Jordan Shutters Muslim Brotherhood Headquarters

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Global media is widely reporting that last week, police in Jordan shut down the headquarters of the Muslim Brotherhood in the capital Amman. According to a BBC report:

Police in Jordan have shut the headquarters of the main opposition movement, the Islamist Muslim Brotherhood (MB), group officials say.

The building in the capital, Amman, was sealed on the city governor’s orders, an MB leader told Reuters news agency.

No reason was given for the closure, the official added. The MB has a strong support base in urban areas and its political wing, the Islamic Action Front (IAF), is Jordan’s largest opposition party.

The group split in 2014 into the old movement and a new, more moderate, officially licensed branch.

The headquarters of the original movement were targeted in Wednesday’s raid. ‘We were surprised by this move from the Public Security Department,’ spokesman Badi al Rafaiah told Reuters.

‘Many policemen and gendarmes came… broke the door down and threw out all the staff with an order to close down the main centre, which they sealed off without giving any explanation.’

The rise in militant Islam in the region has increasingly strained relations between the Brotherhood and the authorities.

The IAF has boycotted parliamentary elections, alleging the system marginalises the party, while authorities have sporadically cracked down on the group.

Last year, a Muslim Brotherhood leader was jailed for criticising Jordan’s ally the UAE, in the first such case involving a top opposition figure in Jordan for years.

The GMBDW last reported on the Jordanian Muslim Brotherhood in February when the group was reported to have ended its official affiliation with the Egyptian organization.

The GMBDW reported in December of 2015 that key members of the the Jordanian Muslim Brotherhood had resigned in the ongoing dispute between rival factions of the Muslim Brotherhood in Jordan.

For a history of extremist statements made in the past by the Jordanian Muslim Brotherhood, go here.

For an analysis of the relationship between the Jordanian Muslim Brotherhood and the government, go here.

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