Opposition groups in Jordan have announced their decision to boycott Wednesday's election

Opposition groups in Jordan have announced their decision to boycott Wednesday's election Jordanians sceptical about the outcome of a January 23 legislative election say they will not vote as they are fed up with the empty promises and failures of past parliaments .
Regular Arab Spring-inspired protests over the past two years have demanded sweeping political and economic reform, including more jobs and the elimination of poverty and corruption.
"I don't think I'll vote. I'm tired of seeing and hearing the same slogans, promises and lies over and over again," Mohammad Qeisi, 43, told AFP as he sat outside his shop in the city of Zarqa, a traditional Islamist stronghold 23 kilometres (14 miles) northeast of Amman.
"The candidates never keep their promises after they win. They change their phone numbers and personalities, becoming unreachable."
More than 2.27 million voters have registered to choose from around 1,500 candidates contesting for 150 seats in the lower house of parliament.
Jordan wants Wednesday's vote to be a focal point for reform, but some people are concerned that many candidates lack clear programmes, despite banners on streets throughout the country with their smiling or serious faces and pledges to improve the lives of Jordanians.
"They are promising us all kinds of things just to win our votes. Every election, we hope something different will happen. But we get nothing," Yasmin Ghanem, 25, a government employee in Zarqa, told AFP.
The industrial city of more than a million people, and a hotbed for Islamic extremists, suffers from over-population, poor infrastructure, dilapidated buildings and water problems.
"Favouritism, nepotism and tribalism control everything. I'm not sure about voting," said Ghanem, who wore an Islamic headscarf and jeans.
The powerful Muslim Brotherhood and other opposition groups like the National Reform Front of former premier and intelligence chief Ahmad Obeidat have boycotted the election over what they have described as a "lack of political will to reform."
"I will not vote. The candidates will only serve their own interests," said bearded Aladdin Shawish as he waited for the bus with Ali Madi, a school teacher who insisted "the coming parliament will be identical to the old one."
In contrast with Zarqa, candidates in Amman and Salt, northwest of the capital, have splashed out on their campaigns, serving food and sweets in large tents to anyone prepared to vote for them.
Their efforts do not appear to have won over many people, and have in fact worked against them -- the government has announced the arrest of at least six candidates, including the leader of an electoral list, for vote buying.
The arrests prompted faint hope among some voters for a clean contest, but the election for many will still be a lottery.
"I'll try to give my vote to a person who deserves it. I hope they'll work hard on meeting our needs and demands," said Taan Awaisheh, 24, from Salt.
"We need to put aside tribalism and racism, then we can vote," said Messef Abbadi, 43, who belongs to one of Jordan's largest tribes.
Jordan has established an Independent Elections Commission to oversee the vote and encourage participation, inviting international observers from the European Union, the US-based National Democratic Institute and others to ensure that polls are free and fair.
Prime Minister Abdullah Ensour told Russia Today that free and fair elections will give the legislature "unprecedented credibility," adding that government interference in the polls was a “red line” that no official would be allowed to cross.
The premier added that a parliament’s credibility emanates from free elections and its members’ “convincing performance” in safeguarding Jordan’s national interests, noting that a credible Lower House will be empowered by its popularity with the people.
The government is combating any attempts to mar the elections through vote buying using all available means, Ensour added in the interview.
When asked about the Muslim Brotherhood’s decision to boycott the elections, the prime minister said the group was an important part of the political system in Jordan and not enemies of the regime.
He criticised their decision to boycott the polls, however, noting that without seats in the Lower House, they will be unable to make the changes they have been calling for to the Elections Law.
On Monday, Ensour met with delegates from international monitoring missions to discuss Wednesday’s elections, which he again stressed would be free, fair and devoid of government intervention.


Source: AFP, Petra News