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Refugee Code Week 2017 concludes

By - Oct 23,2017 - Last updated at Oct 23,2017

AMMAN — Deputising for Her Majesty Queen Rania, ICT Minister Majd Shweikeh on Sunday attended the closing ceremony of the Refugee Code Week 2017, according to a statement from the organisers.

More than 15,000 Jordanian and Syrian refugee youth gained skills to push for the development of digital economy while preparing them to join the global workforce, the statement said.

Jordan is leading in providing educational initiatives to refugees in the region and enrolling 79 per cent of Syrian children in the Kingdom's schools, according to the statement.

 

 

Army chief meets with US commander

By - Oct 23,2017 - Last updated at Oct 23,2017

AMMAN — Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Lt. Gen. Mahmoud Freihat on Sunday received US Army Commanding General Lt. Gen. Michael X. Garrett and an accompanying delegation, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported. The two sides discussed joint coordination and means of enhancing bilateral relations between the armed forces of both countries.

Also on Sunday, Freihat met with Czech Republic's Ambassador to Jordan Petr Hladík and an accompanying delegation.

During their meeting, they discussed various areas of cooperation between the armed forces of both countries. More on Sunday, Freihat met with Higher Education Minister Adel Tweisi and discussed ways to build a partnership between the Jordanian Armed Forces-the Arab Army and the Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research.

 

 

Jordan attends 'Eager Lion 2018' preparatory meeting

By - Oct 23,2017 - Last updated at Oct 23,2017

AMMAN — Head of the operations and training at the Jordan Armed Forces-Arab Army (JAF) Brig. Gen. Misleh Maaytah on Sunday attended the preparatory meeting of the "Eager Lion 2018".

Director of Joint Military Training at JAF, in the presence of the director of military training at the US Central Command, said that this annual drill aims at increasing coordination and cooperation between the armies of Jordan and the US, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

He added that the exercise also helps to develop both countries' defence and training capabilities in strategic planning, in addition to raise the level of preparedness of other participating armies and developing the national capabilities in crisis management. "Eager Lion" drills have been held annually in the Kingdom since 2011, in cooperation with the US and the participation of several countries.

King meets with Utah governor

Herbert talks ties with PM, FM, to attend economic forum

By - Oct 23,2017 - Last updated at Oct 23,2017

His Majesty King Abdullah meets with Governor of Utah Gary Herbert on Sunday (Photo courtesy of Royal Court)

AMMAN — His Majesty King Abdullah on Sunday met with Governor of Utah Gary Herbert and an accompanying delegation, a Royal Court statement said.

During the meeting, joined by HRH Prince Feisal, the King and the governor discussed strategic partnership between Jordan and the US and the means to enhance cooperation in various fields including energy, water, investment, higher education and cyber security.

The meeting also touched on the Syrian refugee crisis and its repercussions on Jordanian economy. This was in addition to discussions about the international efforts to combat terrorism.  

Royal Court Chief Fayez Tarawneh and the King Office’s Director Jaffar Hassan also attended the meeting.

Also on Sunday, Hebert met with Prime Minister Hani Mulki and discussed economic cooperation between the two parties, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported. 

Part of Herbert’s official itinerary is to participate in an economic forum involving Jordanian and US businesspeople for exploring investment opportunities in Jordan, and the possibility of joint projects between the two countries.

Mulki stated that the forum is a “step in the right direction” to achieve mutual benefits in economic relations between Jordan and the business community in Utah in particular, and the US in general.

The prime minister drew attention to the free trade agreements between the Kingdom and several countries including the US, pointing out that Jordan could be a destination for business, trade and reconstruction in the entire region.

Mulki reviewed the economic challenges facing Jordan, and the holistic reforms implemented in the political, economic and administrative fields.  

He also expressed his appreciation for current assistance and support provided by the US to Jordan in implementing various projects. 

On the other hand, the governor of Utah emphasized the relationship between the US and Jordan, commending the Kingdom as an  important player in the security and stability of the region.

Herbert added that the US is aware of the burden borne by Jordan because of its geographical location, which has also been strained by the instability of the situation in the region and the infux of  refugees.

Meanwhile, Foreign Affairs Minister Ayman Safadi met with Herbert and outlined the relations between the US and Jordan.

During the meeting, Safadi and Herbert signed a memorandum of understating between Jordan and the state of Utah to enhance cooperation in infrastructure, energy and water.   

In his meeting the governor on Sunday, State Minister for Investment Affairs Muhannad Shehadeh stressed the importance of the “strong” partnership between Jordan and the US, which led to the implementation of bilateral programmes with technical, financial and economic assistance for contributing to the economic development in Jordan. 

Herbert, who also visited the  Jordan Investment Commission (JIC)Shehadeh added that Jordan considers the US as a main commercial partner, according to a JIC statement. 

Shehadeh, who is also JIC president, reviewed the most important  reforms that resulted in significant improvements in economic sectors, such as amending laws and signing Arab and international agreements, which led to opening new export markets, as well as monetary and financial policies that maintained the national economy. 

He also went over investment opportunities in the Kingdom, especially in the industrial, ICT, tourist, medicine and energy sectors.

Shehadeh reviewed the regional circumstances, highlighting the importance of benefiting from the next phase and the geographical location of the Kingdom that will play a gateway role for the reconstruction of Syria and Iraq.

 

For his part, Herbert praised the “deep-rooted” relations between Jordan and the US at all levels, especially in the economic field, noting that the visit, with the participation of major US companies, aims at having a firsthand look at investment opportunities in Jordan.

NGO raises students to become environmental leaders

By - Oct 23,2017 - Last updated at Oct 23,2017

Participants in a Green Generation Foundation project pose for a group photo (Photo courtesy of Green Generation Foundation)

AMMAN — “Everyone can be a leader of environmental change, by motivating others and setting an example,” stated Dheaya Alrousan, chairman of Green Generation Foundation (GGF), a non-profit organisation advocating for environment preservation.

Registered under the umbrella of the Environment Ministry, the GGF aims to foster a “new green generation” to help solve environmental and climate issues through various activities and projects.

“We train people to become environmental leaders at their own scale. There are practical solutions that can be implemented on a daily basis which help in lessening the global crisis,” Alrousan told The Jordan Times over the phone, noting that the foundation aims at teaching young Jordanians to become more aware of their environment through education and advocacy.

Focusing on youth mobilisation, the foundation was set up in 2011 by Ahmad Alnobani who gathered fellow students at the Hashemite University under the name “HU Greeners”.

“My journey as an environmental activist started when I went to California as part of the USAID programme ‘Leader in global environmental issues’. This was a real eye-opener about all the initiatives that exist and, when I came back to Jordan, I felt a responsibility to do something similar,” Alnobani told The Jordan Times. 

“We started off by carrying out a number of projects that were both simple and innovative,” said the 27-year-old, citing the “Green Walls project” that saw the implementation of a vertical garden bottle system at various locations to promote greenery in urban areas, the “Bring your own Cup” campaign that sought to reduce daily waste created by disposable cups at university, and the “Green Maps” project promoting Mahes in northwestern Amman as a green city. 

“The students used these small daily steps to show people they can bring about great changes; and that you don’t need to be a global leader to make a difference,” Alrousan said.

A number of awareness-raising initiatives targeted at a wider audience were also organised to spread knowledge and social conscience on the issue of climate change, including the “Regional Day of Action” and the “Environmental Open Days”, which both used cultural and artistic techniques like street theatre, cinema and fashion shows to convey their message.

“The Regional Day was a huge event that we held in parallel with other countries in the region,” Alnobani recalled, noting that they used creative forms of expression to attract large numbers of people. 

“You cannot only talk to people, this won’t have an impact. You need to make them involved so they react and feel useful,” the founder continued.

Three years ago, the Green Generation Foundation was officially established as an NGO, with the aim of increasing its visibility and impact through partnerships with major institutions. 

These include the Arab Youth Climate Movement, the Climate action network — Arab World and the Climate action network International, according to the chairman. 

“It is important to show the world that youth in Jordan are well aware of climate change and are part of the world’s movement to combat it,” said Alrousan highlighting the importance to shed light on the highly vulnerable areas in Jordan such as the Dead Sea, Mujib Biosphere Reserve, Fifa and Dana Nature reserves.

Widening its audience to other generations, the GGF recently partnered with the Dahiyat Al Hussein schoolchildren to create the Permanent Waste Exhibition launched in October, and has conducted a series of workshops for local communities in 10 governorates.

“We have finished phase one and two with a funding from the Friedrich Ebert Stiftung foundation and we hope to launch a third phase next year to cover the rest of the Kingdom’s governorates,” Alrousan said, adding that the project seeks to empower local communities by spreading knowledge on various environment-related issues such as political negotiations, gender awareness and the role of women in climate change. 

The GGF is scheduled to hold a nationwide Climate March on November 2, under the theme “You have a print, make it green” that will last for five days, going from Balqa to Aqaba. 

“When it comes to the environment, it is crucial to show the example first, and to promote simple behaviours like walking rather than using your car to reduce carbon emissions,” the chairman concluded, voicing his hope for a large participation in the upcoming march.

Jordan, which has officially recognised climate change as “a serious and pervasive threat to humanity” through an assessment report by its Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, has been implementing a comprehensive national policy for climate change in 2013, scheduled to run through 2020.

 

It aims to “strengthen Jordan’s capacity to respond to the detrimental impacts of climate change” and to “strengthen Jordan’s global stewardship in addressing options to reduce emissions while achieving sound and sustainable developmental objectives in the various sectors of energy, according to a statement by the Ministry of Environment.

Dutch scholar researches ‘entire history’ of basalt desert in Jordan

By - Oct 23,2017 - Last updated at Oct 23,2017

Peter Akkermans

AMMAN — The Jabal Qurma Archaeological Landscape Project started in 2012, with extensive field surveys and excavations in the basalt desert in the east of Azraq, according to a Dutch archaeologist.

“Since 2012, every year, we’re in the field with a team of about 10, for a period of about two-and-a-half months,” said Professor Peter Akkermans, who teaches Near Eastern Archaeology at Leiden University, in the Netherlands.

Their excavations take place at various places in Jabel Qurma, around 30km east of Azraq, such as the ancient stone-walled enclosures and ancient burial mounds, he added.

The Dutch archaeologist has conducted excavations and surveys in Turkey, Syria and Jordan in the past decades, and in 2012, he became the director of the Jabel Qurma Archaeological Landscape Project in the Kingdom.

The team is interested in the entire history of the basalt desert in Jordan, the expert pointed out, from prehistory —about 12,000 years ago — until 19th and 20th century.

“However, our focus at the moment is on the historical period between about 1000 BC [the so-called Iron Age] and about 800AD [roughly Ummayad period],”Akkermans added. 

According to the scholar, this long period has not been investigated by archaeologists until now. 

“To a very large extent, this period in the desert between 1000 BC and 800 AD, is still a ‘terra incognita’, which is hardly or not included in any archaeological discussion,” he underlined.

Scientists are simply not aware of the happenings in those vast deserts, but nevertheless they often tend to present these regions, either explicitly or implicitly, as marginal environments inhabited by marginal people, of little or no relevance for local archaeology, the scholar explained.

“I believe this is wrong and does not do justice to the desert people and their lifestyle in antiquity. Our research in the Jebel Qurma region is new and yields wholly new data and insights; piece by piece we are beginning to understand the archaeology of the region and its importance for Jordanian archaeology in general. For example, at the moment we are working mainly on ancient burials in the desert,” said Akkermans.

The team led by the Dutch scholar studied burial sites during their excavation seasons.

“There are very large numbers of burial cairns of different shape and size in the Jebel Qurma region, but until very recently, we had no clue about their date, construction, kind and nature of burials inside them, mortuary practices in general, etc. In short any basic archaeological information about these tombs was virtually absent,” he continued.

“Who were the people who were buried there and who buried them?” he asked.

“The question is urgent, because of ongoing looting and plunder of tombs, even in these remote areas,” he underlined, stressing that they are now busy with a systematic and in-depth investigation of these burials, in order to understand the treatment of the deceased people in the past and the diversity in the desert.

“Skeletal analysis may help us to understand not only burial practices but also ancient way of life, including issues such as local health and diet,” Akkermans said.

Epigraphic and iconographic data of the Black Desert is very rich and the scholar drew conclusions that people in the past “intensively used the area for those purposes”.

“What was the message which the producers of the rock art tried to convey? And why did people in the desert start to write after all?”

That is a major research question within the Jabel Qurma project, which investigates the local archaeology and its relationship to rock art and inscriptions, Akkermans underscored.

“The pieces of rock art show images of lions, gazelles, horses and large birds that may be ostriches. There are also many hunting scenes or battle scenes, with horsemen armed with spears and people with bows, swords and shields,” the professor outlined.

Moreover, most of the inscriptions are in the “so-called Safaitic script”, an alphabetic pre-Arabic script that was widely used in the desert around 2000 years ago, the scholar noted.

“The inscriptions tend to be very short. Most of the texts are simply names, like ‘so-and-so, the son of so-and-so’, “ Akkermans explained, adding that “some texts contain information on what people were doing, with a few hinting that the people who inhabited Jabel Qurma were in contact with the Nabataeans”.

“I am on the lookout for the Nabataeans,” one inscription reads. Other inscriptions tell of the challenges and setbacks encountered by the people who lived at Qurma, the archaeologist stressed.

“May there be strength against hunger,” one inscription reads, while another was written by a man who said he was “distraught over his beloved”, the Dutch researcher quoted.

Regarding future plans, Akkermans hopes to continue his research in the desert in Jordan for many more years. 

“I find the basalt desert east of Azraq both extremely beautiful [from an environmental and landscape perspective] and extremely interesting [from an archaeological perspective]. At the moment, we are only at the very beginning of an understanding of the past of the Black Desert,” the scholar emphasised.

“My work takes place pleasantly and efficiently, in close cooperation with the Department of Antiquities in Jordan [DoA], and the help of the DoA and its staff is essential for the success of my research in the desert,” Akkermans highlighted.

 

“In short, I hope to contribute substantially to the archaeological investigation in Jordan’s desert for the coming years; I find it a true pleasure to work here!”

Police chief meets Lower House’s human rights committee

By - Oct 23,2017 - Last updated at Oct 23,2017

AMMAN — The head and members of the Lower House’s Public Freedoms and Human Rights Committee on Sunday met with Public Security Department (PSD) Director Maj. Gen. Ahmad Faqih and reviewed the reform process in security.

Faqih said that all PSD procedures are the outcomes of modern security plans under Royal directives to protect citizens and guarantee their rights, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

The PSD chief noted that reform programmes at correctional and rehabilitation centres provided inmates with schools, computer labs and libraries, in addition to comprehensive healthcare services.

MP Sleiman Zaben, head of the panel, said that the visit aimed at enhancing partnership between the legislative and executive authorities.

 

 

Alleged drug smuggling attempt thwarted at border

By - Oct 23,2017 - Last updated at Oct 23,2017

AMMAN — A military source in the General Command of the Jordan Armed Forces-Arab Army on Sunday said that an eastern military zone unit, in coordination with the Anti-Narcotics Department, thwarted an alleged drug smuggling attempt, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported. According to the source, at 2:30am on Sunday, five people tried to trespass from Syria to Jordan.

The security personnel applied the rules of engagement leading to the arrest of one of the suspects and the injury of another; the rest retreated to Syria. After searching the area, nine bags containing 335 palm-sized sheets of hashish, 47,765 Tramadol pills, 395017 Captagon pills and 92 rounds of AK-47 ammunition were reportedly seized and transferred to the concernred authorities.

King pledges full support for Egypt as terror hits anew

Jordan renews call for intensified global anti-terror efforts

By - Oct 21,2017 - Last updated at Oct 21,2017

Egyptians carry the coffin of Police Cpt. Ahmed Fayez during his funeral outside a mosque in the capital Cairo’s western suburb of Sixth of October, on Saturday. Fayez died the previous night during an attack that left him and dozens of other policemen killed in an ambush by terrorists (AFP photo)

AMMAN — His Majesty King Abdullah on Saturday sent a cable of condolences to Egyptian President Abdel Fattah Al Sisi over the loss of lives in Friday’s clashes between Egyptian security forces and armed terrorists in Giza’s Wahat area, which also led to several injuries.

At least 16 Egyptian policemen were killed in a shootout with terrorists on the road between Cairo and the Bahariya oasis in the country’s Western Desert, according to an official toll released Saturday.

His Majesty expressed his condemnation of the heinous terrorist act by criminal groups, stressing Jordan’s full solidarity with Egypt and Amman’s support for Cairo in facing terrorism, according to a Royal Court statement.

King Abdullah also expressed his condolences to Sisi and the victims’ families, wishing the injured a speedy recovery.

Also on Saturday, the Royal Court announced it would fly the Jordanian flag at its main entrance at half-mast from early morning until 6pm in tribute to the victims of the clashes in Egypt.

The government on Saturday strongly denounced the terrorist attack.

Minister of State for Media Affairs Mohammad Momani expressed the Kingdom’s support to Egypt in its efforts against terrorism and its criminal groups that target the security and stability of the Arab country, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

Momani, who is also the government spokesperson, highlighted the importance of joining regional and international efforts in the war against terrorism, “dark ideologies” and the criminal mindset of terrorists, especially after achieving many victories in the war against Daesh and similar terrorist organisations.

He also conveyed the government’s condolences to the victims’ families, and wished the injured a speedy recovery. 

S&P downgrades Jordan rating, keeps outlook stable

Syrian refugee crisis will continue to curb growth, agency says

By - Oct 21,2017 - Last updated at Oct 21,2017

AMMAN — International credit rating agency Standard and Poor’s (S&P) has downgraded Jordan’s rating to B+, from BB-, citing poor performance on external debt, among other factors. 

According to a report S&P posted on its website late Friday, Jordan’s external vulnerabilities have increased and the structure of the public debt stock has weakened and will remain high, while the pace of fiscal reforms “will likely be slower than we had previously anticipated due to the weak macroeconomic environment and social pressures”.

“We are therefore lowering our long-term foreign and local currency sovereign credit ratings on Jordan to ‘B+’ from ‘BB-’. We are affirming the short-term rating at ‘B’,” the report read.

“The downgrade reflects our view of Jordan’s weakening debt profile amid low growth and implementation pressures related to fiscal reforms, and higher external risks,” the statement explained.

Meanwhile, the agency said that stable outlook “balances greater risks from a slower pace of fiscal consolidation than we previously expected against continued support from bilateral donors, at a rating of ‘B+’”.

Explaining the rationale behind the downgrade, the agency said that due to the very high debt burden (around $37 billion at the end of the first third) and the large financing needs, “Jordan has increased its exposure to foreign currency debt and commercial funding”.

The agency expects the country to continue implementing fiscal reforms, yet projecting a slower pace of implementation than the International Monetary Fund programme had anticipated. Moreover, S&P expects the state-owned power generation company, NEPCO, to keep facing challenges as the enterprise has returned to making small losses this year. 

“In our view, the government is likely to prioritise social stability and growth in the current domestic and external environment, with potential trade-offs as to the scope of fiscal reforms.”

Overviewing the Kingdom’s institutional and economic profile, the rating agency expects a low economic growth of an average of 2.7 per cent over 2017-2020, compared to 6.5 per cent over 2000-2009, citing, among other reasons, fiscal pressures resulting from Syrian refugee inflow.

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