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Fourth Circle area protests come to halt

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

AMMAN — After seven days of protests against economic policies and social injustice, protests near the Prime Ministry, located at the Fourth Circle area in Amman, came to a halt. 

A Jordan Times reporter on the site said that the area was almost empty, except for dozens of young people who were celebrating what they deemed an achievement, and traffic was flowing smoothly. 

A security source confirmed in a statement the end of the protests led by young people, which have continued peacefully except for some frictions that caused injuries among security personnel. 

The civil action came one day after the professional associations staged a general strike and a rally in protest mainly against the income tax draft law, which Prime Minister-designate Omar Razzaz on Thursday promised to withdraw from the Lower House. 

Budget deficit JD378m stand at in first third, debts up

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

AMMAN — The budget recorded in the first third of this year a deficit of JD378 million after grants, compared with JD146.7 million for the same period of 2017, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported, citing updated Finance Ministry data. 

The Finance Ministry said in its monthly report published on Thursday that the deficit, before external grants, amounted to about JD452 million, compared with a deficit of about JD231.7 million for the same period of 2017. Total public revenues (domestic and grants) in the first half of this year amounted to approximately JD2.464 billion, compared with JD2.366 billion for the same period of 2017.

Meanwhile, the total public debt at the end of April this year amounted to JD27.721 billion, constituting 96 per cent of the gross domestic product (GDP) at the end of April, compared with JD27.269 billion or 95.3 per cent of the GDP in 2017. 

The debts of the National Electricity Power Company (NEPCO) and the Water Authority amounted to about JD3.7 billion in the first third, the report said,  adding that the net public debt at the end of April of this year showed a rise of JD756.9 million, compared to the end of 2017. The ministry explained that the funds were borrowed to offset the deficit and cover guaranteed loans for NEPCO and the Water Authority.

Drug dealer sentenced to 15 years in jail for smuggling attempt to Saudi Arabia

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

AMMAN — The Court of Cassation has upheld a September State Security Court (SSC) ruling sentencing a man to 15 years in prison after convicting him of attempting to smuggle illicit drugs  to Saudi Arabia in September 2015.

The court declared the defendant guilty of attempting to smuggle over 500, 000 Captagon pills to Saudi Arabia with a trailer and handed him a 15 year prison term. The SCC also ordered the defendant to pay JD10,000 in fines.

Court papers said the defendant wanted to make quick cash and decided along with other suspects, who did not appeal their verdicts, to smuggle illegal narcotics to Saudi Arabia.

On September 15, the defendant hid the illegal pills in a secret compartment of the trailer with the help of others, in an attempt to smuggle the drugs to the neighbouring country.

However, the group was arrested after the driver of the trailer decided to inform the authorities about the plan, court papers said, noting that the defendant had contested the SSC’s ruling charging that “it did not follow the proper procedures and depended on unreliable witnesses”.

But the higher court ruled that the SSC followed the proper proceedings when sentencing the defendant. 

The Court of Cassation judges comprised Mohammad Ibrahim, Naji Zubi, Yassin Abdullat, Bassem Mubeidin, and Hamad Ghzawi.

Jordan Tourism Board sets goals for increased numbers of visitors this year

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

Most of the Kingdom’s 28,000 hotel rooms are located in Aqaba (photo), Amman and the Dead Sea (Petra photo)

AMMAN — The Jordan Tourism Board (JTB) is working on a plan to boost promotions to the country’s attractions with the aim of attracting tourists from the Gulf counties, Asia and Europe, an official said on Thursday.

“As part of the plan, we will soon start running commercials and launch promotional activities to attract tourists from these markets,” JTB Director General Abdul Razzaq Arabiyat told The Jordan Times on Thursday.

“We will start by launching activities in the Gulf countries,” he said, noting that the JTB will place posters and ads in the main commercial centres and malls in the Gulf countries as well as distribute flyers and brochures highlighting the Kingdom’s tourist attractions and variety of tourism.

The official said they expect a rise in the number of tourists coming to Jordan this season. “There has been a rise in the number of visitors and in the sector’s revenues since the beginning of this year,” he noted, adding “based on data received from inbound tourism travel agencies, there is an increase in bookings to visit the Kingdom this year which is promising. Thus, we expect the numbers to continue to grow”. 

According to official figures, the number of tourists coming to the Kingdom rose by 8.7 per cent in the first four months of this year, reaching around 1.539 million visitors. 

The percentage of overnight visitors during the January-April period of this year increased by 8.5 per cent when compared to last year, according to JTB figures.

Of the total number of visitors over this period, 311,667 were from the Gulf countries, a 20.5 per cent increase when compared to the same period of last year.

The tourism sector, which contributes 11 per cent of the country’s economy annually, directly employs 51,000 individuals, 82.5 per cent of whom are Jordanians, in addition to tens of thousands of indirect jobs, according to the Tourism Ministry’s figures.

The Kingdom currently counts around 28,000 hotel rooms with around 92 per cent of the tourism facilities being located in Amman, Aqaba and the Dead Sea. Almost 90 per cent of the workers in the sector are present in these three locations.

Forensic research seeks to solve mysterious deaths at Qasr Hallabat archaeological site

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

The arrow points to the cistern at the archaeological site of Qasr Hallabat where the researchers revealed remains of five suspected victims of homicide (Photo courtesy of Megan Perry)

AMMAN — Forensic anthropology usually involves the investigation of recent, medico-legally significant human remains as opposed to ancient skeletons recovered from archaeological sites, an American researcher explained.

These two perspectives recently merged at the archaeological site of Qasr Hallabat (35km northeast of Amman), where the skeletons of five people showing signs of homicide were found in one of the site’s cisterns, pushing bio-archaeologists to formulate stories surrounding their death.

“To establish the antiquity of these remains, we first relied on the stratigraphy text from excavations by Ignacio Arce [former director of the Spanish Archaeological Mission] and his team to determine that these were not modern individuals, and probably dated shortly after Qasr Hallabat went out of use,” said anthropology professor at East Carolina University Megan Perry. 

To better establish the date of the skeletons, we submitted bone samples from two of the individuals for carbon-14 dating of the skeletons. The dating process estimates when these individuals died and when the decay of 14C isotopes in their body began, the scholar explained. 

“This not only confirmed Arce’s relative date provided by the stratigraphy, but also established an absolute range of 768-895 AD for their deaths, and presumably the dates when they were deposited into the cistern,” she elaborated.

The skeletal analysis, however, gave some clues about the circumstance of the individuals’ death, noted Perry, who also serves as a consultant on forensic anthropology cases in the US.

“Analysis of the skeletons by me and one of my graduate students Taylor Montgomery, identified several injuries in the bones that occurred perimortem [at or near the time of death]. Trauma that occurs before death shows some skeletal response at the point of injury, which can be seen by the naked eye or by a thin section of the bone,” the scholar highlighted, adding that damage to the body or bones that happens after death can be identified as having different colour or texture of the trauma edges than the rest of the bone and a more flaked, splintered breakage pattern. 

The areas of injury in the Hallabat skeletons did not show any bone healing nor did they have the same characteristics of postmortem (after death) damage, Perry pointed out.

In addition, five of the skulls had evidence of blunt force trauma, and some of the arms and legs had signs of sharp force trauma. Furthermore, the patterning and timing suggested that it was homicide rather than accidental trauma or suicide, she underlined.

“We were also interested to note that a few of the skulls had healed cranial blunt force trauma that had occurred some years before death. Thus, some of these folks had been in violent skirmishes before,” stressed Perry, who conducted isotope analysis of the dental enamel of these individuals alongside graduate student Kathryn Parker “to identify their geographic origin”.

“The dental enamel absorbs various isotopes from the food and water [or breast milk] a child consumes while the teeth are forming, which, based on the teeth that we used, would be about birth to four years of age,” Perry noted, adding that the ratios of some isotopes, such as strontium and oxygen, vary across the landscape [strontium based on bedrock geology, oxygen based on water sources].”

“So, by comparing the isotope ratios of strontium and oxygen in the dental enamel to those expected at Hallabat, we can identify if these individuals grew up around Hallabat during childhood,” she explained, noting that the ratios show that the individuals most likely spent their childhood moving between the basalt fields of the Hauran, to the north and east of Hallabat, and the limestone regions of Hallabat.

“Considering that they originated in the same region and died at the same place presumably at the same time, they have a shared life history,” the professor claimed, saying that the best hypothesis is that they were part of a group of pastoral nomads or traders that moved regularly across the landscape as children.

“Perhaps they were still mobile and making temporary use of the water sources of Hallabat when some of them were killed,” the researcher elaborated.

“Who disposed of them in the cistern remains an open question, but, considering that the cisterns of Hallabat provided important water sources for the area, it does not seem logical that a group making regular use of them would contaminate one with dead bodies. So perhaps they were outsiders, or a local group who wanted to deter others from using the Hallabat resources. It remains a mystery,” Perry concluded.

Crown Prince checks on injured officers

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

HRH Crown Prince Hussein checks on a security officer injured during protests in Amman on Thursday (Photo courtesy of Royal Court)

AMMAN — HRH Crown Prince Hussein on Thursday checked on the health condition of a number of public security and Gendarmerie personnel being treated at Al Hussein Medical Centre after they were injured while performing their duty at the Fourth Circle area  in Amman on Wednesday.

His Highness was briefed by Royal Medical Services Director Maj. Gen. Muin Habashneh about the medical treatment provided to the injured, a Royal Court statement said. 

The Crown Prince expressed his pride in members of the public security, the Gendarmerie and all the security agencies who are working to protect the security of the homeland and citizens.

The Crown Prince was accompanied on the visit by the directors of the public security and Gendarmerie departments.

Later Thursday, he posted a photo on Instagram with one of the injured gendarmes and public security personnel with the caption: "We are all proud of your dedication, spending every night away from your families in the holy month of Ramadan to protect Jordanians. The peaceful expression of opinion witnessed over the past days attests to our people's sense of responsibility and your humane professionalism. God bless you and bless #Our Jordan."

Youth ‘optimistic’ after King’s remarks on ‘potential of new blood’

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

Two young protesters carry Jordanian flags during a protest near the Prime Ministry in Amman, on Wednesday (AFP photo)

AMMAN — Jordanian youth voiced optimism following His Majesty King Abdullah’s latest remarks in which he called for “opening the way to new blood and youth with potential to serve their country” and expressed hopes to see the Royal vision translated into reality.

“We are very proud that the Royal vision gives the youth trust and freedom to express themselves and share their concerns and opinions at a time when the youth minister himself was not a youngster,” activist and blogger Noor Abu Goush told The Jordan Times on Thursday, adding “we hope the time has come when the youth can finally have a visible presence in the government, the Parliament, and the decision-making process in general.”

Mohammad Qasem, a 28-year-old activist and one of the instigators of the Fourth Circle area  campaign, said: “The majority of the Jordanian society is from the younger generation, yet, the leadership positions are dominated by older individuals, whose decision-making approach is based on unilateralism.”

“It is necessary that the new government members are chosen based on their competence, not on considerations like age, geography, or tribalism ,” Qasem told The Jordan Times, stressing the necessity for the new prime minister’s reply “to be announced as soon as possible in order to cool-off the fired street movements”. 

For 26-year-old lawyer Reem Sanna, “our country needs both the wisdom and experience of the older generation and the enthusiasm and creativity of the youth. Jordan would enjoy a great and balanced system if we achieved cooperation between the two parties, where the youth rush is channelled and the old intransigence is softened.”

The activists agreed that the younger generation has “great potentials” and “impressive capabilities”, but these should be directed wisely and invested in the right place. 

“Perhaps not all youth are aware enough, so we need to raise their awareness, give them freedom of expression, and put an end to the muzzling approach that many universities and educational institutions are exercising,” Qasem noted, stressing “the change starts from the very early stages of schools, where not only school books should be changed but even the teaching mechanisms and the relationship between students and educators should be tilted towards open dialogue and shared discussions.”

President of the Centre for Strategic Studies at the University of Jordan (UJ) Musa Shteiwi, who is also a sociology professor, noted: “The enforced and dominating political culture, which gives huge considerations to age and experience and less attention to the young voices, is placing an obstacle towards the youth involvement in leadership positions.”

He said that the King sent the new government a “clear and powerful” message, which recognises the voices of the youth, their ideas, opinions, and concerns.

“Involving the youth in the government is only one part, as they should also be involved in various aspects of life as well as public dialogue,” Shteiwi said, highlighting “involving the youth gives them hope that they will have an effective role, encouraging them to work harder.”

Abdullah Dalaen, a member of the “SHABAB 2250” project, said that the youth movement in the country is “changing”.

“I admit that I used to exercise a barbaric behaviour when expressing my opinions, but now, I have learnt how we should all be one and mobilise our efforts towards a joint goal that we want to achieve, through a peaceful and civilised approach,” Dalaen explained.  

SHABAB 2250 is related to the UN Security Council’s adoption of the resolution 2250 on youth, peace and security, which was adopted in December 2015 following HRH Crown Prince Hussein’s speech as the chair of the UN Security Council meeting in 2015.

The recent street movements, which were mainly dominated by the Jordanian youth, are “a good indicator for national unity and the youth’s love for their country”, said Majd Sarsak, president of the UJ students’ union, who said “we want a government that can feel its citizens and stand by their side, and this can be achieved through the inclusion of all segments of society in a national dialogue that meets citizens’ demands and not only collects money from their
pockets.”

Coalition formed to readjust tax, economic policies

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

AMMAN — A total of 23 civil society organisations (CSOs) across the Kingdom have formed a national coalition aimed at adjusting tax and economic policies through the development of policy papers and the participation in future consultations, the organisations announced in a joint statement on Wednesday. 

The decision to form the coalition came after a meeting held by the Jordanian Women’s Union (JWU), where representatives of the 23 CSOs gathered to “stand up for their legitimate rights” and respond to governmental decisions that are “clearly not based on a plan to save the country from the accumulation of debt and the issues affecting the working class”, the statement read.  

The meeting built up on a position paper previously issued by the Phenix Centre for Economic and Informatics Studies, which called for the instauration of the principles of tax justice and the amendment of the powers of the Council of Ministers in determining the goods subject to the general tax on sales and the special tax.

Tamkeen Foundation, the Arab Media Centre, Nour Al Khair Association for Development, the Arab Women Association and the Federation of Independent Trade Unions are some of the CSOs forming the coalition, along with JWU and the Phenix Centre. 

Asked about the steps to be taken by the coalition in the near future, director of the Phenix Centre Ahmad Awad told The Jordan Times that the organisations are hoping to “find opportunities for dialogue and consultation on several socio-economic policies and tax laws”, stressing that “our responsibilities as CSOs are to contribute effectively to such dialogues and to present alternative policies that are compatible with our vision of achieving tax justice”.

In its statement, the newly formed coalition called on the government to “withdraw the new Income Tax Law immediately and resort to dialogue with all concerned parties”, warning that the new law “exacerbates social inequality and the poverty crisis”.

The statement called for “the elimination of the existing gap between the continuous rise in taxes and the quality and quantity of free services available for the citizens”.

The coalition also demanded “the extinction of corruption, the opening of the files and the adoption of the principle of transparency when identifying the sources of funds used by the government”, stressing the importance of reviewing economic policies “to protect the unprivileged population”. 

“The current imbalances have been deepened in the past years as a result of the crises in Syria and Iraq, which led to the closure of the borders between Jordan and its two main economic partners,” the statement continued, adding “the great waves of refugees in Jordan in the last six years have also contributed to an increase in the pressures on the national economy, affecting basic services such as education, health, labour or transport.”

In this regard, the organisations proposed a series of solutions to the status of the economy in the Kingdom “without compromising the citizen’s safety and welfare,” such as developing the agricultural sector in order to reduce the unemployment rates or the provision of loans for production and investment projects. 

Senate president calls for ending protests to ‘avoid instability’

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

AMMAN — Senate President Faisal Fayez on Thursday called on Jordanians to stop the marches and protests so as to prevent the “infiltrated” and “sleepers” from threatening the country’s stability, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

Fayez noted that the recent protests have been witnessing escalations despite the resignation of the government and His Majesty King Abdullah’s directives to the prime minister to conduct a “comprehensive national dialogue” on the income tax draft law.

“We respect the youth’s right to express their demands peacefully and this right is guaranteed by the constitution,” Fayez said during a consultative meeting with the Senate on Thursday, adding “the young Jordanian people who took part in demonstrations have expressed their opinions freely while guarded by the various security organs, showing the mutual respect between the demonstrators and the security officials, and reflecting a civilised image that various Arab and international media agencies were keen on rendering.”

The senate president stressed: “Your voice is heard” and called on the protesters to resume back to their work and universities so as to “prevent bloodshed, preserve security and stability, and to give the new government, which is still in the formation process, an opportunity to present its vision on the controversial issues”.

He pointed out that Jordanians are collectively called upon to stand in line with the country’s security and economic challenges.

He referred to Wednesday’s attack on a Gendarmerie officer, and previous similar attacks and slogans that were offensive to the country and its constitutional institutions, which he said “cannot be tolerated nor accepted”.

Fayez called on all Jordanians to fight the perpetrators of these cowardly acts and reject hate speeches, which “only seek to shake the national cohesion”.

The senate president commended the Jordanian people who expressed their opinions in a civilised manner without violating the law and with full loyalty to their country and its Hashemite leadership.

He also voiced his appreciation to the Gendarmerie, who exerted “massive” efforts to protect the national security and ensure a safe and stable security conditions in the Kingdom. 

Tkiyet Um Ali, Mazar orphan centre distribute food parcels to 217 families in Karak

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

AMMAN — Tkiyet Um Ali and the orphan care centre in the Southern Mazar on Thursday distributed food parcels to 217 underprivileged families in the Karak-affiliated district.

Naser Mahadin, centre director, said that these parcels included lentil, meat and other food items that were presented to help the families meet their needs in Ramadan, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

Mahadin added that Eid clothes were also distributed to 400 orphans and children of families benefiting from the centre services.

He added that the centre, in cooperation with UNICEF, has embarked on the third phase of “Makani” project that targets 900 Jordanian and Syrian children in educational, entertainment and life skills over three months under the supervision of qualified teachers. 

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