Jordanian king announces war against celebratory gunfire

Author: 
DAVID E. MILLER | THE MEDIA LINE
Publication Date: 
Thu, 2010-08-19 03:04

The king’s intervention came after two citizens were killed
and 13 others injured as a result of celebratory gunfire during last week’s
announcement of scores from the Tawjihi, the country’s final high school
examination.
Following the deaths, the king convened a high-level meeting
with Prime Minister Samir Rifa’i, General Intelligence Director Muhammad Rakad,
Chief of Police Hussein Al-Majali and other ministers to discuss methods of
combating the lethal phenomenon.
“We have decided to tackle the issue on three fronts,” Ayman
Al-Safadi, an adviser to King Abdallah II told The Media Line. “Firstly,
implement the law on anyone who breaks it. In Jordan it is illegal to shoot in
weddings. Secondly, look at current legislation and check if is sufficient and
if there is enough deterrence. Thirdly, increase awareness of the problem.”
Al-Safadi said that awareness campaigns have been launched
before through the media, schools and lectures, but results have not been
satisfactory.
“This is a traditional society,” he said. “When you shoot in
the desert, nothing happens; but when you shoot in a densely populated city —
everything that goes up will come down.”
Mohammad Al-Eitan of the Jordan Institute of Diplomacy said
celebratory gunfire has disastrous social ramifications.
“This custom turns happy occasions into disasters,” he told
The Media Line. “Often a father, who is the sole breadwinner, is hit by a stray
bullet and his family is left to fend for itself.”
Al-Eitan recounted a personal tragedy that recently
afflicted his family.
“My brother-in-law was driving in a car with a friend when
he suddenly felt a sharp pain in his thigh. He looked down and noticed blood.
When he got to the hospital it turned out he was hit by a bullet from an AK-47,
no less.”
According to statistics published on the king’s official
website, 106 cases of festive firing have been recorded in Jordan over the past
four years, resulting in the deaths of five people and the injury of 57 others.
A report in the Arab daily Al-Quds Al-Arabi estimated a
higher death toll, reaching “at least ten deaths a year as a result of joyous
gunfire in weddings.”
Eric Berman, managing director of Small Arms Survey, a
Geneva-based research center, said that the phenomenon of celebratory gunfire
was not limited to the Middle East.
“This is not unique to the Arab world, but it seems more
prevalent there,” he told The Media Line. “We try to engage the Arab League to
address arms violence and illicit trafficking, but with limited success.”
Mohannad Al-Eitan said he believed severe punishments were
key in tackling the problem.
“The security forces should deal with a few cases in a very
harsh manner, to deter others,” he said. “The Jordanian mentality is to express
happiness through shooting, and this is a mistake. The time has come to change
this mentality.”

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