AMMAN, Jordan (AP) —
A Jordanian citizen died after being beaten by police, the second time
this week, a police spokesman said Sunday, casting a rare spotlight on
the nation's U.S.-trained security forces, that may also have worked as
proxy jailers for the CIA.
The deaths have provoked angry
demonstrations in this stable U.S. ally. Jordan has largely escaped the
reputation for human rights abuses that clings to many of its neighbors.
Fakhri
Kreishan, 47, died late Saturday, two days after slipping into a coma
caused by a severe beating to the head that took place during a clash
between police and residents in the southern city of Maan.
Sadem
al-Saud, 20, died last Sunday, three weeks after he was put into a coma
by a beating administered during an interrogation in an Amman police
station.
Labib Kamhawi, a leading human rights activist, said Jordan has "always been a security-oriented state."
"That's
why the mentality of police forces is programmed to use excessive force
against anything it deems a hazard to national security," he said.
Last
year, the New York-based Human Rights Watch accused Jordan of
systematic torture in some detention facilities — something Jordan has
denied.
Police spokesman Maj. Mohammed al-Khatib said the six
officers suspected of beating Kreishan and al-Saud have been arrested
and will be tried in a police court. He said neither of the deceased
were wanted by police.
The quick police acknowledgment of the
deaths and prosecution of the perpetrators were apparently in response
to government fears the news would provoke further demonstrations
around the country.
In Maan, violent riots erupted shortly after
Kreishan's death. Angry protesters torched a police vehicle and a
security booth after opening fire on the policemen manning the station
in the city, said eyewitness Mohammed Anani, a resident of Maan, 220
kilometers (135 miles) south of the Jordanian capital.
Dozens of
young men also clashed with police and blocked the desert highway
leading to the Red Sea port of Aqaba before calm was restored, Anani
said in a telephone interview.
"People are angry at police brutality," he said.
It is unusual for Jordanians to criticize their security apparatus, which has been a long-standing symbol of national pride.
Pro-government
lawmaker Mamdouh Abbadi warned that the government "must severely
punish the perpetrators for their crimes and announce the findings of
the police investigation, or parliament will take action."
Jordanian
security forces had a major role in the U.S.-led global war on
terrorism, including assisting Washington in its hunt for al-Qaida in
Iraq leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, who was killed in a U.S. air strike
in neighboring Iraq in 2006.
Jordan has also purportedly served
as a proxy jailer for the CIA until at least 2004, according to Human
Rights Watch. The group said that the CIA transferred at least 14
terror suspects to the kingdom for interrogation after the Sept. 11,
2001 attacks. Jordan has denied the charge.
Malcolm Smart,
regional director for the London-based Amnesty International, said this
week's deaths were a "serious development."
"This kind of force
cannot be tolerated," he said, adding that the responsible officers
must be prosecuted and suspended from the service.