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Rain, hail forecast for Monday

By - Dec 30,2017 - Last updated at Dec 30,2017

AMMAN — A depression on Sunday will bring down mercury levels in most parts of the country, with temperatures expected to reach 14ºC during the day and 5ºC at night in Amman, with the possibility of scattered showers accompanied by thunder and hail, the Jordan Meteorological Department (JMD) said on Saturday.
On Monday, the Kingdom is expected to witness a significant drop in temperatures ranging between 9°C and 5°C in Amman, the JMD said.

It will be partly cloudy with a possibility of rainfall in the north of the Kingdom that extends gradually to include the central and south-west regions of the Kingdom.

In the evening, heavy rain is expected, with possible lightning, thunder and hail, while the eastern regions will see light rain, with northwesterly brisk winds, according to the JMD.

In Aqaba, temperatures will range between 18°C and 14°C, the weather department said.
In the Jordan Valley, mercury levels will range between 32°C and 20°C, while in hilly parts it will be a high of 20°C and a low of 9°C.

In eastern and southeastern parts of the Kingdom dusty conditions are forecast to prevail. 

 

The JMD said it is following up on weather developments round the clock, and will continue issuing detailed weather forecasts as usual and sending them to media outlets and relevant institutions.

JICA transfers 2nd installment of soft loan to Jordan worth $170m

By - Dec 30,2017 - Last updated at Dec 30,2017

AMMAN — Japan has transferred $170 million in soft loan to Jordan as a direct support to the general budget, a Planning Ministry statement said on Saturday.

The loan, extended through the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), will go towards supporting the government’s “Financial Sector, Business Environment and Public Service Reform Policy”, according to the statement.

It is the second instalment of a soft loan agreement worth $250 million that was signed in December 2016, when JICA paid the first instalment worth $85million.

The loan is to be repaid over a 30-year period with a 10-year grace period and an interest rate of 0.2 per cent, according to the statement.

Commending Japan’s continuous support to the Kingdom, Minister of Planning and International Cooperation Imad Fakhoury voiced Amman’s appreciation for Tokyo as a key partner in pushing the development process forward, and for its efforts in supporting Jordan to finance priority development programmes in the economic and social fields.

Fakhoury highlighted the "deep-rooted" relations between Jordan and Japan, praising the Japanese government's "understanding" of the challenges that the Kingdom is facing due to regional turmoil.

In 2016, Japan extended two grants worth $26.03 million to Jordan to support the Kingdom’s humanitarian role towards the Syrian refugees. The grants were used to purchase equipment for the ministries of water and municipal affairs, in addition to enhancing security measures at the borders, according to the statement.  

Since 1999 till 2017, Jordan has received more than $1.3 billion in support from Japan, of which $527.32 million as grants and the rest in soft loans, in addition to JICA's technical support to the Kingdom.

 

In 2012, JICA extended $750 million as concessional loans to support the general budget of Jordan.

Catholic centre presents Pope’s new year message of peace

By - Dec 30,2017 - Last updated at Dec 30,2017

AMMAN -- The Catholic Centre for Studies and Media Saturday presented Pope Francis’ message on the 51st World Day of Peace on January 1.

The centre noted that since it was first issued in 1968 by Pope John Paul VI, the message has been addressed to all people of the world in an endeavour to put forward a roadmap to address current issues that undermine global peace and human dignity, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

It said the new year’s message, titled “Migrants and Refugees: Men and Women in Search of Peace”, referred to the over 250 million migrants worldwide, of whom 22.5 million are refugees.

In his message, Pope Francis referred to the migrants and refugees as “men and women, children, young and elderly people, who are searching for somewhere to live in peace”.

In order to find that peace, they are willing to risk their lives on a journey that is often long and perilous, to endure hardships and suffering, and to encounter fences and walls built to keep them far from their goal, he said.

“In a spirit of compassion, let us embrace all those fleeing from war and hunger, or forced by discrimination, persecution, poverty and environmental degradation to leave their homelands,” he said.

“We know that it is not enough to open our hearts to the suffering of others. Much more remains to be done before our brothers and sisters can once again live peacefully in a safe home,” the pontiff said.

He urged government leaders to take practical measures to welcome migrants and refugees, promote, protect, integrate and, “within the limits allowed by a correct understanding of the common good, to permit them to become part of a new society”.

“All indicators available to the international community suggest that global migration will continue for the future. Some consider this a threat. For my part, I ask you to view it with confidence as an opportunity to build peace, ” the Pope said.

He said that migrants and refugees do not arrive to host countries empty-handed, but they bring their courage, skills, energy and aspirations, “as well as the treasures of their own cultures; and in this way, they enrich the lives of the nations that receive them”.

He urged the United Nations to draft and approve two Global Compacts, one for safe, orderly and regular migration and the other for refugees as shared agreements at a global level.

“These compacts will provide a framework for policy proposals and practical measures. For this reason, they need to be inspired by compassion, foresight and courage, so as to take advantage of every opportunity to advance the peace-building process. Only in this way can the realism required of international politics avoid surrendering to cynicism and to the globalisation of indifference,” the pontiff said.

Head of the Amman-based Catholic Centre for Studies and Media, Father Rifa’at Badr, said he was proud to see that Jordan had fulfilled on the ground the Pope’s message as the Kingdom had undertaken tremendous efforts to host and accommodate refugees and protect their dignity.

He said that despite the enormous burdens posed to Jordan, the Kingdom had presented an unparalleled image in safeguarding the human dignity of displaced people and refugees.

 

Badr also hailed Jordan’s “diplomacy of wisdom”, led by His Majesty King Abdullah, towards the Arab city of Jerusalem, which together with the Vatican call for preserving the status quo in the holy city, respecting international conventions and underlining the historic Hashemite custodianship of Islamic and Christian holy sites in it in the hope to declare East Jerusalem as the capital of an independent Palestinian state. 

Study calls for strategies to address youth unemployment

By - Dec 30,2017 - Last updated at Dec 30,2017

AMMAN — A study titled “Future prospects for youth from an economic perspective” suggests the promotion of initiatives and programmes that support young people all over the Kingdom, the Jordan News Agency Petra, reported on Friday.

The study prepared by the Association of Banks in Jordan (ABJ) Director General Adli Qandah recommends the implementation of plans, strategies and programmes developed by governments in cooperation between the public and private sectors and relevant stakeholders.

Qandah said that the study aimed to identify the challenges and economic opportunities facing the youth.

He added that young people in Jordan face several economic challenges, including unemployment, shrinking labour market indicators, decline in economic growth and the impact of the Syrian crisis on economy.

Qandah said the major challenge for Jordan is to stimulate growth that will result in job creation as the economy is suffering from a recession. The growth rate in 2016 dropped to around 2 per cent compared to 2.4 per cent in 2015.

Qandah predicted that Jordan’s economic growth rate will slightly recover to 2.3 per cent in 2017, with a minor improvement in the near future to reach 2.6 per cent between 2017 and 2019.

The results of the study stressed that the future prospects for Jordan’s youth are determined by two main factors: The existence of plans, policies and programmes that enable the Jordanian labour market to absorb in the increasing number of young jobseekers and having initiatives and business incubators targeting the Jordanian youth. 

These programmes seek to enhance young people’s skills and provide them with the necessary expertise to enter the labour market.

The study also showed that the percentage of young people in Jordan aged 15-34 years constituted around 36.3 per cent of the population in 2016, of which 46 per cent are female, which requires equal employment opportunities for both genders.

 

The study also pointed out the rise in unemployment rates in 2016 to 15.3 per cent and the first-half of 2017 to 18.1 per cent, where young people aged 15 and 39 constitute more than 90 per cent of the unemployed in Jordan.

American archaeologist explores Tell Jalul in central Jordan

By - Dec 30,2017 - Last updated at Dec 30,2017

Tell Jalul, the site from Early Bronze Age near Madaba (Photo courtesy of Paul Ray)

AMMAN — Tell Jalul, located 5km east of Madaba, is the largest tell( hill or mound) that covers 7.2 hectares in central Jordan, said Paul Ray, who holds a PhD in Near Eastern archaeology and is a co-director of Jalul Excavation project. 

The earliest period of occupation at the site was the Early Bronze Age (third millennium BC), he noted, adding that the evidence for settlement at this time consists of a room on the southeastern side of the tell. 

"Ceramic evidence for the Early Bronze Age and the Middle and Late Bronze Age [most of the second millennium BC] has been found all over the site," Ray said.

Iron Age and Persian period (12th-5th centuries BC) structures have been found in most of the excavation areas (labelled Fields A-H, and W), the American scholar explained, noting that these structures have likely recycled the stone foundations from many of Bronze Age structures that existed before them. 

Furthermore, evidence from animal bones and seeds indicate that the inhabitants of the site lived on a mixed agro-pastoral subsistence economy, based on the dry farming cultivation of grains, with cattle used as draft animals, and large amounts of products from sheep and goats supplemented occasionally by the hunting of wild species, and importing fish from distant salt-water ports, the archaeologist elaborated. 

"There is also evidence of horticultural and vinicultural products probably transported from the hills beyond the Madaba Plains; spinning and weaving objects are evidence of cottage industries, and there appears to have been some minor long-distance trade, reflected by occasional imported ceramics [such as Late Bronze Age Mycenaean and Persian periods Attic wares]," underlined Ray.

The houses, as suggested from the domestic structures in Field C, would indicate a kin-based society, he continued, while  the presence of uninscribed mercantile weights suggest a market-oriented economy and large structures such as the tripartite building, in Field A (on the north end of the tell), and the large water reservoir in Field W (on the southeastern end of the tell), suggest their construction under "royal auspices", reflecting a social organisation on at least a tribal kingdom, if not on a state level.

Excavations at Tell Jalul began in 1992, and much of this time "we have been excavating Field C, located immediately east of the acropolis, on the western side of the tell”, the scholar continued.

Unfortunately, "due to stone robbing, as indicated by a robber trench, it appeared that the western wall of the building had been removed in antiquity", the researcher stressed.

"In 1999, the majority of the original building was excavated down to bedrock where excavations concentrated throughout the next several seasons, resulting in the discovery of the northwestern part of a large Persian-period [6th-5th century BC] courtyard-style building," the scholar underlined.

"In 2011, work was resumed on the northern building, where during the intervening time part of the north balk[ strip of unexcavated earth left in place between excavated units, pits, or trenches]  of one of the excavation squares had eroded, exposing several stones of what was plausibly part of the northern wall of this structure," he said.

What emerged in the excavation was, indeed, the northern wall of the building and its entrance, Ray highlighted, adding that "the big surprise was the blocked entrance of an even earlier building". 

The earlier building was a large Iron Age I four-room type house, with walls thick enough to have supported a second floor, at least on the southern, broad-room end of the building, the archaeologist stated.

"Since it was located next to the acropolis, the usual place where administrative and religious structures would be expected to have been found, this building may have been inhabited by an elite family," Ray concluded.

Tell Jalul's population varied during different historical periods, so in the Iron Age it would have been considered a large town,  Ray pointed out, adding that  ancient population estimates cannot be made with confidence. However, settlement pattern studies indicate an intensification of smaller sites during the latter part of the Iron Age and Persian periods in this part of Transjordan.

The Hellenistic period was marked by the decline in the population of the site, but it changed during Roman period when the number of inhabitants increased, he claimed.

"The remains of a Byzantine period church and numerous Islamic period buildings, including a roadside inn have been found here, said Ray, "The evidence so far indicates that early Islamic period buildings [7th century AD] were reused later, with the heaviest use in the Mamluk period [14th century]."

In the Ottoman period (19th and early 20th centuries), the Beni Sakhar tribe and Al Zaben sub-tribe began to settle in the region around the tell, Ray said.

"Therefore, in general, on the basis of size and amount of activity, it would appear that the population may have increased in the Islamic period," he underlined.

Andrews University has cooperated for years with the Department of Antiquities and the American Centre of Oriental Research in this and other archeological research endeavours, he noted.

 

"In the future we plan to return to Tell Jalul and continue our research in a second phase of excavations at the site," the scholar said.

Jordanians continue protests against Trump’s Jerusalem decision

By - Dec 30,2017 - Last updated at Dec 30,2017

Police stand guard as protesters take part in a demonstration against the US president's decision to recognise Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, on Thursday, in Amman (AFP photo by Khalil Mazraawi)

AMMAN — Hundreds of Jordanians took to the streets of downtown Amman on Friday in protest against the decision by US president Donald Trump to relocate the US embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. 

Waving Jordanian and Palestinian national flags and carrying banners, the protesters denounced the Trump’s decision and expressed their solidarity with Jerusalem. 

Yaser Ghannam, a demonstrator, said these demonstrations boost the morale of the Palestinians to continue fight for their cause. 

Ahmad Abu Hussein, another protester, said he wanted to send a message to his “brothers” in Palestine that he is supporting them.

“We want to send a message to the US and Zionists that Jerusalem will remain an Arab city. We will keep protesting until this unfair decision is rescinded,” he told The Jordan Times as he marched with his fellow demonstrators. 

He noted that Arabs have to “wake up” and unite. 

For Eyad Razeq, another demonstrator, Jerusalem is a city for all people, including Muslims and Christians. 

 

“God willing, the Zionists will leave the city. Jerusalem will definitely be liberated.” 

20 teams from 12 countries qualified for Innovate for Refugees competition

Amman to host final ceremony on January 28

By - Dec 30,2017 - Last updated at Dec 30,2017

AMMAN — The MIT Enterprise Forum (MITEF) for the Pan Arab Region announced that 20 teams from 12 countries qualified for the Innovate for Refugees semi-finals to compete during the final ceremony which will take place in the King Hussein Business Park Auditorium in Amman on January 28, 2018. 

The teams were divided as follows: Six from Jordan, four from Lebanon and one each from Kenya, Egypt, Tunisia, Sweden, France, Greece, the US, Germany, Austria and Turkey, MITEF said in a statement e-mailed to The Jordan Times on Saturday.

The second edition of Innovate for Refugees witnessed wide participation, with 1,809 applications from various Arab and international countries. 

The Middle East and North Africa (MENA) accounted for 65 per cent of applications, 25 per cent were from Europe and the remaining 10 per cent came from other parts of the world, the statement said. 

Innovate for Refugees, in its second edition, “succeeded in attracting more refugee participants, with their participation rate increasing to 25 per cent compared to the 15 per cent participation in the first edition. The participation of women has also notably increased, reaching 70 per cent”, the statement read.

The qualifying teams are scheduled to undergo several training sessions on January 26-27, 2018 in Amman, before the final ceremony, which will be accompanied by an exhibition to showcase the semi-finalist teams’ projects in the form of a live demo. 

Conferences and discussion sessions will also be held to review investment opportunities, funding and innovation for the benefit of refugees with the participation of specialists and experts in entrepreneurship and the world of startups.

“The size of participation in this year’s competition has been remarkable, especially by the refugees themselves, reaching 25 per cent! We are working towards enabling refugees to express their ideas and helping them transform them into innovative solutions to the challenges they face in their camps,” Hala Fadel, MITEF Pan ArabChair, was quoted in the statement as saying. 

“In this context, MITEF supported the React hub educational programme that aims to attract refugees to enroll in computer training programmes, which will be launched, for the first time this year, for two weeks from January 14-28, 2018. 

“We have succeeded in attracting 513 refugees registered in this programme and 25 have been selected. MITEF will work to provide job opportunities for participants in this programme. We hope that these initiatives and activities will inspire young people to look forward to the future with optimism away from the difficult reality in which they live,” Fadel added.

Farah Shammas, Innovate for Refugees director, pointed to the success story of Ahmad Al Hidiq, one of the co-founders of HeyDoc. 

 

“Ahmad is a Palestinian refugee in Lebanon who was pre-selected in the first edition of the Innovate for Refugees. HeyDoc has become an award winning global telemedicine platform that connects patients anywhere with doctors all over the world for the purpose of non-urgent medical advisory. This platform provides refugees, the poor and the needy in refugee camps, developing countries and rural areas access to doctors and health professionals to obtain medical advice,” Shammas was quoted in the statement as saying.

Authorities remove illegal water connections from King Abdullah Canal

By - Dec 30,2017 - Last updated at Dec 30,2017

Authorities removed scores of violations on the King Abdullah Canal over the past week (Photo courtesy of the Ministry of Water and Irrigation)

AMMAN — Authorities removed scores of violations on the King Abdullah Canal over the past week, thus ending the “daily theft” of thousands of cubic metres of water from one of the Kingdom’s main water resources, an official said on Saturday.

A technical team from the Ministry of Water and Irrigation and the Water Authority of Jordan, accompanied by security forces, has been inspecting the canal to uncover illegal pipelines that divert water from the canal to private farms, the official at the ministry said.

“Over the past week, the team has removed all of the violations, which were illegal pipes and fixtures extracting the water of the canal to private properties for the irrigation of crops or selling the water via tankers,” the ministry’s official told The Jordan Times over the phone.

Thousands of cubic metres of water were being diverted to private properties, the official source said, noting that the violations were a major cause attributing to the dropping flow of the canal.

The 110-kilometre King Abdullah Canal is supplied by the Yarmouk River. It irrigates 40 per cent of the crops in the Jordan Valley and provides around 40 per cent of the capital’s water after being treated at the Zai Water Treatment Plant.

“Since 2013, when the ministry announced a crack down on water theft and violations, our teams have removed more than 15,905 on King Abdullah Canal. The violations entailed diverting the water of the canal and stealing the fence and safety installations,” the official said.

Also over the past four years, authorities put an end to over 1,916 violations on state lands in the Jordan Valley.

“A large bulk of the violations which the ministry is removing is uncovered with the help of people, who report to the ministry the violations they see on water networks and resources,” the official said.

 

The ministry’s campaign is ongoing, the official said, noting that it aims at enhancing control over water sources by protecting surface and ground water resources from depletion and also stopping the illegal digging of wells.

King condemns attack on Cairo church

By - Dec 30,2017 - Last updated at Dec 30,2017

 

AMMAN — His Majesty King Abdullah on Friday condemned a deadly terror attack that targeted a church in the south of Cairo in a phone call with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah Al Sisi, according to a Royal Court statement.

The King expressed his deepest sympathies and condolences to the president and the families of the victims, and wished the injured a speedy recovery. King Abdullah stressed Jordan’s solidarity with Egypt in the fight against terrorism.

The government also has expressed its condemnation of the terrorist act that resulted in the death of 11 civilians, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

Minister of State for Media Affairs and Government Spokesperson Mohammad Momani denounced the terrorist acts that target innocent civilians; describing the attack against the church as a crime, since targeting places of worship is unacceptable under any circumstances.

Momani reiterated Jordan's stance against terror, calling for collective efforts to face the global threat. He stressed Jordan's solidarity with the Egyptian people and the government, expressing condolences to families of the victims and wishing the injured a speedy recovery.

Jordan, US negotiating new assistance package — source

Talks are under way despite Trump’s vow to punish pro-Jerusalem aid recipients

By - Dec 30,2017 - Last updated at Dec 30,2017

AMMAN — The US is in ongoing discussions with officials over Jordan’s request for a new memorandum of understanding (MoU) on aid to the Kingdom, an unnamed source at the US embassy in Amman said Saturday.

The source told The Jordan Times that the US is the single largest donor to Jordan.

“The United States is in ongoing discussions with Jordanian officials over Jordan’s request for a new MoU, and we look forward to continuing our extraordinary partnership with Jordan,” said the embassy source.

The remarks in response to questions by The Jordan Times come days after US President Donald Trump has threatened to withhold “billions” of dollars of US aid from countries which vote in favour of a United Nations’ resolution rejecting any recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel.

Jordan was one of 128 countries that recently voted in favour of the resolution supporting the longstanding international consensus that the status of Jerusalem can only be settled as an agreed final issue in a peace deal.

Spokesman of the Department of State Heather Nauert has recently indicated that “the UN vote is really not the only factor that the administration would take into consideration in dealing with our foreign relations and countries who have chosen to vote one way or the other”.

According to the Ministry of Planning and International Cooperation, US assistance to the Kingdom in 2017 amounted to $1.3 billion, including military assistance. 

The amount of US assistance provided to Jordan in 2016 reached an unprecedented level, standing at $1.275 billion (around JD904 million), according to the ministry figures.

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