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Sex selection will create population imbalance — SIGI

By - Jan 04,2018 - Last updated at Jan 04,2018

AMMAN — Results of 2015 population and housing census have shown that gender ratio at birth in Jordan is 105 boys to 100 girls, the Sisterhood Is Global Institute (SIGI) said on Thursday.

The census also showed that the number of boys under the age of five is more than girls of the same age by 5 per cent, according to SIGI.

The institute said that although the ratio is close to the international rate, 103.2, the gap is increasing among the 10-24 age bracket.

The ratio is 106.1 among 10-14 year olds, 106.7 for 15-19 years and 108 among the age segment of 20-24, according to the institute.

SIGI attributed the increase of gender rate for boys to sex selection technology before birth, which would result in demographic challenges in the future.

The Law for Assisted Reproductive Technology 2009 has not been endorsed, according to SIGI, which added that there are 22 fertility centres spread across the Kingdom, of which 13 centres have sex selection technologies.

The centres witness a large turnout by Jordanians and non-Jordanians, according to the statement.

The law's Article A has banned the technology, except for special cases that are related to genetic diseases, SIGI said, adding that the law stipulated a one-year imprisonment and a fine for violators.

 

The Jordanian Iftaa Council has also prohibited the technology and demanded the cancellation of Article B, which allows the selection if parents have more than three children of the same gender, as "the Muslim teachings urge people to accept the baby regardless of gender", said SIGI.

Study recommends to narrow gender gap in entrepreneurship

By - Jan 04,2018 - Last updated at Jan 04,2018

AMMAN — The Jordan Enterprise Development Corporation (JEDCO) has conducted a study, in cooperation with the Centre for Strategic Studies (CSS) at the University of Jordan (and Global Entrepreneur Monitor (GEM), in which it recommended measures to narrow the gender gap in entrepreneurship, according to a JEDCO statement. 

The study urges enabling of women and increasing their role in the labour market, and supporting them in entrepreneurships through training and financial support. 

According to the statement, the study urged the government to support entrepreneurship in rural areas to create job opportunities, strengthen development funds and give priority to underprivileged areas. 

The study also encourages start-ups and new companies on diversifying their products to increase competition with established companies to expand in local and foreign markets, in addition to innovation and use of modern technology, the statement said. 

The study stresses the government's support for factories and companies to raise their export capabilities, through exempting their products from tax. 

The study also calls for restricting the unofficial sectors by addressing the causes that prevent them from registering. 

 

The study pointed out the importance of developing applied education in entrepreneurship in schools and universities, by teaching the importance of innovation and entrepreneurship on the quality of life and income, according to the statement.      

Piles of rocks in Jordan’s Black Desert offer clues to ancient past

By - Jan 04,2018 - Last updated at Jan 04,2018

Excavated Late Neolithic building with standing pillars, on slope of Mesa 7, at Wadi Al Qattafi (Photo courtesy of Yorke Rowan and Eastern Badia Archaeological Project)

AMMAN — When a group of scholars in 2008 began to work together in the Black Desert (eastern Jordan), they found many piles of rocks that once were structures.

“Initially it was easy to miss them,” said Yorke Rowan, an anthropological archaeologist who received his PhD from the University of Texas at Austin.

He, and fellow scholars Alex Wasse and Gary Rollefson found doorways under collapsed basalt rubbles, Rowan recalled, noting that “we thought that perhaps they were similar to the burial structures in the Sinai known as nawamis [circular pre-historic stone tombs] that date to the 4th millennium BC”.

“The first one we excavated at Maitland’s Mesa [M-4] at Wadi Al Qattafi [ around 130km east of Amman], turned out to be a structure dated to the Late Neolithic, a type of structure that we didn’t know from the region. It seemed to have a corbelled, low roof, with exterior storage space that was still standing [with roof and stone pillar],” the scholar explained. 

As they excavated a few more of these structures at Qattafi and Wisad Pools [further to the east], they began to realise that there were hundreds of these structures, at Qattafi and Wisad Pools [and probably other places in the desert too], he elaborated. 

“No one had ever studied these, or even commented on them, as far as I know. We started by taking notes, photographing, and taking GPS points,” Rowan said.

However, most photos from the ground looked similar — piles of black basalt rocks — and to properly survey so many collapsed structures accurately would take years, the researcher noted. 

“Our colleague, Austin ‘Chad’ Hill, suggested that he could begin to map these structures using inexpensive drones that he could build himself — he has been building model planes and flying them since he was a kid, “ Rowan said, adding that by putting cameras on the model airplanes, flying methodically over an area and using the geolocation of the photographs, highly accurate maps can be constructed by orthorectifying the images (correcting them for distortion).

The team has completed the survey of an area along Wadi Al Qattafi, about 32 square kilometres. He stressed that they still must mark all the structures, but Chad has completed the processing of the thousands of images they collected from the UAVs. 

“We knew that there were kites [the hunting traps] in the desert, as this have been noted by many flying over the area for many decades; we knew that there were some in and around the Wadi Qattafi area, but our aerial survey discovered more of these kites because they are so difficult to spot from the ground,” he pointed out.

Furthermore, scholars have also used the drones, on a much smaller scale, at Wisad Pools to map the rock art. 

There are over 400 petroglyphs (pecked rock art) in a small concentrated area right around the pools, where animals would have come for water, he continued.

The expert said: “The most prominent type of animals represented are ibex, followed by other horned animals. Only a few humans are represented. What is surprising is how many kites are pecked into the rocks!”

On the other hand, the ghura huts which they recognised at the top of Maitland’s Mesa, are even more difficult, Rowan said.

“We excavated two of them, but found very little inside: No animal bones, no burned material, and no objects that could tell us when they were built. We also don’t believe that they had a stone roof because the huts are built with very small basalt rocks, and the walls wouldn’t have been more than half a metre high,” he emphasised.

Possibly a skin was held in place by these rocks, and the ghura hut was a small, simple shelter with a skin roof, he speculated, adding that recently “our colleague Bernd Mueller-Neuhof excavated very similar structures to the north, and he found some carbonised material that suggests these date to the mid-4th millennium BC, or the transitional period between the Chalcolithic to the Early Bronze Age”. 

“Since most of what we have explored is not funerary, I can’t really say too much yet about the burial of the dead; we do have evidence that later people would sometimes build their tombs on top of a collapsed Neolithic structure, presumably to increase the height and prominence of the later tomb,” the scholar highlighted.

One of these included some nice objects, such as a bronze spear head, earrings, and beads that seem to date to the end of the Late Bronze Age or early Iron Age, Rowan stressed.

The Eastern Badia Archaeological Project scholars have long-term plans for the area that includes additional mapping of the buildings and kites, and they really want to supplement that with geomorphological study to understand if there used to be soils that would better support grasses and other plants, and animals, he underlined. 

Ultimately, their team hopes to put together a website in Arabic and English so that people can appreciate the beauty of the remote region, since few can reach the area.

 

“In addition, we have to finish studying the animal bones [Alex Wasse is analysing those] and gather more data from residue studies and botanical traces. Our colleague Britz Lorentzen identified oak from our excavations at the largest building at Wisad Pools, suggesting that oak trees may have grown there during the Neolithic period. This small piece of wood is exciting, but we’ll need more information before we can build a whole new story about prehistory in the Black Desert,” Rowan concluded. 

Jordan, China ‘keen on better ties, regional peace’

By - Jan 03,2018 - Last updated at Jan 03,2018

AMMAN — Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi and his Chinese counterpart Wang Yi on Wednesday stressed both countries' keenness to develop Jordanian-Chinese ties.

In a telephone conversation, they also went over regional developments, mainly those related to the Palestinian issue, Syrian crisis and international efforts in the war against terrorism, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

They referred to the continuous contacts between His Majesty King Abdullah and Chinese President Xi Jinping to develop relations between the two countries, which celebrated in 2017 the 40th anniversary of establishing diplomatic ties.

Safadi expressed the Kingdom's willingness to increase cooperation with China and open new scopes of economic and commercial partnerships.

He also reiterated that Jordan respects the "unified China" principle, and the Kingdom's support for the "One Belt, One Road Initiative".

The Chinese minister said that his country highly appreciates its ties with Jordan and is keen on building on the momentum through cooperation projects in all fields.

Safadi praised the Chinese stance that supports Palestinian rights and calls for achieving a comprehensive peace in the region according to the two-state solution, which, he described as the only formula to realise peace and stability.

He also stressed that there is no legal impact whatsoever for the US decision to recognise Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, noting that Arab countries agreed to work on limiting its repercussions through a comprehensive worldwide drive to urge the international community to recognise the Palestinian state within the pre-1967 lines.

Safadi acquainted his Chinese counterpart with the Jordanian diplomatic efforts to ensure that Jerusalem remains a final status issue that can only be determined through direct negotiations with international legitimacy resolutions as the terms of reference, emphasising that any unilateral decisions concerning the city are null and void.

The Chinese top diplomat stressed his country’s unaltered stance that supports Palestinian rights, the two-state solution and gathering international efforts to end the conflict.

They also reviewed the latest updates in the war on terrorism and the Syrian crisis, with both officials stressing the need to forge a political solution to the crisis in line with Security Council Resolution 2254 and in a way that preserves the unity of the country and meets the aspirations of the Syrian people.

Safadi accepted his counterpart’s invitation to participate in the Sino-Arab forum that is scheduled to be held in Beijing in mid-2018.

Arab foreign ministers to meet in Amman Saturday

By - Jan 03,2018 - Last updated at Jan 03,2018

AMMAN — Six Arab foreign ministers will convene in Amman on Saturday to look into progress made in response to the US decision to recognise Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, a source said Wednesday.

In addition to Jordan’s Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi, the top diplomats of Egypt, Palestine, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Morocco are expected to attend the meeting, along with Secretary General of the Arab League Ahmed Aboul Gheit, the source added.

The officials are members of a ministerial delegation formed by the Arab League during its emergency meeting in December to follow up on joint Arab action designed to counter the US move, said the source.

The ministers will look into the consequences of the US decision and pan-Arab efforts to preserve Jerusalem’s Arab character and its historic and legal status, the source added.

At their Cairo meeting in December, the Arab foreign ministers slammed the US decision.

They looked into a unified response to Trump’s decision, which sparked outrage and protests across the Arab world, demanding that the US rescinds the decision and calling it a “grave” development that puts the US on the same side as the “occupation”, in violation of international law.

Egypt, on behalf of the Arab bloc, filed a draft resolution with the UN Security Council to prohibit any such move that would alter the status quo of Jerusalem as an occupied land, but Washington vetoed the motion, prompting Arab states to take it to the UN General Assembly, where the resolution won by a massive vote of 128-129.

 

Jordan is the current president of the Arab summit, which was held in Amman in March last year. 

Prince Ghazi, PA panel discuss ways to defend Christian rights in Jerusalem

By - Jan 03,2018 - Last updated at Jan 03,2018

AMMAN — HRH Prince Ghazi, the King’s special adviser for religious and cultural affairs and the personal envoy of His Majesty King Abdullah, on Wednesday met with head of the Palestinian presidential committee for Christian affairs Hanna Amireh and panel members.

Amireh and the delegates highlighted the importance of the Hashemite custodianship on Islamic and Christian holy sites in Jerusalem, praising the key and pivotal role of Jordan in protecting the city and its holy sites, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported. 

They stressed that the Orthodox Patriarchate in Jerusalem has not spared any effort in defending the Christian rights in the Jaffa Gate case, and is still exerting all efforts to ensure its rights of ownership, commending the Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem Patriarch Theophilos III's endeavours in preserving these rights. 

In August, Israel’s Jerusalem District Court upheld a set of real estate deals between the Greek Orthodox Church and the Israeli organisation Ateret Cohanim for two hotels near the Jaffa Gate in Jerusalem’s Old City, ruling that there was no evidence of the deals resulting from fraud or bribery. The church asserts that the deal, conducted in 2004, was conducted illegally and has since led a campaign to save the church’s rights, led by Patriarch Theophilos III. 

They also highlighted the importance of activating the patriarchate’s mixed council and holding elections before Easter.

Ministry reports successes in 2017 macroeconomic indicators

Budget deficit narrows to 2.6%, while growing self-reliance reported

By - Jan 03,2018 - Last updated at Jan 03,2018

AMMAN — The post-grant budget deficit in 2017 stood at JD750 million, compared to JD880 million in 2016, reducing the deficit to the GDP ratio to 2.6 per cent in 2017, down from 3.2 per cent in 2016, the Finance Ministry said on Wednesday.

The deficit dropped by 15 per cent in 2017, compared to 2016, while its average in the past 10 years stands at 30 per cent, according to the ministry statement, carried by the Jordan News Agency, Petra.

By the end of 2017, meanwhile, the public debt totalled JD27.25 billion, or 95.3 per cent of the GDP, up from JD26.1 billion in 2016, or 95.1 per cent of the GDP, the ministry announced.

The public debt growth in 2017 amounted to JD1.2 billion from the 2016 figure, while the average increase for the past five years stands at JD2.2 billion, according to the ministry. 

Domestic revenues in 2017 stood at JD6.72 billion, registering an increase of JD484 million, marking a 7.7 per cent increase from 2016, when the state earned JD6.23 billion.

The grants received in 2017 totalled JD708 million, compared with JD835 million in 2016, down by JD127 million, or a drop of 15 per cent.

Meanwhile, current expenditures in 2017 stood at JD7.1 billion, witnessing an increase of JD178 million that equals 2.5 per cent when compared to 2016 figures, when they totalled JD6.9 billion.

Capital expenditure in 2017 increased by JD49 million to JD1.08 billion, up from JD1.03 in 2016, marking a 4.9 per cent rise. 

 

As for self-reliance, domestic revenues covered around 95 per cent of the capital expenditures in 2017, compared to 90 per cent in 2016.

‘Tourism sector expected to continue recovering in 2018’

By - Jan 03,2018 - Last updated at Jan 03,2018

The tourism sector is expected to continue recovering during 2018, according to stakeholders (Photo by Ahmed Bani Mustafa)

AMMAN — The tourism sector is expected to continue recovering during 2018, according to stakeholders, who urged the concerned bodies for more efforts to better promote the Kingdom and open new markets.

Jordan Tourism Board (JTB) Director Abed Al Razzaq Arabiyat said that 2017 witnessed a "considerable" increase in the number of tourists according to the Central Bank of Jordan's figures.

Arabiyat said that revenues from tourism during November 2017 increased by 14.3 per cent compared with the same period of 2016.

He outlined a number of measures that contributed to increasing tourism indicators including coordinating with the relevant bodies in the fields of promotion.

The JTB also supported the plans for stimulating the charter and low-cost flights including supporting the prices of tickets. 

Trip bookings to Jordan in 2018 are "promising", with fewer cancellations compared with previous years, Suleiman Abu Dalou, a tourist operator, told The Jordan Times on Wednesday. 

The worst year for the Jordanian tourism sector was 2011, during which the "Arab Spring" began, while the best so far was 2017, Abu Dalu said. 

Jordan Tourist Guides Association President Hasan Ababneh said that during the regional crisis, tourists gradually became aware of Jordan's security despite the turmoil in the region, which enhanced their confidence to come to Jordan, leading to a considerable increase in their numbers.

However, the relevant institutions should exert more efforts to attract more visitors, especially from far eastern countries, said the president.

In 2011, Jordan has 1,300 tourist guides who spoke 39 languages, now the number has declined to 1,000 as many guides left the job as a result of the low demand or age, said Ababneh.

"Now tourism is recovering and the sector needs more guides, especially those who speak far eastern languages such as Chinese and Indonesian," said Ababneh, calling for training of more guides to meet the demand.

Ababneh said that the JTB has made an agreement with the relevant bodies to set official guiding fees per day at JD60.

In recent remarks to The Jordan Times, Toursim Minister Lina Annab said that tourism figures in 2017 where higher than expected, adding that that the figures will keep increasing this year.

The World Trade Organisation’s figures have indicated a 4 per cent drop in tourists' numbers in the region 2017, but Jordan witnessed a hike instead, the minister said.

The number of overnight tourists until the end of November increased by 9.5 per cent, reaching 3.911 million visitors, compared to 3.574 million during the same period of last year, the ministry's figures showed.

Meanwhile, the number of one-day visitors during the first 11 months of this year increased by 6.4 per cent in comparison to the same period in 2016.  

Khader Rabbaa, a tourist restaurant owner, agreed and said that in 2017 the number of his clients increased by 25 per cent.

He said that the 2018's booking are promising and include a come-back of traditional clients from Europe and the Americas.

Sadam Kinj, a tourist guide, said that he has struggled for five years but in 2017 he did an adequate number of trips.

Kinj said that the worst year was 2015, when he did one local tour in Jerash, 45km north of Ammna, each week, while in 2017; he almost did one tour every day. 

House speaker meets with JPA president

By - Jan 03,2018 - Last updated at Jan 03,2018

AMMAN — Lower House speaker Atef Tarawneh on Wednesday stressed that the House is concerned with the “strength” of Jordanian media, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.  He added that the Lower House is ready to work with all relevant parties to help support the stability and continuity of media institutions, especially print media that is suffering from financial crises.

During a meeting with Jordan Press Association (JPA) President Rakan Saaydeh, Tarawneh said that the media has an important national role, especially in the light of current regional situations. For his part, Saaydeh praised Tarawneh and MPs for their support to the media and their efforts to help daily newspapers overcome their crises.

 

 

Tarawneh, Tunisian ambassador discuss Arab parliamentary stances

By - Jan 03,2018 - Last updated at Jan 03,2018

AMMAN — Lower House Speaker Atef Tarawneh on Wednesday stressed the importance of coordinating Arab parliamentary stances on various issues regardless of political differences, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

During a meeting with Tunisian Ambassador to Jordan Khalid Suhaili, Tarawneh said that “the world associates refugees only to Syrians, and does not remember that Jordan received many refugee exoduses over the decades”, pointing out that there are more than 4 million refugees in total in the Kingdom from different countries. Tarawneh said that the international community did not meet its responsibilities in this regard.

For his part Suhaili appreciated Jordan’s efforts under the leadership of His Majesty King Abdullah, especially in mobilising all efforts to address the US decision to recognise Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. The Tunisian ambassador praised the bilateral relations between Tunisia and Jordan, and the constant coordination on a parliamentary level. Suhaili also reviewed Tunisia’s reform process in all areas. 

 

 

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