A vehicle exploded a few
hundred metres from the camp, which is home to more than 50,000 people who have
fled the Syrian civil war.
The Jordanian army said
several other vehicles used in the attack were destroyed.
Earlier this month five
people, including three Jordanian intelligence officers, were killed in an
attack on a security office near the capital Amman.
Six Jordanian guards have
been killed and another 14 wounded in a car bomb attack at the Jordan-Syria
border.
The attack took place near
the Rakban camp for Syrian refugees in a remote area of eastern Jordan around
5.30am local time (2.30am GMT).
A Jordanian official said
the attack was launched from the Syrian side of the border.
Jordan has kept tight
control of its frontier with Syria since the outbreak of war in Syria in 2011.
The Rakban crossing is a
military zone far from any inhabited area, and includes a two-mile stretch of
embankments built a decade ago to combat smuggling.
The rest of the border is
heavily guarded by patrols and drones.
Jordan is an ally of the
United States and is participating in the campaign against Islamic State.
The country has received
large amounts of foreign aid to help cope with waves of refugees fleeing Syria,
but has drawn criticism over conditions in the Rakban camp.
Earlier waves of refugees
had an easier time reaching Jordan, with some walking just a few hundred metres
to cross into the country. Jordan closed those border crossings in 2013.
The United Nations refugee
agency said late last year Jordan should accept more refugees and move them to
camps closer to Amman.
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