"We will never allow population transfer from Palestine into Jordan," Safadi told US media.
"And that will just take the conflict into a whole new dimension that will be dangerous and disastrous for the whole area ... We will not allow Israel to transfer the crisis to Jordan."
Any attempt to move the Palestinian population to Jordan while neither Palestinians nor Jordanians want that could only expand the area of the conflict or even cause another one, the Jordanian foreign minister added.
Safadi also emphasized that amid the West's strong support of Israel, the Jordanian population increasingly perceived the conflict between Palestine and Israel as a Western-Arab-Israeli conflict, which must be prevented. He called for a return to sanity and laying down arms.
Meanwhile, protests have been going on for a second consecutive day in front of the Israeli embassy in the Jordanian capital Amman, a Sputnik correspondent reported. The crowd has continued to gather Wednesday evening as protesters condemn the deadly bombing of a hospital in Gaza.
Jordanian police said several officers had been injured in the clashes with the demonstrators and rushed to hospital.
On Tuesday, a missile hit the Al-Ahli Arab Hospital in Gaza City, causing a massive blast in which more than 500 people were killed, according to the Health Ministry of Gaza. Hamas blamed the explosion on an Israeli strike, a narrative that was rejected by the Israel Defense Forces, which said the hospital had been hit by a failed rocket launch by the Palestinian Islamic Jihad movement.
On October 7, Palestinian group Hamas launched a surprise large-scale rocket attack against Israel from the Gaza Strip and breached the border, killing and seizing people in neighboring Israeli communities. Israel launched retaliatory strikes and ordered a complete blockade of the Gaza Strip, home to more than 2 million people, cutting off supplies of water, food and fuel. Thousands of dead and injured have been reported on both sides as a result of the escalation.