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Jordan cracks down on racketeers following maiming of teenager

In an unprecedented move, Jordan's Public Security Department has launched a coordinated wave of arrests of those suspected of racketeering, bullying and repeat offenses, following the attack on a Jordanian teenager in the city of Zarqa that left him with amputated hands and a gouged eye.
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On Oct. 13, at least six men kidnapped 16-year-old Saleh Hamdan in the city of Zarqa, 20 kilometers (12 miles) east of Amman, where they allegedly tortured him before amputating his hands and gouging out one of his eyes. The leader of the men allegedly sent the boy’s amputated hands to Hamdan’s mother. When Hamdan was found, he was carried to a hospital and admitted to intensive care.

The horrific assault and maiming of Hamdan has shocked Jordanian society, triggering a storm of denunciations on social media and calls on authorities to take action. It took the government a few days to react as public pressure mounted, and on Oct. 17, newly appointed Minister of Interior Tawfiq Halalmeh announced that a joint security team consisting of members of the Public Security Department (PSD) and the Gendarmerie Department would launch a campaign to arrest all wanted people and suspects of protection racketeers. He called on the public to share information on suspects with the PSD. Meanwhile, Prime Minister and Minister of Defense Bisher al-Khasawneh assured Halalmeh of the government’s full support for all law enforcement efforts in ensuring the rule of law.

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