Jordan’s Prince Hamzah Renounces Title in Protest Against Policies
AMMAN (AP) – An outspoken half-brother of Jordan’s king has relinquished his princely title.
Prince Hamzah bin Hussein posted the announcement on his official Twitter account on Sunday.
He wrote that he was driven to the decision because his convictions cannot be reconciled with the “current approaches, policies and methods of our institutions.”
It was the latest chapter in an ongoing palace feud that saw the junior royal placed under house arrest a year ago.
He stopped short of directly criticizing King Abdullah II and the ruling elites, as he had done in the past, but his tone signaled that the rift has not been mended, as the Royal Hashemite Court suggested in the past.
The Royal Hashemite Court made no immediate comment.
Abdullah and Hamzah are sons of King Hussein, who ruled Jordan for nearly a half-century before his death in 1999. Abdullah had appointed Hamzah as crown prince upon his succession but stripped him of the title in 2004.
The monarch had placed Hamzah under house arrest last April for his alleged plot to destabilize the Western-allied kingdom.
In a video statement at the time, Hamzah denied the allegations, saying he was being punished for speaking out against official corruption.
Last month, Hamzah apologized to his brother, according to a letter released by the Royal Hashemite Court at the time. Hamzah went on to express hope that “we can turn the page on this chapter in our country’s and our family’s history.”
Hamzah’s announcement is expected to rekindle the royal rift that many in Jordan believed had been resolved with the prince’s apology.
Hamzah had made the decision unilaterally and announced it on his personal Twitter account, rather than in consultation with the royal family.
It was not immediately clear if Hamzah’s decision to relinquish his title will help restore his freedom of movement. Hamzah has only appeared in public once since the feud. In February, the court announced the birth of Hamzah’s son.
The feud was a rare case of infighting within the Hashemite royal family going public. At one point Jordan imposed a gag order on reporting about the events, reflecting the sensitivity of issues surrounding the royal family.
Abdullah had accused his brother of sedition but said the dispute was being resolved within the family and that Hamzah remained in his own palace under the king’s protection.