated in 2006 is improving prison conditions and accountability for abuse. Human Rights Watch's research shows that while the reform program may well be improving the chief areas of its focus - health services, overcrowding, visitation, and recreation facilities - impunity for physical abuse remains the norm.

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@WebMaster @Aeronaut @Oscar

I hope this thread will be kept clean.
 
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King Abdullah of Jordan with Blackwater 'security firm' which is known for murdering Iraqi women and children:

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@WebMaster @Aeronaut @Oscar

I hope this thread will be kept clean.

You reap what you sow you terrorist, you better never never ever again mock our dead people or the everything will become hell for you and your stupid British anti Arab anti Muslim regime. Don't mock the fallen heroes of the Palestinian people you sick deranged Israeli terrorist supporter. Go kill more Syrian ciivlians you cowards.

World Report 2013: Jordan | Human Rights Watch

Freedom of Expression
Jordan criminalizes speech that is critical of the king, government officials and institutions, Islam, as well as speech deemed defamatory to other persons. In 2010, a revision of the penal code increased penalties for some speech offenses and the 2010 Law on Information System Crimes extended these provisions to online expression. In September, amendments to the Press and Publications Law broadened speech restrictions on online publications, also holding website managers responsible for user comments.

In 2012, the legal aid unit of the Amman-based Center for Defending Freedom of Journalists assisted journalists with 10 ongoing criminal cases for speech in violation of articles 5 and 7 of the Press and Publications Law requiring journalists to be “objective.”

In April, military prosecutors charged Jamal al-Muhtasab, editor of Gerasanews website, with “subverting the system of government” for an article concerning the king’s supposed intervention in a corruption investigation. Al-Muhtasab spent several weeks in detention before being released on bail. The case was pending at this writing. In February, military prosecutors also charged Ahmad Oweidi al-‘Abbadi, a former member of parliament, with subverting the system of government because he had peacefully advocated making Jordan a republic. He was also released on bail with the case pending. In January, the State Security Court (SSC) sentenced protester ‘Uday Abu ‘Issa to two years in prison for “undermining his majesty’s dignity” because he had set fire to a poster with the king’s picture in Madaba. The king pardoned Abu ‘Issa in February.

Freedom of Assembly and Association
Under the amended Public Gatherings Law, which took effect in March 2011, Jordanians no longer required government permission to hold public meetings or demonstrations. However, during 2012 prosecutors began resorting instead to charging protesters with “unlawful gatherings,” under article 165 of the penal code.

Hundreds of protests demanding political and economic reforms occurred in urban and rural areas throughout the kingdom. Groups calling themselves the Popular Youth Movement in many towns protested against corruption, the government’s economic policies, and the new election law, and called for an end to military-dominated trials of civilians in the SSC.

The government’s decision to lift gas and fuel subsidies in November fueled protests, some of them violent and featuring once-rare calls for the king’s ouster. Security agencies arrested an estimated 250 people within the first two weeks of the protests; 89 of them were summoned to appear before the military prosecutor on charges that included unlawful gathering. Authorities dispersed protesters using teargas and rubber bullets.

Authorities continue to try protesters in SSCs, which under the Jordanian Constitution have jurisdiction only over high treason, espionage, terrorism, and drug charges. In March, security forces arrested at least eight protesters from the southern town of Tafila in one such protest, referring them to the SSC for “unlawful gathering.” At a March 31 protest in Amman for their release, police detained 13 protesters whom the military prosecutor at the SSC charged with “insulting the king,” “unlawful gathering,” and “subverting the system of government in the kingdom or inciting to resist it.” They were released on bail in mid-April. In a series of arrests in early September, security forces arrested well over a dozen peaceful reform activists, including eight from Tafila, two from Karak, and seven from Amman. All were charged under terrorism provisions, which place them under the purview of the military-dominated State Security Court. All remained in detention at this writing.

Refugees and Migrants
Over 100,000 persons from Syria have sought refuge in Jordan. In July, the government took all newly arriving Syrian refugees to al-Za’tari camp near the Syrian border, which very few have been able to leave. The change ended the previous policy under which Syrians fleeing the conflict could move freely in Jordan if they had a Jordanian guarantor. By October, the more than 30,000 refugees in the camp had rioted several times over the closure and harsh conditions.

Since April 2012, Jordan confined Palestinians who arrived from Syria in separate facilities: Cyber City and King Abdullah Park, in Ramtha, and denied them freedom of movement. Jordanian authorities forcibly returned at least nine Palestinians from Syria and threatened others at gunpoint with deportation, in an apparent display of discriminatory treatment of refugees according to their national origin.

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Torture, Arbitrary Detention, and Administrative Detention
Perpetrators of torture enjoy near-total impunity. The redress process begins with a deficient complaint mechanism, continues with lackluster investigations and prosecutions, and ends in a police court, where two of three judges are police-appointed police officers.

In March, police officers beat close to 30 demonstrators in an anti-government rally with truncheons, kicked them, and slammed their heads into the walls at a police station; two fainted from the ill-treatment. The results of a reported internal police inquiry were not made public. Lawyers for and relatives of peaceful anti-government protesters detained and charged under terrorism laws in January and September also reported physical ill-treatment at police stations in addition to prolonged solitary confinement in pre-trial detention.

On November 16, 2011, Najm al-Din ‘Azayiza, a 20-year-old man from Ramtha, died from asphyxiation on his third day in detention at the Military Intelligence offices in the Rashid suburb of Amman. The government did not adequately investigate his death.

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Your whole army is created to protect the British installed Jordanian regime and you dare disrespect the resistance heroes who fight an immoral occupation, you sick Arabs all of your armies are created to kill your civilians except us Palestinians they're there to fight for our survival and rights and dignity and you dare mock our dead you coward you're going to regret the day you were born for ever daring to disrespect God's soldiers soon the Syrian rebels will bomb your terrorist forces.
 
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mashallah , its so good to see Jordan have a nice cool armed forces and well equipped .
can any Jordanian member enlighten me that why Jordan never try have any JV , with Pakistan ? just like mow KSA is interested in JF , why cant Jordan do same ? plus as for naval they can collaborate with F-22p program .. its a potent ship .
what you guys think /.?
 
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mashallah , its so good to see Jordan have a nice cool armed forces and well equipped .
can any Jordanian member enlighten me that why Jordan never try have any JV , with Pakistan ? just like mow KSA is interested in JF , why cant Jordan do same ? plus as for naval they can collaborate with F-22p program .. its a potent ship .
what you guys think /.?
Jordan doesn't nee Navy even if they want to get something few missile boats like we got from Turkey will do the job really small ones but equipped with good missiles What the need to focus is on getting some new Tanks and also increasing Fighter Jets in their Air Force man they should have at least 150 + Fighter Jets
 
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Jordan doesn't nee Navy even if they want to get something few missile boats like we got from Turkey will do the job really small ones but equipped with good missiles What the need to focus is on getting some new Tanks and also increasing Fighter Jets in their Air Force man they should have at least 150 + Fighter Jets

they must have some future plans to induct some new birds !
 
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