Jordan King Swears in New Cabinet Ahead of Polls
إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربيةKing Abdullah II on Thursday swore in a 21-strong cabinet a day after he named pro-reform politician Abdullah Nsur to form a government tasked with preparing for legislative polls.
The swearing in ceremony comes a week after the king dissolved parliament and called early elections, which he says he wants to be held by the end of the year although no date has been set for the polls.
Nsur, an outspoken MP and senator who has held several key government portfolios in the 1980s and 1990s, is a vocal supporter of sweeping reforms and has repeatedly called for the need to uproot corruption in Jordan.
He formed his government only a day after the king appointed him to replace former premier Fayez Tarawneh, who quit in line with constitutional rules stipulating that the government must step down when parliament is dissolved.
Nsur's cabinet includes four newcomers, including Interior Minister Awad Khleifat, who also held that post in 2002, and Minister of Trade and Industry Hatem Halawani, who will likewise head the ministry of communications and information technology.
The other two new cabinet ministers are Nidal Qatamin who takes over the labor ministry and Bassam Haddadin who was appointed minister of political development and parliamentary affairs.
Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh retains his post for the fifth time in a row in the new line-up which does not include any women.
On Wednesday the king sent Nsur a letter asking him to form a new cabinet that must strive to ensure that all Jordanians take part in the legislative polls.
"The primary responsibility of this government in this transitional phase is to pave the way for a qualitative leap in Jordan's political history and democratization," the king told Nsur in his letter of designation.
"Between now and election day, your government is expected to continue dialogue with all segments of society, political parties and political forces, to encourage them to effectively take part in the elections as candidates and voters," the king said in the letter.
Nsur's key challenge will be to persuade the powerful Islamist opposition to back down from a decision to boycott the polls.
The opposition says the electoral process favors government loyalists at the expense of the Islamists, and has also demanded a parliamentary system in which the prime minister would be elected rather than appointed by the king.
A date for the elections is to be announced by the newly established Independent Election Commission.