Displaying 41 - 50 of 189.
Mahdī Mustafa believes that the three bombings that hit Amman’s largest hotels on November 9 have made it quite clear that neither closed borders nor security procedures can prevent terrorist bombings.
The author expresses his rage and sadness at the death of a prominent film director and producer in the Amman bombings.
In the aftermath of the recent terrorist bombings that rocked Jordan and caused widespread public outrage, thousands of Jordanians took to the streets to protest against leader of al-Qā‘ida in Iraq, Abu Mus‘ab al-Zarqāwī, who has defended the attacks.
This article discusses some of the differences between the Amman blasts and the riots in Paris.
This article discusses some explanations for terrorism and makes a distinction between terrorism and resistance.
The death of the Syrian film maker, Mustafa al-‘Aqqād has prompted angry reactions from Arab writers.
In prison, the true character of Abu Mus‘ab al-Zarqāwī was shaped. During the course of his trial, he attacked the judges and accused them of being infidels, impressing Usāma Bin Lādin and Ayman al-Zawāhrī, according to the testimony of al-Qā‘ida member, Sayf al-‘Adl, an Egyptian.
Members of the Jordanian Brotherhood took to the streets in 1990 to express vehement rejection against the use of US forces to liberate Kuwait from the Iraqi invasion. Some even supported Saddam Hussein himself.
Jordan’s capital, Amman, hosted a four-day conference organized by the Arab Team for Islamic-Christian Dialogue.
The Jordanian Administrative Court supported a prison sentence handed down to Jordanian poet Musa Al-Hawamda by a lower court. Al-Hawamda is charged with defaming Islam in his poetic anthology titled “My Trees are Higher.”

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