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Online payments increased fivefold last year — CBJ

By - Jan 06,2018 - Last updated at Jan 06,2018

AMMAN — Payments through eFAWATEER.com, an online bill payment service, have increased by 5 times in 2017, reaching JD3.345 billion this year, compared with JD561 million in 2016, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported on Saturday.

The Central Bank of Jordan’s (CBJ) data showed that the number of financial transactions since the launch of the system in 2015 amounted to some JD4 billion.

The amount of payments in December 2017 rose to JD470 million, compared to JD135 million in December 2016, an increase of 248 per cent.

Between November 2017 and January 2018, the payments rose by 10.3 per cent, with total payments in November reaching JD456 million.  

The number of bills done through eFAWATEER.com reached about 4.7 million in 2017, compared with 1.8 million bills in 2016.

Payments to government institutions accounted for the largest share of the payments (92.1 per cent), with a value of JD3.82 billion, with the rest being mostly in the telecommunications and service sectors.

The number of channels of payment from banks and financial institutions amounted to 27, with 111 entities which issued bills payable electronically via eFAWATEER.com. 

 

The CBJ said it expects 20 institutions and companies to join eFAWATEER.com this year.

Farmers rejoice as rain soaks Kingdom

Dams now hold 82.9mcm or 24.9 per cent of their total capacity of 333 mcm — El Nasser

By - Jan 06,2018 - Last updated at Jan 06,2018

The rain, which started on early Friday and lasted until early Saturday, 'has saved this year's agricultural season from a looming drought', officials said (Photo by Osama Aqarbeh)

AMMAN — Over 20 million cubic metres (mcm) of water entered the country’s 12 main dams after the rain, which lasted between Friday and Saturday, according to official figures released on Saturday.

The rain, which started on early Friday and lasted until early Saturday, “has saved this year’s agricultural season from a looming drought”, officials said.

Several streets and houses were flooded on Friday, following the heavy precipitations which also caused landslides in different parts of the country, according to authorities, which did not report any weather-related fatalities. 

A depression accompanied by a wet and cold air mass started affecting the country Thursday evening, bringing strong winds that raised dust and reduced visibility in desert areas as well as heavy rain across the Kingdom, according to the Jordan Meteorological Department (JMD).

Wadi Al Sir received the highest amount of rain, according to figures from the Ministry of Water and Irrigation, which indicated that the western Amman district received 98.2 millimetres (mm) of rain in 24 hours (between Friday and Saturday).

Meanwhile, Aqaba, some 330 kilometres south of Amman, received the lowest amount of rain, registering only 2.5mm, according to the ministry’s figures.

In a statement e-mailed to The Jordan Times, Minister of Water and Irrigation Hazem El Nasser said that the rain has channeled 20 mcm into the country’s 12 major dams.

“The dams now hold 82.9 mcm or 24.9 per cent of their total capacity of 333 mcm,” El Naser said.

Despite the excellent amounts of rain received during the depression, water levels at the dams are far below what they reached during the same period last year.

Ministry’s figures indicate that during this time last year, the dams held 141.78 mcm or 43.85 per cent of their total capacity.

“Friday’s rain raised the overall rain that the country received since the start of the wet season to 2.3 billion cubic metres (bcm) of water, which constitutes 29.1 per cent of Jordan’s long-term annual average of rainfall of 8 bcm,” El Nasser said in the statement.

During this time last year, the country received 45.6 per cent of its long-term annual average of rainfall, according to the ministry.

Meanwhile, ministry’s spokesperson, Omar Salameh, said that some 70 per cent of the total amount of rainwater that entered the country’s dams went mainly into three dams: King Talal, Mujib and the under-expansion Waleh.

“The dams’ storage is expected to slightly increase during the next two days as floods are still entering the dams,” Salameh told The Jordan Times.

The official said that the rain has “revived the hopes of farmers and cattle breeders” of a productive agricultural season, especially as rain has been meager this winter.

President of the Jordan Valley Farmers Union Adnan Khaddam said that farmers are “rejoiced” by Friday’s rain, expressing hope that the country would witness similar depressions which will bring sufficient rain.

“We are very happy that the country has finally received good rainfall amounts this winter. This has a very positive impact on crops in the valley and it will reduce salinity levels in water stored at the dams,” Khaddam told The Jordan Times.

The farmers’ representative said that, when the Jordan Valley receives adequate rain, farmers use less water for irrigation and also use less pesticides as rain and cold weather limit the spread of pests.

“The rain is very good for citrus trees as it washes away dirt and strengthens the colour of the fruits. It is also very good for leafy vegetables such as lettuce, cabbage, parsley and mint among other crops, which are the main cultivations in the Jordan Valley currently,” he noted.

Khaddam said that the Jordan Valley received excellent amounts of rain, especially in its northern part.

 

Meanwhile, the Greater Amman Municipality on Saturday said in a statement that its teams responded to 200 weather-related emergencies on Friday, 90 per cent of which were sewage flooding and rising water levels in basements of buildings which do not have pumps.

American historian explores Ottoman land reforms in Palestine

By - Jan 06,2018 - Last updated at Jan 06,2018

Susynne McElrone

AMMAN — Ottoman land reforms are poorly understood by historians, according to Susynne McElrone, an American historian specialised in the history of Palestine.

Very little is known about the implementation of property-tenure reforms in Palestine, she said, noting that the  Land Code was promulgated in 1858, while additional property-ownership-related reforms followed during the 1860s and 1870s.

“These reforms were significant because they institutionalised individually held, centrally issued title deeds [tapu], which established for the first time an individualised value-based property tax and made both the tapu and this tax important bases of proof of land rights,” McElrone told The Jordan Times in a recent e-mail interview.

The predominant narrative about the issue has long been that villagers and other small landowners in the late-19th century did not understand the significance of land-tenure reforms, she explained.

“Motivated by fear of military conscription and increased taxes, they declined — or, in the language of the narrative, stubbornly refused — to register their lands with the government in their own names,” she said.

As such, Ottoman land-tenure reforms in Palestine are widely understood to have resulted in outcomes opposite to their intentions, namely a class of landless agriculturalists and the formation of large landed estates, as village mukhtars, urban notables and merchants from Palestine and Lebanon registered in their own names small farmers’ landholdings upon the request of suspicious and fearful fellahin, McElrone elaborated.

In order to implement these reforms, the empire sought to register every property in the empire in the name of individuals, the American scholar continued.

“This was a huge undertaking,” she said, adding “despite what we commonly read in history books, I think that they were overwhelmingly successful”.

According to McElrone, these reforms are also important because they continue to influence land-tenure law in the Levant nowadays. For example, the Jordanian Department of Lands and Survey traces its history back to these Ottoman reforms, the researcher highlighted.

“Ottoman-era tapu documents have been important proofs of Palestinian historical land ownership, which is crucial in legal battles against land confiscations today. So important, in fact, that in 2005, Turkey gave copies of all its Ottoman-era land records for Palestine to the Palestinian Authority,” she stressed.

 While land records in Turkey have not been made available to researchers or the public, Turkey has announced that it would grant access to the otherwise-closed Ottoman Tapu-ve-Kadastro archive in Ankara — the most complete archival source for such documents —  to Palestinians in need of documentary evidence of Ottoman-era land tenure, McElrone underlined.

One of the problems of writing this history has traditionally been a difficulty of access to the tapu land records, she explained, adding that a number of historians have written that, when the Ottomans retreated, they took most of their records with them.

“Given the predominant narrative, I was surprised when researching Ottoman Hebron to come across a late 19th-century register cataloged as a ‘registration of property owners, Hebron district, 1876’,” the scholar explained.

McElrone was even more “surprised” to realise that Hebron villagers had registered in their names close to half a million dunams of land in this register, and that this register was a registration of properties for the new property-tax rather than a tapu register.

“The two types of registration surveys [tapu and property-tax] were conducted independently of each other,” she said, noting that investigation of this record alongside tenure questions brought to the Hebron Sharia court between 1867 and the beginning of World War I have greatly helped her in her work.

Even though Ottoman law required every property holder to register his or her property with the tapu, it appears many people registered their land with the tapu only when they had a need for this specific legal document, because there were no legal consequences for not registering, and traditional methods of proving land tenure continued to remain valid in the empire.

Property-tax records are a better reflection of land tenure in the empire in the reform era than the tapu records, which have traditionally been the focus of scholars’ attention, because, unlike the tapu, the tax was obligatory and the government exerted great efforts to ensure its collection, McElrone maintained.

She explained: “My research plan here [in Jordan] involves expanding this investigation to other parts of Palestine, comparing property-tax records and tapu records, and attempting to trace for the first time the progress of reform implementation in Palestine, because it has never systematically been traced.”

 

“It is also a project that contributes to rural Ottoman history by tracing patterns of land-tenure and the socioeconomic history of land-tenure in the reform era,” she noted, concluding that the Ottoman empire was an agrarian state and its population overwhelmingly rural, but this population has left the smallest imprint on the written record, making rural history the most difficult to uncover.

Teachers’ verbal, physical violence still prevalent in schools — SIGI

By - Jan 06,2018 - Last updated at Jan 06,2018

AMMAN — An 18 per cent of the students in Jordan reported verbal violence in schools over the period of 2015-2016, while an 11 per cent reported being subjected to physical punishment, a statement issued by the Sisterhood Is Global Institute (SIGI) on Thursday said. 

“Training teachers and principals to deal with cases of violence and disruptive behaviour is not enough and their capacities in this area are still limited,” the statement highlighted, pointing out that some educators “show aggressive tendencies to manage the classrooms and discipline the students”.

“The teachers here don’t understand the difference between educating us and beating us, they hit us and call this discipline,” an 17-year-old student from Zarqa told The Jordan Times, adding that “people think that this is in the past now, but it is still happening”. 

“Verbal violence is not even considered violence, it’s a habit, they tell us that we are stupid, that we are animals, it happens every day,” the student continued. 

“I hate school,” said Ahmad, a 10-year-old student from Madaba Governorate, who complained that “the teachers beat us when we are late or when we don’t hand in our homework”.

 “I want to get out of school as soon as possible because I can’t handle it, it’s too much for me,” the student added. 

In addition, the institute expressed concerns over a rise in the violence among students, which includes subversive behaviour, deliberate destruction of property, harassment, bullying and gender-based violence, pointing out that “the Ministry of Education makes clear efforts to promote non-violence and positive student discipline”.

The performance of the students was also a preoccupying factor for SIGI, which stated that “although the performance of female students is better than the performance of their male counterparts in reading, mathematics and science, international comparisons put Jordan in the 20 per cent of countries with minimum participation in the International Student Assessment Programme”.

The lack of harmonisation among policies for the selection, development and management of teachers and their educational practices was the “main contributor to the learning crisis”, according to the statement. 

The institute also stressed the problem of the gender gap in the educational system, pointing out that “although enrollment rates in primary education are equal to a large extent between males and females, the learning environment, curricula, learning methods, hostile environment and management systems continue to reinforce socially stereotyped roles”.

Regarding the enrollment rate in the secondary stage, the organisation highlighted an increase in the school dropouts due to high rates of child labour, early marriage and violence forcing students to leave school. 

 

“I dropped out of school because I was not that good at studying. My father found a job for me, I saw the opportunity of making money and I did not see a point in finishing my education,” a local from Irbid told The Jordan Times, adding that “now, I see my siblings going to university and I regret it, because I know that I will have a hard time finding a decent job without a degree”.

Aqaba container truck drivers end four-day strike

By - Jan 06,2018 - Last updated at Jan 06,2018

AMMAN — Container truck drivers in Aqaba on Friday ended their four-day strike, which resumed the flow of goods from the port to the Kingdom’s markets, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported. 

The president of the Truck Owners Association Mohammad Dawoud said that negotiations between the association, MPs and the government led to the suspension of the strike for 14 days, provided that the drivers’ needs are met.

The drivers are demanding the need to control and regulate the transport of individual container trucks, find solution to loading quantity and restrict cargo companies from interfering with individual container trucks’ businesses, Dawoud added. The strike led to the accumulation of thousands of containers at Aqaba port last week, Petra reported.

 

 

CARE celebrates 70 years of work in Jordan

By - Jan 06,2018 - Last updated at Jan 06,2018

AMMAN — CARE International’s celebrations of the 70th anniversary of work in the Kingdom, held under the title “Realising permanent change”, is an opportunity to assess achievements over the past years, Salam Kanaan, the country director of CARE International in Jordan, said on Saturday.

Kanaan noted that the organisation is scheduled to launch new projects in the Kingdom and expand its geographical outreach, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported. Over the past seven decades, CARE International contributed to improving the lives of millions and guaranteeing their rights to receive tools necessary to improve their living conditions, Kanaan added. 

 

 

1981 food establishments suspended, 551 closed by JFDA in 2017

By - Jan 06,2018 - Last updated at Jan 06,2018

AMMAN — Jordan Food and Drug Administration (JFDA) Director General Hayel Obeidat has said that the administration has suspended 1981 food establishments and closed 551 other institutions that violated regulations over the past year, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

Obeidat said that the JFDA will continue to implement strict procedures. He pointed out that over the past year, the violations amounted to approximately JD3.754 million, while revenues amounted to JD293, 948. For his part, director of the regional directorate at the JFDA, Musa Abbadi said that the administration has destroyed 3117 tonnes of solid food and around 326,000 litres of liquid materials.

He pointed out that staff at the directorate carried out around 44,537 inspections, and issued 26,512 warnings to various institutions.

 

 

Two arrested for allegedly setting fire to vehicle with owner inside

By - Jan 06,2018 - Last updated at Jan 06,2018

AMMAN — Personnel at the Irbid Public Security Department (PSD) and Criminal Investigation Department (CID) have arrested two suspects who allegedly set fire to a vehicle while its owner was inside, a security source said on Friday.

The source said that the owner was transferred to hospital where he was reported to be in critical condition, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported. After listening to witnesses’ testimonies, security personnel have arrested one of the suspects who admitted to having disputes with the victim, maintaining that the other suspect set the vehicle ablaze. 

Further investigation led to the identification of the second suspect’s hideout in eastern Amman, where security personnel raided the house and arrested him, the source added.  

Tawjihi winter session starts today

By - Jan 06,2018 - Last updated at Jan 06,2018

Some 117,491 students will sit for the Tawjihi exams on Sunday (File photo)

AMMAN — The General Secondary Education Certificate Examination (Tawjihi) 2017 winter session will start today and end on January 23, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported on Saturday.

Around 117,491 students will sit for the exams on the first day, of whom 89,968 are regular students while 41,751 are private-study applicants who failed in previous sessions, according to Education Ministry spokesperson Walid Jallad.

A total of 175,947 students have registered for the winter session, he added.

Jallad noted that the national exam will be held in 1,581 halls in 522 schools across the Kingdom, adding that 17,000 teachers will be working as exam invigilators, while some 19,000 teachers will be grading the tests in 87 evaluation centres across the country.

For the first time, the ministry has provided an e-service for students to know about the Tawjihi examinations centres through http://schools.bluerayjo.com, Jallad said.

The ministry has urged students to commit to the exams’ regulations, which include not bringing any kind of pen or pencil as they will be provided by the ministry. 

The exams will be split into two sessions: the first at 11am and the second at 1:30pm.

Jallad explained that the ministry has formed an operations room at the ministry’s headquarters, along with another operation rooms at the directorate of exams. The centres will receive the comments and enquiries from exam halls and the community and prepare a report which will be delivered to the minister on a daily basis.

 

He pointed out that any enquiries can be received on the following numbers: 0796142000, 0772370383, 0777222151, 0796795968, 0795720601, landline: 065654918, 065699916, fax 064646654.

Tough situation of male refugees ‘often overlooked’ — study

By - Jan 06,2018 - Last updated at Jan 06,2018

Male refugees are at risk of discrimination, violence and social marginalisation, according to a study (Photo courtesy of CARE)

AMMAN — Single male refugees and unaccompanied adolescent boys are subject to a number of threats and risks which are often overlooked and under-addressed by the humanitarian community, a recent report by the non-governmental organisations CARE and Promundo showed.

Titled “Men and boys in displacement. Assistance and protection challenges for unaccompanied boys and men in refugee contexts”, the report looked into the gendered impact of the refugee crisis on unaccompanied refugee boys and men, highlighting the gaps in the humanitarian response in Jordan, Lebanon, Turkey and Greece.

While the situation of refugee women and children and the risks they face are “quite rightly addressed”, the specific needs of single male refugees, and especially unaccompanied adolescent boys aged between 13 and 17 years, remains often under-tackled, the study indicated.

Economic difficulties encountered by unaccompanied refugee boys and men was pointed out as the most crucial issue, as the lack of legal status  for refugees in host countries makes it difficult, if not impossible, for them to work and earn an income.

“Here, experience doesn’t count. They only want diplomas. I believed that experience or talent could be enough,” a Syrian refugee was quoted in the report as saying.

This difficulty to earn an income also affects these males’ sense of self-worth, as they consider it shameful not to be self-sufficient, the study highlighted. 

According to a psychologist at a male youth shelter, “they take the fact of not having work as a personal failure rather than as the consequence of the broader economic reality. They say: ‘I want to find a job, not just for the money but because I’m a man. I need to support my family back home’.”

Furthermore, unaccompanied refugee boys and men are exposed to various threats in the host countries, such as discrimination, harassment and violence, as well as threats of deportation, which was shown to be especially high in Jordan.

Such issues aggravate the problem of daily mobility for unregistered refugees, who become discouraged from moving around freely by fear of police hostility or arrests, the report, which was authored by Delphine Brun, a researcher on gender and inclusion in humanitarian action, stated.

These issues, among many others, have a devastating impact on the refugees’ psychological state, with cases of mental health issues and distress being widely reported among these groups.

According to International Medical Corps, 35 per cent of refugees living in urban areas in Jordan report reduced functioning in their daily activities due to emotional distress, while 27 per cent said they experienced fear all or most of the time in the two weeks preceding the question.

This social marginalisation and the psychological damages it creates often lead to deviant behaviours including addiction to drugs and alcohol, or criminal activities, the report showed.

According to Brun, male refugees often lack a clear place within humanitarian response frameworks as there is a common perception that men are more able to look after themselves and handle the difficulties caused by displacement. Therefore, their specific vulnerabilities are often overlooked.

“The report does not aim to compare the needs of refugee boys and men with that of refugee women and girls, or to downplay the specific risks faced by refugee women and girls,” Brun wrote, stressing “in exploring the situation, vulnerability and needs of unaccompanied male refugees, the report recognises the inter-connections and relations between different groups in crisis situations and crisis-affected communities”.

She said that failing to address the needs of a specific group can have a negative impact on other groups, in this case, women and children.

Ultimately, the report called for a more evidence-based response, detached from assumptions and false perceptions through better coordinated mechanisms which should have a clear focus on addressing distinct gender needs. 

 

It urged for a specific support to boys and men, particularly those who are unaccompanied, in order to tackle the issue of marginalisation and deviant behaviours.

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