The move comes after a round of austerity measures adopted by the government earlier this year which almost doubled the prices of bread, fuel and increased sales taxes on hundreds of everyday goods from internet subscriptions and electricity to soft drinks and stationery.
Jordanians staged the first nationwide strike in decades to protest against tax reforms. All photos by Salah Malkawi for The National
The strikers, called by the country's professional associations, fear they will be forced to shoulder a greater share of the tax burden at a time when complaints about poverty and unemployment are growing louder.
In Amman, thousands gathered at the professional associations complex and chanted against the government of Hani Mulki.
“Down with Hani Mulki,” they chanted. “Death rather than humiliation”.
Protesters held banners that read “no to squashing the middle class,” “No to the income tax law.”
“If the government does not want to listen to the crowds, it must immediately step down,” Abdul Hadi Falahat, president of the Jordan Agricultural Engineers Association
The move comes after a round of austerity measures adopted by the government earlier this year which almost doubled the prices of bread, fuel and increased sales taxes on hundreds of everyday goods from internet subscriptions and electricity to soft drinks and stationery.
Jordanians staged the first nationwide strike in decades to protest against tax reforms. All photos by Salah Malkawi for The National
The strikers, called by the country's professional associations, fear they will be forced to shoulder a greater share of the tax burden at a time when complaints about poverty and unemployment are growing louder.
In Amman, thousands gathered at the professional associations complex and chanted against the government of Hani Mulki.
“Down with Hani Mulki,” they chanted. “Death rather than humiliation”.
Protesters held banners that read “no to squashing the middle class,” “No to the income tax law.”
“If the government does not want to listen to the crowds, it must immediately step down,” Abdul Hadi Falahat, president of the Jordan Agricultural Engineers Association
The move comes after a round of austerity measures adopted by the government earlier this year which almost doubled the prices of bread, fuel and increased sales taxes on hundreds of everyday goods from internet subscriptions and electricity to soft drinks and stationery.
Jordanians down tools for national walkout over tax reform
The proposed measures are a bid to boost growth and reduce public debt, but critics warn they hit poor and working people hard