Amman-Saba:
On Friday, numerous cities in Jordan held large solidarity marches to support the Palestinian and Lebanese peoples and to condemn the Zionist aggression against them.
The Free International Youth Movement in Jordan organized a solidarity event in front of the US embassy in the Jordanian capital, Amman, during which it announced an open hunger strike, to demand the lifting of the siege on the Gaza Strip and the urgent entry of aid to the Strip.
The participants in the marches affirmed their support for the Palestinian resistance in Gaza, the West Bank, and Lebanon, expressing their condemnation of the Arab and international silence towards the crimes committed against the Palestinian and Lebanese peoples.
The solidarity activists demanded the "cancellation of the Treaty of Shame (Wadi Araba) with the criminals of the war of genocide," and the demonstrators waved Jordanian and Palestinian flags and banners reading "The people are against normalization" and "The people want to drop the peace treaty with Israel."
The participants denounced the Arab silence in the face of the genocide and starvation of the people in the Gaza Strip and the northern regions, especially in light of the continued support of the United States and many Western countries for the Zionist enemy.
Participants chanted slogans including: "America is it, America is the head of the serpent", "America is the Great Satan", "Terrorist America, colonial state", "O Jordanian government, this is the popular will", and "There are no foreign bases on Jordanian soil".
The participants called for supporting the Palestinian resistance and working to provide the Palestinian people with aid and protection to strengthen their steadfastness, and affirmed their support for the option of resistance, and cheered its leaders and martyrs.
With absolute American support, the Zionist enemy army has been waging since October 7, 2023, a genocidal war on the Gaza Strip, which resulted in more than 140,000 Palestinian martyrs and wounded, most of them children and women, and more than 10,000 missing, amid massive destruction and famine that killed dozens of children, in one of the worst humanitarian disasters in the world.