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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.

'135,000 Jordanians over the age of 60 to be included in health insurance'

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

AMMAN — Health Minister Mahmoud Sheyyab on Saturday said that the number of Jordanians over the age of 60 to be included in health insurance is around 135,000, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

The minister added that the government's decision came as part of its plan to include all Jordanians under the umbrella of free insurance.

He outlined a number of measures taken by the government such as raising the ceiling of income of covered families from JD200 to JD300. The government on Thursday decided to include Jordanians over the age of 60 in the health insurance as of January 1.

Awamleh elected as Arab League intellectual property committee chair

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

AMMAN — The Technical Committee for Intellectual Property at the Arab League has elected Zain Awamleh, the director of the industrial property protection directorate of at the Ministry of Industry, Trade and Supply, as its chair for two years during a meeting in Cairo.

The committee was established following the resolution of Arab League Economic and Social Council at its 97th ordinary ministerial session to establish the rules of cooperation between the Arab countries and a strategy for joint Arab action in the field of intellectual property in the Arab region, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

Awamleh said in a press statement that her election to chair the committee comes in recognition of Jordan's efforts to protect intellectual property rights in various fields.

Royal Court threatens legal action against rumourmongers

Statement refutes allegations targeting princes sent to retirement

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

AMMAN — The Royal Hashemite Court on Saturday released the following statement:

“Rumours and misleading claims have been circulated over the past few days by a number of online outlets and social media websites, spreading lies about Their Royal Highnesses Prince Feisal Bin Al Hussein, Prince Ali Bin Al Hussein, and Prince Talal Bin Mohammad.

The Royal Hashemite Court will pursue legal measures against those who spread lies and false claims against Their Royal Highnesses the Princes and members of the Royal Hashemite family, as the fabricated news circulated recently is aimed at undermining Jordan and its institutions.

Our loyal people do not fall for such lies, which can never damage Jordan’s national unity and the deep-rooted relationship between Jordanians and the Royal Hashemite family.

His Majesty King Abdullah, the Supreme Commander of the Jordan Armed Forces-Arab Army (JAF), had sent Their Royal Highnesses letters in appreciation of their service after they were referred to retirement from the JAF.

Their Royal Highnesses had been exemplary officers of the Arab Army, loyal to Jordan and the Hashemite Throne.” 

Boy killed in Irbid road accident

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

AMMAN — A 13-year-old boy was killed and his sister was injured on Saturday after the vehicle they were in overturned in Irbid's Shajara neighbourhood, according to the Civil Defence Department (CDD).

Eastern Irbid CDD personnel transferred the body to the Ramtha Public Hospital and administered first aid to the injured girl before transferring her to hospital where she was listed in fair condition, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

Cabinet includes 60-69 age category under free healthcare

Decision comes after House panel makes recommendation amid budget debate

By - Dec 28,2017 - Last updated at Dec 28,2017

A Cabinet decision will expand the umbrella of free medical insurance (Photo by Amjad Ghsoun)

AMMAN — The Council of Ministers on Thursday decided to include Jordanians over the age of 60 in the health insurance as of January 1.

The decision is part of the government's policy to expand the health insurance umbrella until reaching a comprehensive health insurance that covers all Jordanians, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

The government has earlier included Jordanians over the age of 80 in health insurance and later decided to lower the age to 70 years, before taking Thursday's decision. Children below six are all included under the free healthcare umbrella. 

The decision, which will cost some JD25 million, is in line with the government's approach to improve services offered to citizens, including in the health sector.

Granting health insurance to citizens over the age of 60 has an important social factor and is part of supporting the medium- and low-income classes of the society, which His Majesty King Abdullah ordered to protect, Petra said, citing a Cabinet statement. 

After examining the state budget, the Lower House Financial Committee on Tuesday recommended that all Jordanians in their sixties be covered by free health insurance.

Reading the report, the panel’s rapporteur MP Riyadh Azzam noted that the cost of including the 60-to-69-year-old citizens in the health insurance would stand at around JD23 million which, he said, can be covered from the allocations for medical treatment.

According to official figures, 68 per cent of Jordanians and 55 per cent of the Kingdom’s overall population, including children under six years old, are covered by various types of health insurance.

Around 312,000 children benefit from a Royal Decree that provides all children under the age of six with free healthcare services. 

Excluding these children, the health insurance coverage rates drop to 63 per cent among Jordanians and to 52 per cent among the entire population.

Results of the latest census (2015) showed that the Kingdom’s population stands at around 9.5 million, including 2.9 million guests, representing 30.6 per cent of the overall population.  

Jordan bans import of frozen poultry from Saudi Arabia after bird flu outbreak

Kingdom 90 per cent self-sufficient with poultry meat — Agriculture Ministry

By - Dec 28,2017 - Last updated at Dec 28,2017

Jordan is 90 per cent self-sufficient with poultry meat, according to the Agriculture Ministry (Photo by Amjad Ghsoun)

AMMAN — Jordan has banned the import of frozen poultry from Saudi Arabia following the outbreak of a highly pathogenic avian influenza virus.

The precautionary measure seeks to protect the country’s poultry stock and also protect public health, the Ministry of Agriculture, which placed the ban, said.

“All imports of poultry, frozen poultry and poultry meat which didn’t undergo thermal processing are banned from entering the country,” Ministry of Agriculture Spokesperson Nimer Haddadin told The Jordan Times on Thursday.

Haddadin underscored that while Jordan is 90 per cent self-sufficient with poultry meat; some traders import frozen poultry from Saudi Arabia.

“The ministry upholds the ban on poultry imports until the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE) declares the infected countries as free from the virus,” he underlined.

The United Arab Emirates also suspended earlier this week its imports of live and frozen as well as table eggs and chicks from Saudi Arabia, after the disease was reported in a poultry market in Riyadh.

Saudi Arabia has confirmed early this week an outbreak of highly contagious bird flu in Riyadh that led to the culling of nearly 16,000 ducks, Reuters reported. 

The highly pathogenic H5N8 strain infected and killed 14 birds at a non-specified location in the Saudi capital, Reuters said citing a report from the OIE, noting that the other birds in a flock of around 60,000 exposed to the virus were culled, the report said. 

Bird flu or avian influenza (AI) is an infectious viral disease of birds (especially wild water fowl such as ducks and geese), often causing no apparent signs of illness, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO).

AI viruses can sometimes spread to domestic poultry and cause large-scale outbreaks of serious diseases. Some of these AI viruses have also been reported to cross the species barrier and cause disease or subclinical infections in humans and other mammals, according to the WHO website.

 

Most AI viruses do not infect humans; however, some, such as A (H5N1) and A (H7N9), have caused serious infections in people.

Jordanian graffiti artists brighten Amman’s drab streets

By - Dec 28,2017 - Last updated at Dec 28,2017

Top: A picture taken on December 17 shows a graffiti mural on a wall in Amman (AFP photo by Khalil Mazraawi)

By Kamal Taha

Agence France-Presse

AMMAN — Dreadlocked university student Suhaib Attar clutches a can of spray paint as he sets to work on the latest gloomy corner of Jordan’s capital that he has turned into his canvas. 

The leading light of a tiny group of graffiti artists, the 25-year-old is on a mission — daubing flowers, faces and patterns across Amman to bring more colour to the lives of its 4 million inhabitants.

“Our city is beautiful but it needs to be brightened up,” Attar tells AFP.

The aim is to “transform these great big walls of dull concrete into an expressive painting that is full of life”, he says.

Built on seven hills that give their names to the main districts, Amman has been home to a small graffiti community for some years.

And while they may number fewer than 10, the artists have been busy.

Their eye-catching designs have begun popping up around the city centre — especially the oldest Jabal Amman and Jabal Luweibdeh neighbourhoods where lots of foreigners live.

 

Struggle for 

permission 

 

In a conservative society like Jordan’s the graffiti artists have constantly had to challenge convention to carve out a niche for their works. 

But the art still faces limits like other forms of expression — and Attar says he steers away from politics and religion.

“I avoid topics that may shock some people who do not understand this art yet,” the street artist explains.

Art student Suha Sultan has experienced firsthand the suspicion — and hostility — that sometimes meets her work. 

“I was doing a large portrait of a tribal man and passers-by started questioning me, lecturing me because I was up a ladder among a group of men,” she recounts.

“They interrogated me about the meaning of my graffiti.”

Sultan says that as she walks around Amman she itches to use her skills to revitalise the many soulless expanses of wall she sees. 

“But it isn’t so simple as to do the graffiti we need to get prior permission from the municipal authorities or the owner of the building,” she explains.

“Most of the time we end up getting refused and sometimes we face rejection by members of society.”

‘Red lines’ 

 

Painter Wissam Shadid, 42, agrees that there are “red lines” that cannot be crossed in a society steeped in tradition where artistic creation can be curbed. 

“We paint nature, animals, portraits, but we don’t touch at all subjects connected to morality,” the street artist says.

But even that makes for an impressive change around the Jordanian capital.

“Before there were only the names of football clubs, phone numbers or messages from young guys to their friends scrawled on walls,” Shadid says.

“Now we are trying to make our art more popular.”

And as graffiti makes inroads in Jordan it is increasingly drawing admiration from some locals and visitors. 

“It adds colour to the city as buildings here can all look alike,” says Phoebe Carter, an American studying Arabic in the kingdom.

Jordanian Karim Saqr, 22, agrees that the works bring a much-needed splash of excitement. 

 

“When I spend the morning near a wall with beautiful graffiti, it fills me with positive energy for the rest of the day.”

RFC conducts short film competition titled ‘We Are Jerusalem’

By - Dec 28,2017 - Last updated at Dec 28,2017

The Royal Film Commission has announced a short film competition aimed at providing a platform for Jordanian and Arab filmmakers to present their outlook over the recent crisis in Jerusalem through films (Photo courtesy of the RFC)

AMMAN — The Royal Film Commission (RFC) has announced a short film competition aimed at providing a platform for Jordanian and Arab filmmakers to present their outlook over the recent crisis in Jerusalem through films, the RFC’s Managing Director George David told The Jordan Times.

“The RFC wanted to involve all Arab filmmakers, so that they can tell the world their point of view on this sensitive issue, that is of major concern to them also,” the RFC official said. 

He stressed that the question of Jerusalem is a critical issue to the region, stressing the rights of the Palestinians. 

“We have the right to show that unbiasedly and share the point of view from this part of the world. What we would like to underline is the Palestinian Arab character of Jerusalem. We work in cinema, and cinema is part of culture. Culture is also part of what is happening, it is not on the margin of reality but at its core,” David added. 

The competition, titled “We Are Jerusalem”, seeks to encourage as much original content as possible, he noted. 

“We trust Arab filmmakers will show creativity and sensitivity in the work produced,” he added. 

In order to have a manageable size, the organisers limited the submissions to recently produced films (2017/2018) that do not exceed seven minutes while allowing all genres except documentaries. 

The competition is open to all Arab directors provided that each director submits one film only. Films shot on mobiles are also eligible, according to an RFC statement. 

Films are accepted in English and Arabic, and if any other language is used, the movie must be subtitled in either English or Arabic prior to the deadline on January 21, 2018, the statement said. 

David noted that the mission of the RFC is “precisely to promote and support the audiovisual industry”, adding that film competitions are part of this support as they encourage voices to express themselves through films. 

“We are not naïve and we know that such an initiative cannot have a direct influence on the course of events. Yet, we felt it was important to give a space for people to express their feelings and thoughts, through art. The RFC has always been a space promoting freedom of expression in the region,” David said.  

It is very important that the Arab cinema always remains active and rich in terms of producing films that keep up with any events happening regionally and globally, according to David. 

 

“The audiovisual industry is a very powerful tool today and there is a responsibility held by Arab filmmakers in that respect: to properly utilise this tool to deliver their messages, as well as to reflect the reality of their country,” David said. 

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