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JEBA, Polish Chamber of Commerce sign cooperation agreement

By - Jul 09,2018 - Last updated at Jul 09,2018

AMMAN — Jordan Europe Business Association (JEBA) and the Polish Chamber of Commerce recently signed an agreement in Warsaw to increase cooperation and develop economic and trade relations between the two countries, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

The agreement, signed by JEBA’s Jamal Fariz and Vice President of the Polish Chamber of Commerce Mark Klosezko, aims to develop cooperation between the two sides and create a common ground for cooperation between Jordanian businessmen and their Polish counterparts.

The agreement, which was signed during the business forum organised by JEBA in cooperation with the Amman Chambers of Commerce and Industry and the Polish embassy in the Kingdom, aims at enhancing joint cooperation and coordination between the two sides, it also aims to facilitate the participation of the members of the association in activities, events, exhibitions and conferences.

Prince Raad offers condolences to family of minister Farhan

By - Jul 09,2018 - Last updated at Jul 09,2018

AMMAN — HRH Prince Raad, the Regent, on Sunday visited the house of the former minister of education and minister of Awqaf Ishaq Farhan, who died on Friday.

The prince conveyed the condolences of His Majesty King Abdullah to the bereaved family.  

Winners of Queen Rania entrepreneurship competition honoured

By - Jul 09,2018 - Last updated at Jul 09,2018

AMMAN — Deputising for HRH Princess Sumaya, President of Princess Sumaya University for Technology (PSUT) Mashhoor Al Refai on Sunday honoured the winners of the ninth edition of the Queen Rania National Entrepreneurship Competition, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

Some 300 participants of 175 teams took part in the competition, where 26 teams reached the finals. Refai said that, since the establishment of the university in 1991, and under the directives of the princess, who is the chairperson of the university, PSUT has focused on the provision of entrepreneurship programmes in Jordan.

The competition seeks to raise awareness of potential opportunities in the ICT sector and to shed light on innovative and outstanding technology business ideas, plans and start-ups. 

In addition, the competition aims at developing the entrepreneurial skills of participants and fostering the enterprising spirit among university students and graduates, according to Petra.    

Nine year sentence for man who molested 14-year-old sister

Victim ran away from the family house because she was afraid their father would not believe her

By - Jul 08,2018 - Last updated at Jul 08,2018

AMMAN — The Court of Cassation has upheld a March Criminal Court ruling giving a man an increased sentence of 9 years in jail after convicting him of molesting his teenage sister in an Amman neighbourhood in July 2017.

The court first handed the defendant, who is a vegetable seller, a seven-year prison term after finding him guilty of molesting his 14-year-old sister at their home in mid-July. 

However, the Criminal Court decided to increase the sentence by two years and four months because the victim was his sister.

Court documents said the victim was sleeping in her bed in early July when “the defendant lay next to her and molested her”, adding “the victim pushed him away but he did not stop harassing her for over a week, pushing her to run away from her house because she was afraid her father would not believe her if she told him about the sexual assault”.

The victim went missing for a few days, then contacted her family and informed them about the assault, court documents noted, adding that her family informed the authorities and their son was arrested by the police.

The defendant did not contest the Criminal Court’s ruling, and the higher court ruled that the verdict was correct and the defendant deserved the
punishment.

 The Court of Cassation judges were Mohammad Ibrahim, Naji Zubi, Yassin Abdullat, Nayef Samarat and Hamad Ghzawi.

Syria’s regaining control of border crossing ‘good news’ for Jordan

Commander says awaiting political decision to start arrangement to re-open border

By - Jul 08,2018 - Last updated at Jul 08,2018

A soldier is on duty on Saturday at a border military post with Syria as regime forces regain control of the Syria side of the crossing (Photo by Raad Adaileh)

JABER BORDER CROSSING — A top military commander has said that the Syrian army’s regaining control of the border crossing with Jordan is a “positive development” that serves the national security of Jordan.

In an interview during a tour of the northern border zone, Brig. Gen. Khaled Massaid, commander of the northern military region, told Al Rai and The Jordan Times that Syria is now capable of the full control of their side of the Jaber/Nassib border crossing, after the Jordan Armed Forces-Arab Army (JAF) has done its part during the time when the border outpost has fallen in the hands of “terrorist organisations”. 

He stressed, however, that the decision to open the border with Syria is political and if a political agreement is reached, security arrangements will follow.

He added that the JAF are able to fully control the border, thanks to professional military and advanced equipment that JAF possess.

Massaid’s remarks came after the return of calm and the Syrian army’s control in cooperation with the Russian troops over Nassib border crossing (See separate story).

The officer also stressed that Jordan stands firm on border closure decision, pointing out that “90 per cent of the Syrians stranded on the border have returned to their homes”, adding that the remaining numbers are estimated at thousands and the reason for not going back is due to “their own situation with the Syrian regime”.

Other sources at the border  confirmed that, saying the remaining number of the displaced on the border does not exceed 8,000. 

The commander noted that medical services were still provided to the people remaining in the area and that after the treatment, the patients are “immediately returned” to Syria.

The Royal Medical Services has provided medical assistance to about 1600 Syrians from those displaced in the Syrian-Jordanian Free Zone and more than 250 cases have transferred to the Jordanian hospitals.

Regarding the injuries of the displaced people, medical sources said that the injuries were caused by shrapnels on the first day of the bombing, but the following days,  incoming cases mainly suffered from dehydration and intestinal infections.

Commenting on the fate of the terrorist organisations deployed in the south of Syria, Massaid said there was a state of chaos, but in light of the Syrian army’s return, the terrorists will move into the Syrian northern territories or any border area, noting that their current number is estimated at 2,500 to 3,000.

However, Massaid acknowledged fears of terrorists’ possible infiltration into Jordan, but he asserted that JAF are there to keep the danger out, reiterating that the system in place is assuring, in addition to the “rapid air force’s response”, coupled with sophisticated night vision equipment. 

He said a limited number of infiltration attempts from the Syrian side had been detected and prevented recently.

Japanese minister visits northern border

By - Jul 08,2018 - Last updated at Jul 08,2018

AMMAN — Japanese State Minister for Foreign Affairs Masahisa Sato and his accompanying delegation on Saturday visited the northern military region, where they were briefed on the situation in the border area.

The visiting official was welcomed by the Assistant to the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs-of-Staff Brig. Gen. Nasser Mohammad Muhairat and Brig. Gen. Khaled Massaid, commander of the northern military region.

The guest and the delegation were briefed on the tasks and services provided by the advanced medical centres of the Royal Medical Services (RMS) on the Jordanian border, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

The guest and his delegation also visited a military centre to combat terrorism and extremism located in the area, where he met with Commander of the National Defence College, Brig. Gen. Abdullah Shdeifat.

The delegation toured various sections of the centre, praising its role in combating extremist idelogies.

Standing for centuries, Azraq Castle has more to tell

By - Jul 08,2018 - Last updated at Jul 08,2018

A general view of Azraq Castle, around 100km to the south of Amman (Photo courtesy of Ahmad Lash)

AMMAN — The weathered stone walls of the Azraq Castle, located some 100 kilometres East of Amman, have witnessed much of human history, serving as a strategic site in Roman, Byzantine, and Islamic times. 

A scholar said that studies of the history of the fortification are not complete. 

Ahmad Lash, a Jordanian scholar from the Department of Antiquities (DoA) told The Jordan Times in a recent interview that “most of scholarly studies have focused on the Roman, Byzantine and Ayyubid periods, so questions about other periods remain unanswered”.

He added that it is well known that the Azraq area is referred to in many historical sources on account of “its militarily and commercially significant location, as well as its position on the pilgrim route from Damascus to Mecca”. 

Nevertheless, said Lash, who managed a DoA project to restore the castle between 2006-2008, the oldest inscriptions in Greek and Latin date back to as early as the 2nd century AD, when the castle was built to protect the caravan road that connected southern Syria with Arabia because of its strategic importance as an outpost for the Persian Empire.

The Arabic inscription above the main gate details the castle’s rebuilding during the Ayyubid period ten centuries later, in 1236, when the area was under threat from invading Tatars.

From historical evidence and archaeological indications, it is clear that in the pre-Islamic era, there was a trade route connecting the Arabian Peninsula with the Levant via Wadi as-Saran to Damascus, the expert noted.

“Other routes led south from Azraq to Bayir Al Jafir, Maan and to Hijaz through Tabouk, or to Sinai and Egypt through Aqaba,” Lash stressed.

During the Umayyad period (661–750 AD), Azraq was not as important in military terms as it was during the Roman and Byzantine periods, the scholar underlined, which rendered the black-stone castle less strategically important, although the area, an oasis in the eastern desert, was frequented by the new Arab rulers in Damascus for recreation. 

The strategic and military importance of Transjordan, in general, and Azraq in particular, was revived during the Ayyubid and Mamluki periods, when the Ayyubids realised the strategic significance of the desert town during their military campaign against the Crusader occupation of Palestine and south Jordan, which posed a threat to communications between Egypt and Syria, and to the pilgrimage route between Damascus and Mecca.

“In this respect, Sultan Naser Dawood (1206-1261) ordered the rebuilding of the castle in 1236 while Izz Eddeen Aybak restored it,” he noted.

With the Mongolian incursions, the importance of Azraq and its old military fort increased.

“This posed a real danger to the existence of the Mamluk state, as well as a threat to the holy cities of Mecca and Medina,” Lash underlined.

“During the early 20th century, Azraq Castle was used by Prince Ali Bin Al Hussein and T. E. Lawrence as a base from which to launch the Great Arab Revolt towards Damascus, and then it was re-used by the Druze in the Syrian uprising against the French colonial forces in 1924,” Lash stated.

In more recent times, after the creation of Jordan, the Azraq oasis became the headquarters of Border Guards.

“This all demonstrates how the importance of Azraq fluctuated according to wider social and military conditions,” the researcher concluded.

But after standing for centuries in the harsh desert environment, the need for its restoration become apparent. 

Lash and his team restored the southwestern portion of the site, one of several restoration projects conducted by DoA since the 1970s.

First female divers certified in Aqaba

Three of 15 participants in specialised training on reef checking and eco-diving were female

By - Jul 08,2018 - Last updated at Jul 08,2018

Participants in the programme receive comprehensive training on species identification and diving, among others (Photo courtesy of JREDS)

AMMAN — A specialised training on reef-checking and eco-dive has concluded in Aqaba, producing Jordan’s first certified female divers, marine conservationists said on Saturday.

Fifteen participants, three of whom were females, underwent the specialised training on reef-checking and eco-diving, according to Ehab Eid, the Royal Marine Conservation Society of Jordan's (JREDS) executive director.

“The participants are from the local community of Aqaba. They are from institutions which are key partners of JREDS, including the Royal Jordanian Navy and the Aqaba Diving Association,” Eid told The Jordan Times.

The training, which concluded on Thursday, seeks to create a bigger team capable of providing ecologically sound and economically sustainable solutions to save coral reefs, Eid highlighted.

“The five-day training programme entailed theoretical and practical parts. The participants received comprehensive training that entailed a training manual and species-identification flashcards. This was followed by several diving attempts at the Aqaba Marine Park, with the aim of applying theories in practice,” he underlined.

By creating partnerships among navy, personnel community volunteers, government agencies and CBOs, "JREDS believes that management of these critically important natural resources will be improved", and that the level of awareness and knowledge of the coral reefs of Aqaba will be enhanced, Eid continued.

The marine conservationist noted that similar training was conducted in 2016, but the recent training programme constituted a huge milestone, as it entailed the participation of three female divers.

“Now Jordan has its first three female divers who are trained and certified to check the coral reefs of Aqaba for vital indicators that gauge whether they are healthy or not, and to act upon such reports,” Eid commented.

Coral reefs in the Gulf of Aqaba, located some 330km south of Amman, cover almost half of Aqaba’s coastline, offering 21 diving locations for the exploration of diverse, colourful and unique coral reefs, according to JREDS.

Thirteen kilometres of Aqaba’s coastline, which stretches over a total of 27km, are covered with globally diverse coral reefs.

Mohammad Tawaha, JREDS, marine conservation programme manager and the society’s office manager in Aqaba, said that participants were tested for the international reef-check accreditation at the end of the training programme, noting that results will be announced soon

“Through this, more qualified divers will be engaged in the international eco-divers community worldwide,” he underlined.

The training programme, which was implemented in coordination with the Aqaba Marine Park of the Aqaba Special Economic Zone Authority, was supported by the EKF ESS project and funded by Germany through the GIZ and in collaboration with the Ministry of Environment, according to JREDS.

The unique beauty of Aqaba’s coral reefs lie in the fact that 250 out of Aqaba’s 516 fish species inhabit the reefs, according to the society.

The Gulf of Aqaba is a semi-enclosed water basin attached to the semi-enclosed Red Sea, with a length of 170km, an average width of about 15km and a maximum depth of more than 1,800 metres.

Jordan’s coastline represents the northernmost outcropping of coral reef in the world and tolerates a higher salinity rate compared to other seas, according to the guide on toxic creatures in the Gulf of Aqaba.

Razzaz mourns passing of former Education minister Ishaq Farhan

By - Jul 08,2018 - Last updated at Jul 08,2018

AMMAN — Prime Minister Omar Razzaz on Friday mourned the passing of former minister of Education Ishaq Farhan, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported. The prime minister commended Farhan's efforts in all the posts he assumed, and extended his condolences to the family of the former minister.

Farhan has served as minister of Education and minister of Aqwqaf, senator, president of the University of Jordan and Zarqa Private University, and president of the Royal Scientific Society.

The former minister has received several medals of honour and was among the top leaders of the Islamic movement in Jordan.

As Education minister, he supervised the renewal of schools' curricula, and exerted efforts to "Arabise" education at UJ. 

Annab meets hotel association over boosting sector

By - Jul 08,2018 - Last updated at Jul 08,2018

AMMAN — Minister of Tourism and Antiquities Lina Annab on Saturday met with the Jordan Hotel Association's president and its members to discuss means of boosting the tourism sector, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

In the presence of officials from the ministry and the Jordan Tourism Board, Annab called for a comprehensive study on the hotel sector in Jordan to improve its services, meet the tourists' needs and encourage businessmen to invest in the sector.

She commended the association's "essential role" in enhancing the hotel services, stressing that it is a "joint duty" for both institutions and expressing the ministry's readiness to share expertise in this regard.

Also on Saturday, Annab met with the Jordanian Association for Traditional Crafts and Industries to discuss issues and challenges facing the antiquities sector.

She stressed the necessity to improve the sector and regulate its work through mentoring its prices and costs, which are "highly important" for tourists, calling for supporting craftsmen, especially in rural areas, in order to utilise their skills in showcasing the national products and reviving Jordan's heritage. 

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