You are here

Local

Local section

Aqaba silos tender worth JD10m, not JD70m — investigation

By - May 30,2018 - Last updated at May 31,2018

AMMAN — Initial results reached by an investigation team of the Jordan Integrity and Anti-Corruption Commission (JIACC) on the Aqaba's silos explosion incident revealed that the value of the tender stood at JD10 million and a reserve of JD1 million, a JIACC source said on Wednesday. 

The source added that the money was allocated to remove and demolish the old port which included 75 silos, fuel and gas reservoirs, among other facilities, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported. 

The source noted that the first payment of the tender has not yet been paid to the main contractor, refuting the news of the tender volume standing at more than JD70 million as "false". 

The investigation is expected to conclude within days, Petra added. 

An explosion took place on May 14, leaving six people dead and four injured, as several contracting companies were demolishing construction sites at the premises.

Aqaba Special Economic Zone Authority (ASEZA) has issued a statement stating that the cause of the explosion was due to “a spark from iron wielding or another electric source”, adding that ASEZA closed down the premises to allow rescue teams and investigators quick and easy access to the area.

In previous remarks to The Jordan Times, ASEZA Chief Commissioner Nasser Shraideh said the prosecutor tasked with investigating the incident charged a contracting and sub-contracting company that were tasked with demolishing the old port with causing the death and harm of individuals.

Ministry of Public Sector Development launches gov’t leadership programme

By - May 30,2018 - Last updated at May 31,2018

AMMAN — A programme for government leadership was launched on Tuesday in conjunction with the Kingdom's celebrations of Independence Day, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

The programme is implemented by the Ministry of Public Sector Development in cooperation with the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

Deputising for the Prime Minister Hani Mulki, Minister of ICT and Public Sector Development Majd Shweikeh attended the launch ceremony and stressed that the programme is aimed at providing a pool of qualified government leaders capable of assuming leadership positions in the public sector departments and institutions to bring about change and development, especially at the level of government services provided to citizens or in stimulating economic growth in different sectors.

Shweikeh pointed out that 50 trainees were selected from 21 government institutions and departments related to the service of economic activity registration to participate in two programmes. 

She added that the selection process followed a transparent, scientific and non-traditional mechanism based on submitting applications by the candidates of the supervisory and leadership category, in addition to reviewing these applications by a neutral committee and subjecting the applicants for examinations and interviews.

Shweikeh explained that during the coming period, the participants will be reintegrated by setting out the foundations and mechanisms to re-engage them in their departments in the public sector, in order to benefit from the training they received. The coming period will witness a new start for the role of the Institute of Public Administration as a centre for preparing future leaders in the government apparatus, the minister noted.

Freihat meets with Afghan ambassador over cooperation

By - May 30,2018 - Last updated at May 30,2018

AMMAN — Chairman of the Joint Chiefs-of-Staff Lt. Gen. Mahmoud Freihat on Wednesday met with Afghani Ambassador to Jordan Abdullah Habibi over means to enhance cooperation, coordination and relations between the Kingdom and Afghanistan, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported. 

Halasa checks on desert highway sites in Maan

By - May 30,2018 - Last updated at May 30,2018

AMMAN — Minister of Public Works and Housing Sami Halasa has checked on the desert highway sites in Maan Governorate which were affected by last winter's floods, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported on Wednesday.

Accompanied by Maan governor, Al Husseinieh mayor and residents of the district, Halasa toured the sites and stressed the importance of following up with the watersheds in Al Husseinieh district, where an international hydrologist came to provide technical advice on the location.

The minister also checked on the completed first part of the desert highway project, noting that work is being implemented in 11 work sites separated by seven kilometres each.

He said the second phase of the project is expected to be completed within a month, adding that the project is executed based on international standards and in accordance with the arrangements made with the Saudi Fund for Development, which funded the project. 

Energy saving programme for Petra hotel launches second phase

By - May 30,2018 - Last updated at May 30,2018

AMMAN — Jordan Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Fund on Wednesday signed the second phase agreements of the programme to support four new hotels in Petra in implementing renewable energy projects to increase their competitiveness, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

The agreements, aim to help these hotels reduce their electricity bill to a total of JD1.5 million. Minister of Energy and Mineral Resources Saleh Al Kharabsheh said: “It positively reflects on the ancient city of Petra and achieves the government's developmental goals."

French Agency for Development Office Director Luc Le Cabellec praised the cooperation between the agency and the Ministry of Energy to support the tourism sector in the city of Petra and to "scale up efforts exerted to rationalise energy and preserve the environment".

Tourism stakeholders join nationwide strike against income tax draft law

By - May 30,2018 - Last updated at May 30,2018

The main sit-in near the Professional Associations Complex in Amman to protest against the draft income tax law on Wednesday (Photo by Amjad Ghsoun)

AMMAN Several tourism associations on Wednesday joined the nationwide strike in protest of the draft amendments to the Income Tax Law.

The Jordan Society of Tourism and Travel Agents (JSTA) has issued a notice to all of its members to take part in the strike starting from 12:00pm on May 30 in rejection of the draft law.

JSTA Secretary Kamal Abu Diab told The Jordan Times on Wednesday that around 700 travel agents and tourism workers across the Kingdom stopped working at 12:00pm. 

Approving the Income Tax Law amendments by the government and refereing it to the Parliament without opening dialogue with the tourism and travel sector, and not taking into account the difficult economic burdens the sector is already bearing, has pushed the association to take part in the strike, Abu Diab said.

The amendments to the law impose "very heavy burdens" on all agents and employees, who are already suffering from the effects of regional crises as well as other challenges and taxes that have threatened the tourism sector's sustainability.

Travel and tourism agents are convinced that if the amendments to the Income Tax Law are passed, they will affect the standards of living for agencies’ owners and employees and will push investors to abandon the sector, the secretary said.

For Jordan Tourist Guides Association (JTGA), their participation in the large-scale protest consisted of three activities: closing the association's headquarters, staging a sit-in in front of it and joining the main protest at the Professional Associations Complex in Shmeissani area in Amman.

JTGA President Hasan Ababneh said that the reason for their joining in the strike was that  "the draft law was not discussed with tourism stakeholders".

The draft law will negatively affect the tourism sector, which is a leading sector in the national economy, contributing more than 10 per cent of the GDP, Ababneh said.

For tour guides on the field, Ababneh said that they could not join the strike as they were running trips that have already been contracted and paid for by tourists.

But even those who were unable to join found a way to participate, as they took to social media to praise the association for joining the strike.

Jordan Restaurants Association also partook in the strike in rejection of the amendments of the law which, it said “adds new economic challenges to run and sustain restaurants which are already burdened with taxes and licensing fees”.

Health professionals say gov’t has to ‘mitigate our pains too’

By - May 30,2018 - Last updated at May 30,2018

The medical personnel of various public and private hospitals took part in the strike against the income tax draft law in Amman on Wednesday (Photo courtesy of Zuhair Msallam)

AMMAN — Doctors, pharmacists and nurses on Wednesday took part in the nationwide strike at their respective hospitals to protest the income tax draft law and the civil service system.

The medical personnel of various public and private hospitals in Amman were seen leaving their offices and gathering in the hospitals' yards this morning, in response to the calls launched by the Kingdom's three health associations — the Jordan Medical Association (JMA), the Jordan Pharmacists Association and the Jordan Nurses and Midwives Association — earlier this week.

"The salaries are the same while prices are increasing. Meanwhile, the government is drafting and endorsing laws that only seek to earn more and more money from the poor's pockets," a nurse, who spoke under anonymity, lamented. 

The health professionals were among a number of unionists and professional association members who joined Wednesday's strike demanding that the draft amendments to the Income Tax Law not be endorsed, in addition to changing employees’ performance evaluation system, describing these laws as "unjust" and "against the interests of citizens", according to a group of doctors striking at Amman Medical Centre (AMC).

"Even before these laws, our rights as health workers were already diminished and, now, with these decisions, the burden will become unbearable," Hanan Rushdi, one of the striking pharmacists, told The Jordan Times, claiming "one day is not enough and does not make a difference. There should be more escalating measures if we get no response."

"The government should stop responding to the International Monetary Fund's dictations at the expense of its citizens," another pharmacist, who preferred to remain anonymous stated, adding "our strike is peaceful and we intend no harm to our beloved country or its properties, but 'some people' are betting that the citizens will remain silent and it is now the time to speak up."

"Jordan is a limited resourced country. Yet, the people who are taking the country's resources are the same ones who endorse these laws on poor citizens," the pharmacist continued, urging for "the corrupt to be held accountable".

For her part, a female doctor said: "We are standing here for all citizens, not just for the health staff, as we demand a country that grants us our basic rights of living."

A doctor at the Islamic Hospital, a private hospital that took part in the strike, echoed similar remarks. "Citizens are already burdened with the many taxes they pay on all items and products; yet, even their incomes are coveted and the government wants to get a share of it," he said, stressing "when the poverty line in Jordan is higher than the tax exemption limit, then we have to stand out and say 'enough'."

He also referred to a recent report published earlier this week by The Economist, which ranked Amman as the most expensive city in the Arab world. "High prices, no salaries and then more and more taxes," the doctor commented. 

For Ahmad Abu Ein, a doctor at Prince Hamzah Public Hospital, "the Income Tax Law will demolish the entire middle class, which eventually affects the whole country."

On the civil service system, one of the health staff said: "The evaluation system puts employees at the mercy of their direct managers' moods; so, if they decide to give a 'fair' rating to the employees for two consecutive years, they will lose their jobs."

"The civil service system makes us lose our employment security," the doctor commented.

A pharmacist noted that the civil service system had excluded the teachers following the strikes they held last month, which she cited as evidence to the "injustice" of the system, saying "if one segment was excluded, then others should be as well."

Mohammad Kofahi, a member of the JMA's strike follow-up team, told The Jordan Times that both the public and private hospitals took part in the nationwide strike, except for the emergency staff and doctors who had to deal with urgent cases, noting the patients have reacted "positively" to the movement, showing understanding.

"Even directors of some private hospitals joined their staff in the strike," he commented.

Hani Dalqamoni, a nurse at AMC, pointed out that "as health cadres, we are humans in the first place, so we delivered aid to urgent cases, including the dialysis patients. However, we are striking regarding the regular and routine cases". 

"When we received a child with a high fever, five of our cadres suspended their strike and ran for help," he recalled.

"We are truly glad that our campaign has reached out to all citizens as patients are standing by our side and have cooperated with the strike," another health staff commented, stressing "we are loyal to our profession and we want to help people and mitigate their pain, but we need the government to understand our demands and mitigate our pains too." 

JT reporter presents book on Jordan’s interfaith drive to Pope

By - May 30,2018 - Last updated at May 30,2018

The Jordan Times reporter Rula Samain presents a copy of her book on Jordan’s interfaith efforts to Pope Francis at the Vatican on Wednesday (Photo courtesy of Rula Samain)

AMMAN — The Jordan Times’ reporter and author Rula Samain has presented a copy of her book “Fortress of Peace: Jordan’s Interfaith Drive and Model of Coexistence” to Pope Francis at the Vatican.

“It was a great honour for me that His Holiness accepted the present.  In fact, the Pope himself and senior Vatican officials are aware of the efforts His Majesty King Abdullah in the field of interfaith harmony, and some were involved in these efforts and aware of the book,” Samin said.

She added that the visit and the brief meeting with the Pontiff during the general audience on Wednesday were arranged by the Vatican embassy in Amman and Monsignor Khaled Akasheh, bureau chief for islamic relations at the pontifical council for interreligious dialogue at the Vatican. 

The book, published last year in English and is being translated into Arabic, documents the Kingdom’s efforts to promote interreligious harmony at the world level and defend the true image of Islam. 

“Fortress of Peace” focuses on Jordan as an exemplary model of peace, interfaith harmony, tolerance and dialogue, Samain said upon launching the book, which has attracted the attention of organisations and figures concerned with the issue around the world. 

The book is divided into five sections, starting with the Hashemites’ philosophy of religious coexistence since the Great Arab Revolt, Jordan’s initiatives in interfaith dialogue: mainly the Amman Message and its accomplishments, “A Common Word” and “The World Interfaith Harmony Week”. 

In Another chapter, the author interviewed Arab and foreign figures who had been involved in interfaith activities organised by Jordan, who gave their reflections on the experience and advice on how to avoid setbacks and move ahead towards a fully mature experience. 

The writer had also toured religiously mixed communities around the country to collect the verbal heritage of Muslim-Christian coexistence, coming up with a series of anecdotes that show the unique cordial relationship between the Muslim and Christian components of the Jordanian society.

In the last chapter, the author discusses “outstanding issues” that need to be addressed regarding the Christian community in Jordan, from a legal perspective.     

Mulki, Fayez say new income tax law ‘necessary to reach self-reliance’

By - May 30,2018 - Last updated at May 30,2018

AMMAN — Senate President Faisal Fayez on Wednesday discussed with Prime Minister Hani Mulki the amended draft law on the income tax, which was referred by the government to the Lower House of Parliament last week, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

"The conditions we are going through require united efforts in order to deal with the challenges based on national responsibility," Fayez said, noting that the meeting comes as part of continued consultation between the Senate and officials to follow up on the government's measures to address economic challenges. 

Fayez stated that the Senate will continue shouldering its national responsibility to address economic challenges so as to serve the interests of the country's citizens, preserve economic and social stability in the Kingdom and translate His Majesty King Abdullah's directives to improve citizen's living conditions.

The Senate president stressed that the chamber, through its specialised committees, will conduct in-depth dialogues on the tax law with various commercial and industrial sectors, civil society institutions, experts and specialists, in order to reach understandings on the law based on its monitoring, legislative and constitutional duty.

For his part, Mulki said the government is "serious" in dealing with various economic challenges to reach a stage of self-reliance and overcome the difficult economic conditions. 

The premier pointed out that the government is continuing dialogue on the draft law and explaining its contents to various stakeholders including the Senate and Lower House, various civil society institutions and other concerned bodies.

Fayez emphasised that "no financial and economic reform should affect the lives of citizens, especially the limited and moderate income citizens", calling for the establishment of "deterrent measures to prevent tax evasion and the misuse of public money".

Pharmaceutical exports up to over JD600 million in two years

By - May 30,2018 - Last updated at May 30,2018

AMMAN — Jordanians spend 37.6 per cent of their income on food and 6.8 per cent on health (36 per cent of which on medicine), Jordan Food and Drug Administration (JFDA) Director General Hayel Obeidat said on Wednesday.

In an interview with the Jordan News Agency, Petra, Obeidat said that the access of Jordanian medicines to 62 countries worldwide is a "big success" for the local industry, noting that the value of pharmaceutical exports went up to more than JD600 million in the past two years.

He said that the Kingdom got rid of the counterfeit medicine market in 2014, attributing this achievement to the increasing awareness on genuine medicines.

So far, the prices of 262 medicines have been lowered in 2018, including 139 whose prices may be lowered again before the end of the year, Obeidat said, noting that 2017 witnessed lowered prices for 955 medicines.

Meanwhile, the number of food violations has dropped remarkably and was accompanied by lesser destroyed quantities of expired food, he stated, attributing these developments to harsher penalties and the application of gradual penalties to violators.

The director general said the Kingdom's food exports in 2017 amounted to $4.3 billion, with a violation rate to health standards of 0.38 per cent.

He noted that there are some 1,800 factories for foodstuff and some 82,000 facilities that deal with food in its various stages of production, manufacturing, distribution and sale in the Kingdom, which makes monitoring this big number of food institutions an "uneasy mission" for JFDA.

The administration implemented 13,986 inspection visits in the first third of this year, which resulted in the closing of 598 food institutions, 183 case referrals to courts and 7,204 fining of institutions in various sectors.

During the January-April period, JFDA destroyed 569 tonnes of foodstuff, while the number of violating institutions stood at 781, Obeidat noted. 

On the administration efforts in Ramadan, he said that JFDA personnel implemented 3,892 inspection campaigns across the Kingdom, during which they issued 48 fines, destroyed 12,934 litres of foodstuff and 48,011 kilogrammes of food items, in addition to closing six food institutions and suspending 60 others. 

Pages

Pages



Newsletter

Get top stories and blog posts emailed to you each day.

PDF