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EU launches ‘NEXT SOCIETY’ initiative to develop tech solutions to regional issues

By - Nov 04,2017 - Last updated at Nov 04,2017

Entrepreneurs are seen at the launching event of NEXT SOCIETY in Amman, on October 25 (Photo courtesy of EU delegation in Amman)

AMMAN — The delegation of the European Union (EU) to Jordan on October 25 launched the “NEXT SOCIETY” initiative in Amman, with the aim of gathering innovators and entrepreneurs from across the Kingdom to develop innovative solutions for the future of Jordan and of the Arab region. 

Funded by the EU, the programme is coordinated in Jordan by the ANIMA Innovation Network, in partnership with the Information and Communications Technology Association and the Royal Scientific Society, Communications Manager at ANIMA Lauriane Ammouche told The Jordan Times. 

Three Jordanian start-ups have already been selected to access the services of the initiative’s tailor-made support programme for entrepreneurs, according to Ammouche. 

“The support programme, namely Start-up Booster Track, enables entrepreneurs to bridge with key markets in Europe, Africa, the Gulf countries and the United States,” she added. 

The initiative has been established in a total of 30 countries across Europe and the Mediterranean region, involving 3,000 businesses, innovators and investment organisations and 2,500 SMEs and entrepreneurs.

Several countries in the region have been active in the programme over the past months, developing various solutions to address the challenges faced by the Middle Eastern countries. 

In Palestine, “Edunation” provides a new-age learning environment for students, with an active platform that accommodates a multi-lingual, multi-curricula environment that aims to empower educators to deliver educational value. 

Another of the countries active in the initiative, Lebanon is implementing “Riego”, a system that offers a solar powered control device to optimise irrigation water consumption. 

For its part, Tunisia collaborated to design the first compactor that treats all kinds of waste, which is already present in many African countries. 

KOICA fellows share their experience in South Korea

By - Nov 04,2017 - Last updated at Nov 04,2017

Participants at a meeting organised by the Korea International Cooperation Agency at the Talal Abu Ghazaleh Knowledge Forum pose for a group photo on Thursday (Photo by Andrea Celeste)

AMMAN —The Korea International Cooperation Agency (KOICA) on Thursday held talks with officials at the Talal Abu Ghazaleh Knowledge Forum in Amman, sharing Jordanians’ experience of living in South Korea through the agency’s fellowship programme. 

The meeting focused on three main topics including the economic development policies of South Korea, the impact of the Korean experience on the development of Jordan’s agricultural sector and the sharing experiences on learning the Korean language and culture. 

South Korean Ambassador Lee Bom-yon, Talal Abu-Ghazaleh, chairman of Talal Abu-Ghazaleh Group (TAG) and President of KOICA Alumni Association of Jordan (KAAJ) Bahjat Aladwan attended the discussions.

Founded in 1991, KOICA is a governmental agency that seeks to transfer Korea’s experience, knowledge and technology through the granting of aid programmes, according to a statement from the agency.

KOICA has invited over 720 Jordanian officials to train in Korea to assist the Kingdom in developing its human resources, the statement added.

Established in 2013, KAAJ serves as a platform for participants of KOICA-sponsored fellowship and training programmes to hold activities and cultural events to share more about the Korean culture in Jordan, the statement read.

Members of the KOICA and KAAJ fellowship programmes, Khalid Al Manaseer and Israa Abu-Saif talked about their personal experiences during their trip to South Korea.

Head of the forestry deparment at the ministry of Agriculture, Manaseer completed his Master’s degree in the field of food security and agriculture in the Asian country.

“This opportunity has benefited my experience through field visits, and practice in laboratory which helped transfer those experiences to Jordan,” he recalled. 

Abu-Saif, who participated in the “Training Course for the New Generation of Korean Language” held by KOICA in 2015, said that she learned the language and how to cook popular Korean food through field trips to local companies such as Hyundai and Samsung, in addition to voluntary work. 

Some of her achievements as a student of Korean language were that she obtained a scholarship to study Korean at a Korean University for four months, getting the opportunity to work as an Arabic language teacher for Korean students in Jordan and as a Korean language interpreter for one of KOICA’s projects in Jordan. 

The ambassador commended the programme, highlighting it benefits to students and society.

“This is a very good opportunity for the alumni of the KOICA programme who train and study in Korea to share their experience. With this programme, they recall what they have learned and transfer it to others. Even a small number of people can change society and the people around them,” Lee told The Jordan Times. 

“During the process of economic development, Korea has tried many things and has made some mistakes, which is a good experience to share for Jordan’s development,” he said, adding that, in order to make some decisions, “Jordan needs to see what other countries and other people have done to share and learn from each other’s experiences.”

10-year jail term upheld for man who murdered ex-wife with pantyhose

By - Nov 04,2017 - Last updated at Nov 04,2017

AMMAN — The Court of Cassation has upheld a May Criminal Court verdict sentencing a 45-year-old man to 10 years in prison after convicting him of murdering his ex-wife over an alimony feud in an Amman neighbourhood in October 2016.

The court declared the defendant, a street vendor, guilty of murdering his ex-wife, 36, using her own pantyhose on October 6, and handed him a 20 year prison term.

However, the court immediately decided to reduce the sentence to half because the victim’s family dropped charges against the defendant.

Court papers said that the couple had been divorced since 2015 and that the defendant would visit his children at their mother’s house twice a month.

On the day of the incident, the court maintained, the defendant went to his ex-wife’s house to see their three children, the court documents said.

“The two argued again over the JD190 alimony the defendant had to pay for his wife and children, and the situation became heated,” the court documents continued.

“The defendant headed to the laundry room, grabbed one of the victim’s pantyhose and kept pulling on the victim’s neck with it for around 20 minutes until he made sure she was dead,” court papers added.

The defendant placed his “ex-wife’s lifeless body on the bed, left the house and went back to his house to stay with his new wife”, the court added.

He was arrested by authorities later in the day and confessed to the incident.

The higher court said it relied on witnesses’ statements, including her children, who testified that he was the last to be seen with her.  The Court of Cassation also depended on the defendant’s own confession.

The Court of Cassation tribunal comprised of judges Mohammad Ibrahim, Yassin Abdullat, Naji Zubi, Daoud Tubelieh and Mohammad Tarawneh.

‘Imposing new taxes is Jordanian sovereign decision’ — IMF

By - Nov 04,2017 - Last updated at Nov 04,2017

AMMAN — The International Monetary Fund (IMF) supports Jordan’s efforts to implement tax reforms, IMF Director of the Middle East and Central Asia Department Jihad Azour said, adding that a wider popular participation in taxpaying contributes to the success of such reforms.

Replying to questions by the Jordan News Agency, Petra, at a recent conference in Rabat, Azour stressed that imposing any new taxes is a sovereign decision by the government and that IMF only provides the government with consultation services.

He added that Jordan is among the countries that were most affected by regional circumstances, and hosted one of the biggest numbers of refugees.

Such circumstances had various impacts on the Kingdom’s economy, which required an economic reform programme to lower budget deficit and achieve economic stability through providing more investment opportunities to the private sector. 

Classification of Jordanian universities to be completed by year-end

By - Nov 04,2017 - Last updated at Nov 04,2017

AMMAN — Higher Education Accreditation Commission (HEAC) President Bashir Zu’bi on Thursday said that results of classification of the Jordanian universities would be announced by the end of the year.

During a meeting with presidents of private universities, Zu’bi said that HEAC is working on developing the university proficiency exam, considering the test as a tool of quality assurance of academic programmes.

He noted that private universities should have syllabi that accord with the requirements outlined in the reform plan of education and vocational and technical training, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported on Friday.

He added that HEAC also seeks to attract more Arab and foreign students, aiming to raise their number from 39,769 to 70,000 by 2020.

Arabic version of the Convention on the Rights of the Child to be launched November 20

By - Nov 04,2017 - Last updated at Nov 05,2017

The UN World Children’s Day is marked annually on November 20 to celebrate the day the Convention on the Rights of the Child was signed (Photo courtesy of UNICEF Jordan)

AMMAN — The National Council for Family Affairs and UNICEF will be launching the first-ever child friendly Arabic version of the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) on November 20, at an event which will see the participation of over 2,000 children and adults, a statement from the UN agency said. 

A more comprehensive handbook for adults including the official CRC document and the Sustainable Development Goals in Arabic will also be disseminated at the event. 

UNICEF has started planning for World Children’s Day, marked annually on November 20 to celebrate the day the Convention on the Rights of the Child — an agreement by member countries of the UN including Jordan, to do everything possible for the best interest of all children, came into effect in 1989, according to the statement.  

Since 1989, more countries have ratified the convention than any other human rights treaty in history, with 192 countries being state parties to the CRC.

This year’s World Children’s Day will see the addition of a children’s “take over” moment. Children and young people have been meeting high profile and influential people from all over the world, and sharing with them what they would do for children if they were to become that personality for one day, the statement said. 

People from all walks of life in Jordan, including ministers, diplomats, TV and radio personalities, private company CEOs and directors, music and sports achievers and the UN have started meeting children and youth and hearing their opinions and suggestions for the development and wellbeing of all children in the Kingdom. 

The World Children’s Day, which will be observed globally, is an occasion to underscore the progress made over the past decades and build on it to ensure equal opportunity to education, health, safety and participation for every child, the statement said.

Solidarity campaign for Palestinian camps’ health centres launched

By - Nov 04,2017 - Last updated at Nov 04,2017

AMMAN — On the occasion of the International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People, the Jordanian Society for Medical Aid for Palestine (JMAP) launched a solidarity campaign to support the health centres at the Jerash and Hitteen camps. 

Running through December 30, the campaign aims to collect medicines and other medical supplies to ensure the continued provision of the services at the camps. 

“Our mission is to establish and operate medical health centres within refugee camps in Jordan to provide health services and enable refugees to live in a healthy environment,” JMAP Communications Coordinator Shahed Shalami told The Jordan Times. 

“We are taking donations from both organisations and individuals, and we have established promotional stalls in crowded areas such as malls or hospitals for the expansion of the campaign,” she continued. 

The campaign will also contribute to JMAP’s goal of establishing a mobile clinic to serve the camps of Al Sukhneh, in Zarqa and Talbieh in Zizia.

“Palestinian refugees need our help to alleviate their hardship, and to enable JMAP to reach to others living in Sukhneh and Talbieh camps,” Shalami concluded.

Jordanian scholar digs deep into copper mining in ancient times

By - Nov 04,2017 - Last updated at Nov 04,2017

Zeidan Kafafi

AMMAN — Cutting wood for metal smelting was vital for inhabitants through different ages as the process of reforesting would take a long time, according to a Jordanian scholar, who added that the metal objects’ industry was monopolised by temples, palaces and rulers.

To produce metal objects, ore must be mined and then smelted with a strong fire to release the metal, which needs a large amount of timber, said Professor of Archaeology Zeidan Kafafi from Yarmouk University in Irbid.

If a state could not produce these objects, metal tools were imported from other countries with a developed metallurgy sector, Kafafi told The Jordan Times in a recent e-mail interview.

“Unfortunately, the metal technology wasn’t a form of administrative or scribal concern in Mesopotamia and Egypt in ancient times like some other crafts,” the scholar, who is the member of the Board of Trustees at the Jordan Museum, underlined.

Written documents present only limited information and are often silent concerning the geographical provenience of the metal ore, its quantity, price, or techniques of fabrication, Kafafi continued.

However, it might be found that jewellery excavated from the pre-historic times onward, and in the cemetery of Ur (southern Iraq) or at several sites in Egypt, represent an advanced form of handicrafts, Kafafi said.

“The study of the early metal production and its use has been left to the archaeologists and archaeo-metallurgists,” he said, adding “nevertheless, the Akkadian cuneiform texts uncovered in Mesopotamia refer to the importance of copper from the mountainous area located on the East of the Tigris River and of metal stones from Magan [Oman].”

When discussing the early metallurgy in Jordan, emphasis is placed on research in two regions: the Wadi Faynan (Wadi Araba) and Tell Al Himmah (Jordan Valley), which are both located in the Afro-Asian rift, Kafafi outlined.

Jordan became a major source of copper during the Chalcolithic period (beginning of the Bronze Age) when copper cores were found at Wadi Faynan.

“The earliest copper objects registered from the excavated archaeological sites comprised tools and decorative items,” Kafafi explained, noting that the excavated copper objects at Wadi Mehres in Palestine reflect the capabilities of the Chalcolithic metal smiths illustrated by the shapes of the cult-objects. 

“However, weapons such as daggers, crescent-shaped axes made of copper became more popular only later in the Early Bronze Age,” Kafafi stressed.

The Middle Bronze Age witnessed the use of sophisticated bronze objects that were moulded, Kafafi said, noting that “the Late Bronze Age metal production was a continuation and development of the Middle Bronze Age industry”.

As a result of this small scale dig at the site Tell Al Hammeh, a number of iron furnaces, first thought to be dated to the 8th/7th centuries BC, and a large amount of slag were uncovered, he noted.

“It has been claimed by the excavators that the study of the excavated archaeological materials from Tell Al Hammeh proved the presence of an iron production centre. New information about the dating of the iron production at the site was also obtained from the recent excavations conducted in 2000 and 2009,” the scholar emphasised.

However, this argues that the Iron Age workshop industry at Tell Al Hammeh might represent, if not the oldest of its type, at least one of the earliest in the Ancient Near East region, Kafafi argued.

Scholars should accept that Jordan is considered to be the region where the earliest steps of the copper mining, smelting, moulding and hammering occured, Kafafi concluded.

Kafafi is scheduled to elaborate on this topic in his presentation to the World Science Forum, to be held under the patronage of His Majesty King Abdullah at the Dead Sea between November 7 and 11. The international event will be organised by the Royal Scientific Society.

Number of government e-services to reach 293 by 2020

By - Nov 04,2017 - Last updated at Nov 04,2017

AMMAN — Several ministries and public departments have started testing e-services approved by the government, and are being implemented by the ICT Ministry in cooperation with partners, the ministry announced on Saturday.

As of the beginning of 2018, 10 services will be available exclusively online at some departments, according to a ministry statement.

During a recent Cabinet session, ICT Minister Majd Shweikeh presented a report that showed progress in the advancement towards a "digital Jordan", noting that many government procedures will be modified between 2017 and 2020.

The minister said that tenders were floated in 2017 to modify 287 public departments' services, adding that work is ongoing to automate 75 services. She noted that 136 services will be automated in 2018, 131 services in 2019 and 293 services in 2020. 

Sheyyab inspects services at health centres

By - Nov 04,2017 - Last updated at Nov 04,2017

AMMAN — Health Minister Mahmoud Sheyyab on Saturday inspected health services provided to citizens in a number of health centres in the governorates of Jerash, Ajloun and Irbid, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

Sheyyab affirmed the ministry's determination to make changes in the level of health services and improve their quality. He said that these field trips, especially surprise visits, allow strengthening performance.

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