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Guinea keen on enhancing business ties with Jordan — president

By - Nov 12,2017 - Last updated at Nov 12,2017

AMMAN — Guinean President Alpha Condé, who is currently on an official visit to Jordan, on Sunday called on the Kingdom’s private sector to get acquainted with investment and trade opportunities in his home country.

During an economic forum organised by the Amman Chamber of Industry, Condé stressed his country’s keenness to establish investment and trade relations with Jordan and provide incentives for Jordanian companies, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

He stressed that Guinea can also function as a hub for Jordanian businesspeople in Africa. For his part, State Minister for Investment Affairs Muhannad Shehadeh said that the African market is a priority for the Jordanian industrial sector as part of its efforts to open new markets for the Kingdom’s products.  

 

 

Safadi meets with UK minister

By - Nov 12,2017 - Last updated at Nov 12,2017

AMMAN — Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi on Sunday met with UK Minister of State for International Development and Minister of State for the Middle East at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office Alistair Burt, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

During the meeting, Safadi and Burt discussed means to boost UK-Jordanian relations and outlined the latest regional developments, especially the Palestinian-Israeli peace process and the Syrian crisis.

The two ministers stressed the importance of intensifying efforts to reach political solutions for the regional crises. The meeting also addressed the burdens borne by Jordan due to hosting 1.3 million Syrian refugees.

Burt expressed his country’s appreciation for Jordan’s role in helping the refugees and improving their livelihoods. 

Razzaz, UK minister visit school

By - Nov 12,2017 - Last updated at Nov 12,2017

AMMAN — UK Minister of State for International Development and Minister of State for the Middle East at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office Alistair Burt, accompanied by Education Minister Omar Razzaz and British Ambassador to Jordan Edward Oakden on Sunday visited Aisheh Bent Talha Elementary School in Jabal Amman, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

Burt voiced the British government’s appreciation of Jordan’s efforts in improving the access to education for all public school students and refugee students from all nationalities.

He stressed the UK’s commitment to support Jordan in implementing the Jordan Response Plan.

Social enterprise connects urban with rural citizens over local heritage

Internationally acclaimed enterprise set example of bridging gap between city and village culture amid overwhelming urbanisation

By - Nov 12,2017 - Last updated at Nov 18,2017

A woman from the village of Eiraa, west of Salt, teaches an Amman resident about the wild plants found in the area (Photo courtesy of Zikra)

AMMAN — “With the expansion of urbanisation and modernisation, people have become disconnected from their heritage and their local communities. They have turned blind to what they already have,” said Lama Khatieb, co-founder of the Jordanian social enterprise, Zikra, an award winner. 

“This is where Zikra comes in: We help people reach out to these skills, knowledge and culture that they already have,” she told The Jordan Times over the phone.

The Jordanian social enterprise was recently awarded the UNESCO-Japan Prize on Education for Sustainable Development (ESD) for its “Popular Learning Programme”, during a ceremony held at the UNESCO headquarters in Paris earlier this month.

The programme aims to enhance local knowledge in various communities in Jordan and in the region by reframing them into sustainable economic opportunities.

“We already have so many assets and knowledge in society. We just need to cultivate them and remind people that they exist,” Khatieb said, citing one of the projects focused on the local practice of frash, a sewing technique used by the local communities in the north of Jordan. 

Frash consists of re-using the fabrics from the household and turns them into blankets, curtains or other items.

“We are not importing any knowledge, people were already using that technique when we arrived and we only helped them develop this skill into a viable economic project,” the co-founder said, noting that the project, which started at a very small scale in 2011, now counts 5 to 6 projects in different governorates.

To date, more than 8,500 people have participated in Zikra for Popular Learning, with 280 youth being trained and 60 individual households economically empowered.

“We also invite youth from the region to train them in replicating the same initiative in their home countries. We have seen projects being implemented in Syria, Tunisia, Algeria, among others,” Khatieb noted. 

In addition to the UNESCO awarded initiative, Zikra (or “memory” in Arabic) is also conducting a number of projects aimed at promoting "alternative learning" to empower local communities. 

Starting in 2007 in the remote and marginalised village of Ghor Al Mazra’a in the southern Jordan Valley, Zikra was established by Amman-based entrepreneur Rabee Zureikat, who wanted to find alternative ways to alleviate poverty.

“I did not want to give through the usual forms of charity, going from the capital to the rural areas, which is often demeaning to the receiving party. This is how I came up with the idea of ‘exchange tourism’,” Zureikat explained. 

The “exchange tourism” is an initiative that promotes equity between rural and urban communities through cultural exchange.

“We want to bridge these two communities together by promoting alternative learning techniques whereby people reconnect with their local culture and traditions. Zikra aims to empower them to use their local heritage as a source of inspiration for sustainable solutions to their issues,” he explained.

With Zikra, both sides give and receive: while Ammanites — and tourists — contribute with a small fee of around JD30, villagers bring their own resources to the table: skills.

Mazra’a residents invite the visitors into their homes, where they show them how to cook, weave, bake bread, pick fruit, while listening to stories by the locals. 

“I used to pass this area on my way to Aqaba by car without stopping. I discovered how simple life is here and how complicated our life is in Amman,” a young professional from Amman told Zukeirat after a day trip to Ghor Al Mazra’a.

“We strive to bridge the gap of memory, by showing everyone that knowledge and skills from the past can still be useful nowadays,” Khatieb said.

For its part, the popular music identity project seeks to re-discover the traditional music instruments such as nay, shabbaba, yarghoul (all indigenous pipe instruments) and rababa (bedouin violin) and traditional dances like dabkeh, at a time when a Westernised culture is dominating the Jordanian musical scene.

In this project, visitors learn how to make their own instruments from local natural resources like reeds, play the instrument and explore the stories behind it. 

The self-funded programme aims to go against existing social systems by using local capacities to progress towards a more egalitarian, inclusive society, according to its founders. “The tourism revenues generated by the initiative is reinvested in the marginalised communities’ economic development, through microloans to local entrepreneurs, preferably females, which helps narrow the socioeconomic gap,” Zukeirat said.

A statement by the UNESCO quoted the international committee that selected Zikra for the award as saying: “This exemplary project demonstrates a creative and dynamic response to local issues through using innovative approaches to learning which recognise and affirm existing strengths, cultures and traditions in communities and countries in the region, bringing these to bear on difficult social, economic and environmental challenges towards greater sustainability.”

 

Zikra and its founders have also been awarded the King Abdullah II Award for Youth Innovation and Achievement, the Ashoka fellowship and a special recognition by His Majesty King Abdullah at the World Economic Forum in Jordan. Zureikat was also listed by Arabian Business Magazine as one of the “Top 30 Under 30”.

Parliament’s second ordinary session begins

By - Nov 12,2017 - Last updated at Nov 12,2017

Lawmakers are seen during the first meeting of the second ordinary session of Parliament on Sunday (Petra photo)

AMMAN — The Senate on Sunday held its first meeting of the second ordinary session which was inaugurated by His Majesty King Abdullah with the Speech from the Throne. 

Senate President Faisal Fayez, in the presence of Prime Minister Hani Mulki and Cabinet members, said that the Speech from the Throne encompassed all local and regional issues, expressing the Upper House’s keenness to fully cooperate with the Lower House and government members to enhance efficiency, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported. 

The Upper House elected members of the committee that will reply to the Speech from the Throne, which include senators Marouf Bakhit, Rajai Muasher, Bassam Talhouni, Samir Murad and Haydar Mahmoud.

Also on Sunday, the Lower House held its first meeting of the second ordinary session and authorised its permanent office to name members of the panel that will reply to the Speech from the Throne, as stipulated in Article 6 of the Chamber’s by-law, Petra reported.

At the beginning of the meeting, Lower House Speaker Atef Tarawneh pledged to continue the constitutional work of the Chamber with the “highest degrees” of dedication and responsibility.

Tarawneh said that His Majesty identified the main features of the upcoming stage and called for showing the utmost levels of commitment to deal with the challenges of next year, whether they are economic, political or related to the regional conditions.

He also called on the government to explain its programmes transparently and acquaint the public with clear steps to deal with challenges. He stressed that the House will not spare any effort in protecting Jordanians through any means possible to achieve public interests. 

Later, members of the House elected MP Khamis Atiyyeh as the first deputy House speaker, with 64 votes. His rival MP Ahmad Safadi received 58 votes, while 8 votes were cancelled.

 

MP Suleiman Zaben won elections as the second deputy speaker with 66 votes, according to Petra.

Petra witnesses ‘considerable’ rise in tourist numbers

Hotels that closed as result of low turnout in past few years will reopen next year — official

By - Nov 12,2017 - Last updated at Nov 12,2017

AMMAN — The number of tourists who visited Petra in 2017 increased “considerably” compared to the previous year, an official said.

Petra Development and Tourism Region Authority (PDTRA) President Mohammad Nawafleh said that, since January this year, 521, 000 visitors entered Petra, compared to 461, 000 during all of 2016.

PDTRA said they expect the number to reach 650,000 by the end of 2017. 

In October, the average number of visitors per day reached 1, 800, Nawafleh said.

“The number of tourists visiting the ancient city until November has recorded a promising increase towards the end of the year, considering that November and December are part of the high season during which the rose-red city is supposed to receive more visitors,” Nawafleh told The Jordan Times over the phone on Sunday.

He said that this year’s rise comes after a few years of lower turnout due to the regional turmoil that began in 2011, when the start of the “Arab Spring” made tourists reluctant to visit Jordan. 

The official said he expects the high turnout to continue until April 2018.

Nawafleh noted that a number of hotels that closed as a result of the low turnout in the past few years will reopen next year. 

The number of hotel rooms in Petra stands at 2,300, only 1, 450 of which are available as eight hotels are currently closed, according to PDTRA.

However, 226 five-star rooms are scheduled to be available next year after the reopening of two hotels, the authority said.

The total number of hotels in Petra stands at 41, according to PDTRA.

Petra is the main tourist site in Jordan, one of the new seven world wonders and a UNESCO world heritage site, 235km south of Amman. 

Danish-German archaeological project in Jerash ‘unlocks new path to understanding the city’

By - Nov 12,2017 - Last updated at Nov 12,2017

Alex Peterson

AMMAN — Although the focus of the archaeological research conducted in Jerash has been centred on the main road, the Danish-German Jerash Northwest Quarter Project came with new findings in the last five years.

“This is because it is where the fantastic ruins of classical public buildings stand,” said Alex Peterson, an American PhD candidate in Archaeology at Aarhus University in Denmark.

The colonnaded streets and abundance of ruins mean that excavators will always find some interesting information, he continued, adding that “on the other hand, the northwest quarter is barren and littered with stones so, at first glance, it looks uninteresting”. 

The densely settled area and monumental structures discovered by the Danish-German Northwest Quarter Project — a joint project between Aarhus University in Denmark and Munster University  in Germany — unlocked a new path to understanding the city by unearthing the material culture hidden underneath the surface of the less explored periphery areas of the ancient urban centre, Peterson told The Jordan Times in a recent e-mail interview.

Peterson said: “I cannot evaluate the exact number of inhabitants in Jerash during the Ayyubid and Mamluk periods, but we know it must have been a somewhat substantial community based on the construction efforts observed in the northwest quarter.”

A large courtyard house and several satellite residential complexes were expanded over time and also show signs of repair, the scholar added, stressing that the construction of additional rooms attests to the growth of the community. Based on the material culture and the architectural features, the settlement must have existed for at least two to three generations, he commented. 

“French excavations near the temples of Zeus two decades ago also uncovered a node of Middle Islamic settlement in the southern area of Jerash. Little is known about what may be underneath the modern town today, but it’s very possible that more structures belonging to this period remain undetected today,” Peterson underscored.

Jordan at the time was an important region for the Mamluk sultanate, the scholar claimed, noting that the state invested in agriculture and the settlement discovered in Jerash may be tied to the growing agricultural industry.

However, few sources are available: we only have Latin texts from the Crusades that record a battle fought at Jerash, Peterson noted. “According to these, a small garrison and fortification was located at Jerash and the Crusaders used siege engines and eventually captured and destroyed the fortification, allowing the garrison to depart safely after surrounding,” the archaeologist claimed.

 During the Ottoman period, in the 16th century, tax record mentions 8-12 families living in Jerash who are believed to have raised animals, grown crops, and produced honey. But no historical sources speak directly about the residential complex discovered in the northwest quarter, the American underlined.

“In several trenches we have excavated well preserved floor levels and almost complete vessels. Other evidences have more fragmented pottery as it has been moved frequently because of filling and leveling activity while building the structures,” he noted.

The pottery itself comes in many forms, the scholar continued, adding that there are several glazed more fine, vessels. However, much of the material is handmade pottery and painted handmade vessels, Peterson pointed out.

“Ceramic research is still at a very early stage and there is still not definitive chronology or typology for this type of pottery. Hopefully, as research continues in Jerash, we will be able to formulate more precise chronologies for the less well understood ceramic material of this period,” the scholar stated.

Joint Jordanian-Saudi military drill kicks off

By - Nov 12,2017 - Last updated at Nov 12,2017

AMMAN — The joint Jordanian-Saudi military drill “Yarmouk 2” began on Sunday with the participation of the Jordan Armed Forces-Arab Army and the Saudi Armed Forces, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

The one-week drill aims at enhancing joint military cooperation and the exchange of expertise, improving rapid response to terrorist threats and future challenges and urban warfare.

The exercise also aims to speed up procedures of receiving and analysing tips in traditional and untraditional operations, as well as increasing the level of combat skills of both armies, according to Petra.

Jordan, Egypt discuss Palestinian national concord, region

By - Nov 12,2017 - Last updated at Nov 12,2017

AMMAN — His Majesty King Abdullah on Sunday received Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry who delivered the King a message from President Abdel Fattah Al Sisi that addressed bilateral relations and the latest regional developments.

His Majesty, during the meeting held at Al Husseiniya Palace, highlighted the "deep-rooted" ties between Jordan and Egypt, stressing keenness on expanding cooperation relations at all levels, according to a Royal Court statement.

The King reiterated the importance of carrying on with efforts that aim at enhancing the pan-Arab cooperation, coordination and solidarity, so that Arab states would be coordinating stances in a way that contributes to overcoming the challenges facing the region.

Talks also focused on the current regional situation, especially the  newly signed Palestinian reconciliation agreement between Hamas and Fateh and efforts to push forward the Middle East peace process, as well as the latest updates in the Syrian and Lebanese arenas.

King Abdullah and Shoukry highlighted the importance of intensifying efforts aimed at finding political solutions to regional crises, so as to restore security and stability for the region’s peoples and spare it more tensions and violence.

His Majesty asked Shoukry to convey his greetings to Sisi and invited him to visit the Kingdom.

Also on Sunday, Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi and Shoukry discussed bilateral ties and the latest regional developments, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

The meeting also focused on the latest developments concerning the recent Palestinian reconciliation deal, as well as efforts to end division between them.

Discussions also covered efforts to boost the Palestinian national unity and support the resumption of Palestinian-Israeli peace negotiations that should lead to the establishment of an independent Palestinian state within the June 4, 1967 lines with East Jerusalem as its capital.

Safadi reaffirmed Jordan’s support for efforts made by Egypt to achieve the Palestinian reconciliation agreement.

The two officials also went over the latest developments in Syria, Lebanon and Iraq, as well as means to counter terrorism in the region.

During the meeting, Safadi briefed Shoukry on the deal signed by Jordan, the US and Russia about underlying principles regarding the de-escalation zone in southern Syria, which came into effect in July.

 

At the end of their meeting, the two ministers agreed to continue cooperation and coordination on regional developments to best serve mutual interests and the Arab nation.

AND treated 974 drug addicts since January

By - Nov 12,2017 - Last updated at Nov 12,2017

AMMAN — The Anti-Narcotics Department’s (AND) addiction treatment centre has treated 974 drug addicts in the first 10 months of the year, the department announced on Sunday.

In 2016, a total of 1,436 people received treatment, according to AND statistics, cited by the Jordan News Agency, Petra. The department dealt with 11,607 drug cases in the January-October period, including 9,866 cases related to drug abuse and possession.

In 2016, the AND dealt with 13,616 cases. In the first 10 months of 2017, the department arrested 16,631 suspects for drug-related cases, including 1,338 non-Jordanians, compared with 19,449 arrests in 2016, 1,699 of whom were foreigners. Seized items mainly included hashish, heroin, Captagon pills, synthetic cannabis (locally known as joker) and marijuana, according to AND. 

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