Jordanians privately fume over Pandora Papers revelations, while local media stays quiet
On Sunday night, a trove of secret files was released, detailing the offshore holdings of a host of world leaders, including Jordan’s King Abdullah II.
The documents, entitled the "",Ìýshowed that Abdullah had spent well over $100 million on real estate, the most expensive of which was a $33 million home in Malibu, California. He also held properties worth about $28 million in the UK.
The reaction to the leaks, in Jordan, was hard to judge as there was a virtual media blackout on the topic, save a from the Royal Court republished in local outlets. Privately though, some Jordanians expressed anger at the contents of the leaks.
"I'm frustrated to say the least. The king has asked the people to press from below while he presses down on his ministers, but apparently, that was all empty words," aÌýJordanian man in his late 20sÌýtold °®Âþµº, requesting anonymity.
According to the Royal Court, the purchases revealed in the documents were "personally funded" by Abdullah and "none have been funded by the state budget".ÌýThe statement added that the media reportÌý"distorted and exaggerated the facts".
The king later the documents were part of a "campaign against Jordan".
Publishing anything critical of the royal family is an imprisonable offence in Jordan under strict anti-defamation legislation. Local media tends not to touch matters relating to royal scandals, such as the in April 2020.
However, Jordanian journalists speaking to °®Âþµº voiced frustration with their inability to discuss and engage with the nationally important story.
"It undermines us as journalists. Instead of having a counter-narrative that relies on professionalism and ethics, Jordanians are now hostage to the social media interpretation of these events," a journalist told °®Âþµº under the condition of anonymity. Ìý
"If the international media has already published the story, then Jordanians are going to read the stories [anyway], so banning publishing on it is ridiculous, unless Jordan is going to ban the internet entirely," another Jordanian journalist who requested anonymity said.
It has not been confirmed yet if media have been instructed not to publish stories on the scandal, although there is a long-held taboo againstÌýpublishing anything about the royal family.
The leak of the financial data, even if it does not implicate the king in any pilfering of state funds, is still shocking to many Jordanians who for years have weathered an increasingly dire economic situation.
Jordanian opposition figures have for years painted the king and Queen Rania as extravagant rulers, pointing to their swanky parties as evidence of rulers out of touch with a country with one of the highest youth unemployment rates in the region.
Oftentimes these characterisations have come without evidence and instead relied on hearsay, particularly about the king and his alleged lavish lifestyle.
Some of his statements, such as calling tribal elders "dinosaurs" in a 2013 with Jeffrey Goldberg, have only fueled this perception.
To have evidence of such spending then, has led some Jordanians to feel bitter about their monarch's wealth and speculate about its origins.
"There is a saying in Arabic: 'The one who guards is the one who steals.' This perfectly applies to him. Is he even aware of the scale of the problems the public is going through? I think not," the late-20s Jordanian said.
Other Jordanians were less willing to discuss the matter. "On this topic, we’re all cowards," another Jordanian said after declining to comment.