More than a thousand people protested in the Jordanian capital Amman on Friday against a recent government agreement to import natural gas from Israel, local media reported.

This is the third consecutive week protests have taken place against the controversial deal, which was signed on 26 September.

This Friday's demonstration departed from the Grand Husseini Mosque in central Amman after Friday prayers.

Chants included “Oh great Jordanian people, the enemy’s (Israel) gas is imperialism,” and “from the south to the north, the gas of the enemy is occupation.”

الشباب لن يكل همه أن يستقل أو يبيد تستقى من الردى ولن نكون للعدى كالعبيد #غاز_العدو_احتلال pic.twitter.com/AkPq3rzvmc — Kefah Adnan - كفاح عدنان #مع_المعلم (@kefaaah) October 14, 2016

Video of the protests in Amman

The government has defended its decision by saying it will cut the state’s energy bill and diversify their sources of gas supplies.

A US-led consortium leading the development of Israel's offshore gas reserves announced the deal to sell natural gas from its Leviathan field to Jordan.

US firm Noble Energy, the lead partner, said the contract with the National Electric Power Company of Jordan (NEPCO) was for 8.5 million cubic metres per day over a 15-year term.

MPs from a variety of different political backgrounds have spoken out against the deal, saying that “normalisation is unacceptable in all its forms”.

The protests are being called by the "National Campaign to Overturn the Gas Deal with the Zionist Entity", a broad coalition of civil society groups, activists, lawyers and political groups.

The campaign estimates that 56 percent of the deal ($5.6bn) and an estimated 40 percent of electricity bills paid by Jordanian households will go directly into Israeli government coffers.