"The opposition demands the resignation or the sacking of the government and the formation a national unity and reformist government that would win the people's trust and protect their lives," Hamzah Mansur, chief of the powerful Islamic Action Front (IAF), said. "Any government that kills citizens loses legitimacy," he told a news conference.
Youth movements backed the call. "We demand the prime minister and intelligence chief (Mohammed Raqqad) quit," Firas Mahadin of the March 24 youth group told reporters. "We have reached a point of no return."
The rift between Jordan's government and the opposition widened after the prime minister on Friday accused the main opposition movement of spreading chaos following the martyrdom of a protester, the first in the kingdom. "Stop playing with fire... stop hiding your real intentions," Prime Minister Bakhit told the opposition in an address broadcast on Jordanian television. "We have invited the Muslim Brotherhood for talks, away from protests and demonstrations, but apparently they have an agenda to create chaos in the country," Bakhit said.
The IAF is the main opposition party and political branch of the Brotherhood which found protection in Jordan in the 1950s and 1980s when they were persecuted in Egypt and Syria.River to Sea





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