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Jordan, Germany extend dates, funding for SME support programme

By - Dec 14,2019 - Last updated at Dec 14,2019

AMMAN — Jordan and the German Agency for International Cooperation (GIZ) on Saturday signed an amendment to extend their joint “Support for micro-, small- and medium-sized businesses” programme to 2024 instead of 2022 and increase its budget from 7 million euros to 10 million euros. 

The agreement was signed by Minister of Industry, Trade and Supply Tareq Hammouri and Director of the GIZ’s Jordan and Lebanon Office Elisabeth Girrbach, the Jordan News Agency, Petra reported.

The programme aims to implement sectoral strategies to enhance the capabilities of micro-, small- and medium-sized businesses in the sectors of food processing, information and communication technology and tourism.

Towards this goal, the project works to improve the competitiveness of these institutions and enhance their capabilities. It also aims to upgrade the business and investment climate, develop tools for companies to access financial and non-financial services and facilitate dialogue between the public and private sectors.

A workshop on the programme’s operational plan was opened in the presence of the ministry’s secretary general, Yousef Shamali, who stressed the importance of the partnership with the GIZ.

Shamali said that the ministry “looks forward to developing the joint venture with the GIZ” in light of the agreement to extend the implementation of the programme until April 2024, Petra reported.

He noted that supporting micro-, small- and medium-sized businesses is “a priority for the government” due to their contribution to enhancing the competitiveness of the national economy and their role in providing new jobs, highlighting the part they play in building a private sector capable of competition on the local and global levels. 

Girrbach underlined the “distinguished partnership” that brings the GIZ and the Ministry of Industry, Trade and Supply together in implementing a number of technical support programmes geared towards promoting sustainable economic development. She stressed the importance of continuing partnership to achieve the development desired by the Jordanian government.  

Heart of Amman initiative supports start-ups with social impact

By - Dec 14,2019 - Last updated at Dec 14,2019

The Heart of Amman initiative encourages Jordanians to come up with solutions that will improve their daily lives as urban citizens, according to UNDP Resident Representative Sara Ferrer Olivella (Photo courtesy of UNDP Jordan)

AMMAN — The UNDP’s Heart of Amman initiative has announced that 30 of the most promising and developed start-ups participating in the programme will be given financial support to help establish and start their businesses, in addition to continued mentorship.

A UNDP statement on Saturday noted that the chosen start-ups went through a “rigorous selection process”, as more than 800 applications were initially submitted to the programme, which the organisation is carrying out in partnership with the Greater Amman Municipality (GAM).

Of the 800 start-ups, 100 were admitted to Heart of Amman, which comprises an intensive 12-day boot camp for training and mentorship with the aim of establishing businesses that focus on economic and social development in Amman. 

Each of the 30 start-ups will receive mentorship, financial grants and support in networking. 

Last week, support in networking began through an event where participants met with potential investors, technical experts and successful entrepreneurs, who offered them guidance and mentorship to enhance their businesses and increase their opportunities to succeed. 

The start-up founders will continue to meet with these experts to connect with suitable, relevant stakeholders and seek potential collaborations and investments. 

Amman Mayor Yousef Shawarbeh stressed that GAM supports initiatives and programmes that promote and bring about sustainable development in the centre of Amman, and enable young people to enter the labour market with innovative ideas, according to the statement.

UNDP Resident Representative Sara Ferrer Olivella said: “At UNDP, we believe that successful interventions come from the community and its citizens. The Heart of Amman initiative encourages Jordanians to come up with solutions that will improve their daily lives as urban citizens.”

“This initiative is very special because it engages all stakeholders in the city including citizens, municipalities, the private sector and civil society entities in helping GAM achieve its inclusive development goals for the capital,” she was quoted in the statement as saying.

The Heart of Amman initiative is being implemented with the technical assistance of UNDP Inclusive Growth and Sustainable Livelihoods Pillar in partnership with local administrations and municipalities, and supports Jordan with a special focus on urbanised areas. 

The UNDP develops interventions and implements projects that target the most vulnerable communities in Jordan. This covers all aspects of sustainable development with a focus on youth empowerment and engagement, gender equality, increased employability, sustainable livelihoods and inclusive urban civic-centred planning projects, the statement concluded.

SSIF to establish third solar energy station

By - Dec 14,2019 - Last updated at Dec 14,2019

AMMAN — The Social Security Investment Fund (SSIF) last week signed an agreement to start implementing a project to establish a third solar-energy power station to provide electricity to hotels owned by the Social Security Corporation (SSC), SSC branches and the SSIF headquarters.

SSIF CEO Kholoud Saqqaf said that building the station with a capacity of five megawatts in Ghour Al Ramah is part of a scheme that started in April when it established two stations with a total capacity of 10 megawatts, according to an SSIF statement on Saturday.

Saqqaf noted that the first two stations will commence operations during the first half of 2020. The CEO pointed out that these stations will reduce the SSC’s annual expenditures by JD7 million. 

Jordan’s ambassador to Latvia presents credentials

By - Dec 14,2019 - Last updated at Dec 14,2019

AMMAN — Nawaf Tal, Jordan’s ambassador to the Kingdom of The Netherlands, on Friday presented his credentials to President of the Republic of Latvia Egils Levits as Jordan’s non-resident ambassador to the republic in the Latvian capital Riga.

During the meeting, Tal conveyed to Levits His Majesty King Abdullah’s regards and His Majesty’s wishes of prosperity to the Latvian people, the Jordan News Agency, Petra reported.

In turn, the Latvian president asked the ambassador to convey his best regards and wishes to King Abdullah and to the Jordanian people, as well as his hopes to further consolidate the relations between the two countries.

Ambassador Tal also held meetings with the Latvian minister of state for foreign affairs and Latvia’s deputy house speaker. 

Head of Republic of Adygea meets Circassian businesspeople

By - Dec 14,2019 - Last updated at Dec 14,2019

AMMAN — Head of the Republic of Adygea Murat Kumpilov on Saturday met with a number of Circassian businesspeople in Jordan.

During the meeting held at the Circassian Charity Association, Kumpilov highlighted the importance of his visit to the Kingdom in enhancing bilateral ties in the economic, cultural, educational and health fields.

He also expressed his country’s readiness to boost investment in the Kingdom, including export of wheat and rice, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

Jordan Investment Commission General Secretary Faridon Hartouqa highlighted the importance of Jordanian-Adygea cooperation, notably in the agriculture sector, pointing out that the two sides have agreed on expertise exchange in this arena besides the possibility of launching direct air links.

Investing in adolescent health ‘beginning of a long road’ to youth empowerment

36 countries participate in regional conference in Amman

By - Dec 14,2019 - Last updated at Dec 14,2019

The 3rd Regional Adolescent Health Conference aims to strengthen adolescent health systems through the framework of the Sustainable Development Goals (Photo courtesy of Adolescent Health Conference website)

AMMAN — With the aim of strengthening adolescent health systems through the framework of the Sustainable Development Goals, the 3rd Regional Adolescent Health Conference, organised by the Royal Health Awareness Society (RHAS) in cooperation with the Ministry of Health and the International Association for Adolescent Health (IAAH), was launched on Thursday in Amman.

The opening ceremony touched on enhancing policies in youth services and exchanging expertise on all aspects of adolescent health in order to build a healthy environment and achieve long-term positive impact, by drawing attention to this segment of society.

The conference’s theme, “Investing in Healthier Generations”, is “the beginning of a long road ahead towards developing strategies and schemes to equip young people with necessary knowledge and due attention, particularly given that their numbers continue to grow", Minister of Health Saad Jaber said during the opening ceremony.

Barbara Shenstone, regional director of the International Development Research Centre, noted at the ceremony that more than 78 million people worldwide are under the age of 19, representing one-fifth of the global population.

Youth are a “great treasure”, as the ones tasked with carrying societies forward, she said, adding: “They are young, strong and talented, but as this conference shows, they can have particular vulnerabilities in keeping up with our times.”

Young people today face the challenges that come with a modern world that is crowded, polluted, often violent and in constant evolution and change, Shenstone said.

“For some, the future is uncertain. Adolescents — in particular, girls — may face the risks of early marriage and sexual and gender-based violence, in addition to social norms and practices that can cause obstructions of identity,” she added.

Deputy Regional Director of Arab States at the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) Frederika Meijer also highlighted that adolescence is a “critical period” in human development, when physical, emotional, social and psychological changes take place.

“Investing in adolescents pays off in upcoming generations, and they should take part in development agenda as potential change makers,” she said during the ceremony.

The Ministry of Health gives “great attention” to young people aged 10 to 19 through its School Health Directorates, according to Jaber, who noted that school health programmes take a “prominent place” within the ministry’s strategic plan for 2018-2022.

Comprehensive medical examinations have been provided to approximately 99 per cent of youth, with the aim of helping them establish healthy lifestyles, the minister said.

The conference is witnessing the participation of 36 countries, and the ceremony saw the attendance of Health Minister of the Palestinian National Authority Mai Alkaila, RHAS Director General Hanin Odeh, representatives from international institutions and the private sector and academic experts from Jordanian and Arab universities.

Jordan pharmacy giant draws on skills of fresh graduates, women in growth path

By - Dec 14,2019 - Last updated at Dec 14,2019

Amjad Aryan

AMMAN — Despite what many call a “flat” year for the Jordanian economy, Pharmacy One opened 25 new branches in 2019, with its President and Founder Amjad Aryan saying that his “faith in better days is unwavering”.

In an interview with The Jordan Times, Aryan said that if he had to do it all over again, Jordan would still be his first choice for investment.

Opening the pharmacy chain’s first branch in 2001, Aryan said his initial goal was to open 10 branches. Nearly 20 years later, however, Pharmacy One has 106 branches all over the Kingdom.

“In the beginning my dream was 10, then 20, then 30, but I certainly never came to Jordan thinking I was going to open up more than 100 pharmacies. If that is an indicator of anything, it is that an investment in Jordan can prosper and grow far beyond what any investor expects,” he said.

Pharmacy One currently employs over 1,000 personnel, a number Aryan hopes to expand.

“Investing in Jordan is not just about making a profit, it is also about employing locals. It is worth noting that around 60 to 65 per cent of our employees are women,” he added.

Alongside a largely female workforce, 80 per cent of Pharmacy One’s employees are fresh graduates, Aryan said, adding that as part of the company’s corporate social responsibility, it has established 10 simulation pharmacies in different Jordanian universities to train pharmacy students.

“There were a lot of complaints from the private sector that these fresh graduates are not ready for the labour market, which is why we established these simulation pharmacies. I like to believe that one has to do something about helping fresh graduates rather than complain about them not having experience,” he added.

Dismissing what he called a “general air of negativity” in the Jordanian economic market, Aryan said that “better days are coming”.

He pointed out that along with the increase in Jordan’s population, building a recognisable name brand and earning consumer trust sit at the heart of his and other businesses’ success in Jordan.

“I think if the government were to include us Jordanian investors in dialogue with foreign investors, we could be of great help,” said Aryan.

He added that “reassuring foreign investors of the safe and secure Jordanian market, as well as warning them against pitfalls and letting them in on success secrets is beneficial to everyone”.

Aryan applauded His Majesty King Abdullah’s directive to the government to lower medicine prices, calling the move “essential” in maintaining Jordan’s role as a regional and international medical tourism destination.

“We have excellent medical facilities, talented doctors and great medical staff — so why not promote ourselves? We are already well-known for all that inside the Arab world, but now it is time to remarket ourselves to the whole world,” he said.

Calling Jordan the “Arab hub” for medical tourism, Aryan believes that what is standing in Jordan’s way is that its private and public sectors “do not recognise their own potential”. 

He called for a collective effort to promote Jordan’s local talents and investment advantages, as well as pave the way for new investors.

Crystal-Margaret Bennett: Pioneering archaeologist in region remembered

Scholars pay tribute to founder of British Institute in Amman

By - Dec 14,2019 - Last updated at Dec 26,2019

Crystal Bennett dictating to her secretary in her Amman office, 1976 (Photo courtesy of Simon Bennett)

AMMAN — A lecture recently held in London paid tribute to a pioneering archaeologist in the MENA region and the founder of the British Institute in Amman, Crystal-Margaret Bennett.

Bennett (1918-1987) was a member of a generation of “formidable British female archaeologists in the Middle East”, said Archie Walls, an architect specialised in Islamic architecture, adding that those female scholars were all “big characters”.

Bennett was a disciple of another great British archaeologist of the Levant, Kathleen Kanyon (1906-1978), and made lasting and deep friendships in the region. It was this, as well as the ability to  think about the future role of British archaeology in a changing Middle East that led her to the founding of the British Institute, Walls told The Jordan Times in a recent e-mail interview.

“It was her many friendships with Jordanians and various British diplomats, plus the financial backing of friends in the UK that enabled her to have a flat in the Alia Building, 1st Circle Jabal Amman, and use it as the headquarters of her own excavations and as the Amman office of the British School of Archaeology in Jerusalem (BSAJ),” he wrote.

In 1975, Bennett established the British Institute in Amman, which was initially called the British Institute at Amman for Archaeology and History; and its patron until now is HRH Prince Hassan.

Bennett was a pioneer of archaeological research in Jordan and the region, studying both the Neolithic Period and Edomite sites in Petra in 1958, 1960 and 1963, noted Professor Bill Finlayson, who spoke on Wednesday at the 30th Crystal Bennett Memorial Lecture of the Council for British Research in the Levant at the Institute of Archaeology of of the University of London.

Bennett ensured that her excavations were well organised, remembered Walls, adding that she trained her staff well and instilled a sense of responsibility in each of them, as can be seen by the successes of her team in their later careers.

“I knew Crystal Bennett personally. I spent April, May and the first half of June 1973 at the British School of Archaeology in Jerusalem, working on my Edinburgh University PhD on mosaics in Asia Minor and the Levant,” said  Professor Claudine Dauphin, noting that as a member of the BSAJ, this was her base.

Furthermore, very few archaeologists came to Jerusalem during the period between the June War and the October War, as the political situation was unstable, Dauphin told The Jordan Times, noting that at times there were only the director, Bennett, architect Archie Walls, who was recording the Islamic monuments of Jerusalem, and herself.

“She had an incredible number of contacts, which she shared generously with researchers, often contacting senior academics by telephone to set up meetings between them and the younger scholars,” Dauphin remembered.

Prince Hassan took a notable interest in the Bennett excavations, and on various occasions his input played a significant role in the success of the projects, Kay Prag from The University of Manchester told The Jordan Times.

“In 1978, she conducted soundings at Dhra [west of Karak], and in 1980 soundings in Wadi Dana and Wadi Faynan, as well as a further season at Busayra in 1980 and at Tawilan in 1982. She was much involved in setting up the first of the great triennial conferences on the history and archaeology of Jordan, which was held in Oxford in 1980,” Prag reminisced, adding that these conferences still retain “the spirit of friendship and international cooperation”.

Apart from the importance of her Jordan excavations in reconstructing Edomite history, Bennett, following in the footsteps of her mentor Kathleen Kenyon, “attracted to Jordan British funding for research, and provided wages for teams of local workmen, who revered her for her humane qualities”, according to Dauphin. 

“Crystal Bennett was a ‘great lady of Near Eastern archaeology’ in all senses of the word ‘great’,” Dauphin concluded.

King congratulates Algerian president-elect

By - Dec 14,2019 - Last updated at Dec 14,2019

AMMAN — His Majesty King Abdullah has sent a cable to Algerian President-elect Abdelmadjid Tebboune, congratulating him on winning the presidential election.

In the cable, King Abdullah reaffirmed keenness to continue bolstering the deep-rooted ties between the two countries and peoples, and to maintain coordination and consultation on issues of mutual concern, according to a Royal Court statement.

His Majesty expressed best wishes to the Algerian president-elect, wishing the people of Algeria further prosperity and progress. 

 

King congratulates UK PM on election win

By - Dec 14,2019 - Last updated at Dec 14,2019

AMMAN — His Majesty King Abdullah has sent a cable to UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson, expressing congratulations on his party’s win in the general election.

In the cable, King Abdullah highlighted Jordan’s keenness to advance the strategic and bilateral ties with the United Kingdom in service of the interests of the two countries and peoples and in pursuit of regional and global peace and stability.

His Majesty wished Prime Minister Johnson success, wishing the people of the United Kingdom further prosperity and progress, according to a Royal Court statement.

 

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