Jordanian security neutralizes Dalabeh's killer

A Takfiri cell in Huseiniya District
of Jordan's Ma'an Governorate took advantage of protests taking place in some
parts of the Arab country against fuel prices to carry out some terrorist
operations.
The Public Security Directorate
announced on December 19 that all the technical and laboratory evidence,
investigations and information collected confirmed that the terrorist killed
was the same killer of Col. Abdul Razzaq al-Dalabeh.
Al-Dalabeh was killed during a raid
on a terrorist cell in Huseiniya.
The directorate confirmed in a
statement that all the information reached indicated the existence of a
criminal agreement for setting fire to car tires on the street.
The terrorist killed and his older
brother were assigned the task of firing towards public security men
immediately upon their arrival to deal with the riots, the directorate added.
Col. al-Dalabeh from the General
Security Force was killed last Thursday in Huseiniya in southern Jordan by
unidentified people.
The directorate pointed out that the
weapon used by the terrorist during the raid, which claimed the lives of three
security men and left five others injured, matched samples taken from the
scene.
It noted that the security force
that carried out the raid was highly qualified and efficient and worked for
long hours to arrest all the wanted persons and neutralize the killer in the
complex circumstances that accompanied the raid.
The killer tried to exploit the
situation of being in a residential area in moving between adjacent houses, the
directorate said.
It added that some people tried to
impede the work of the force, and disrupt it.
However, the force succeeded in
neutralizing the terrorist and killing him, despite the intensive firing in its
direction and the large quantities of ammunition present with him.
Protests
It is noteworthy that the rise in
fuel prices seemed harsh for a segment of middle-income people.
This prompted a number of truck
drivers to organize repeated strikes.
Taxi owners then joined in, before
the drivers of public buses did this.