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Crisis management centre wraps up major drill

Security agencies ‘show high level of coordination, swift response to simulated situations’

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

AMMAN — HRH Prince Ali, director of the National Centre for Security and Crisis Management, on Monday attended the concluding ceremony of the "2017 Fortified Fortress" drill that saw the participation of security apparatuses and several state institutions.

Prime Minister Hani Mulki, who is also chairman of the board of directors of the centre, attended the drill, designed as an experiment to evaluate mechanisms of responding to crises and the coordination capabilities of concerned institutions, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported on Tuesday.

The exercise included various phases to assess the effectiveness of strategic and executive plans prepared to deal with all forms of crises, in addition to drills that simulated expected real-life scenarios.

All participating institutions showed "an advanced level" in dealing with various forms of crises, were "able to adapt" to emergencies, and exhibited agility and swiftness in their reactions to the simulated situations, along with a high degree of coordination, cooperation and exchanging information with other agencies, according to Petra.

At the closing ceremony, Brig. Gen. Adnan Abbadi, deputy director of the centre, presented a briefing on the outcome of the drill.

His Majesty King Abdullah in January, 2008, entrusted Prince Ali with the establishment of the centre.

In a letter to the Prince, the King said the centre, which he described as a “national necessity”, should function within a national framework to coordinate and unify efforts and capabilities to confront and manage any form of crisis the Kingdom might face, in addition to undertaking necessary crisis planning.

 

His Majesty, along with HRH Crown Prince Hussein, was at the centre to follow up firsthand on a successful operation to neutralise terrorists in a village near Karak in December.

‘Loudspeakers, DJ banned outside tourism facilities’

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

AMMAN — Tourism Minister Lina Annab on Tuesday said the ministry has decided to ban the use of loudspeakers and DJ outside tourist facilities, a ministry statement said. The decision comes in line with the regulations related to preventing noise pollution based on the Environment Law of 2016.

The ministry will be the authority to monitor the commitment to the new decision at tourist facilities across the Kingdom, she added. The minister warned against violating the law, which will be subject to legal measures implemented by the Tourism Police Department.

 

 

Kuwait lifts ban on Jordanian produce

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

AMMAN — Kuwait on Tuesday lifted its ban on some of Jordan’s fruits and vegetables, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported. The ban was imposed three months ago after claims that produce contained chemical pesticide residues.

According to the Kuwaiti statement, products have to be accompanied with certificates of safety issued by accredited agencies. The Agriculture Ministry called on exporters to commit to the standards of safety and requirements of importing countries.  

 

 

Zakat Fund to distribute 11,000 school bags

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

AMMAN — Awqaf directors in various governorates of the Kingdom on Tuesday received 11,000 school bags with an estimated cost of JD92,000, to be distributed to students from underprivileged families who are beneficiaries of the Zakat Fund, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

In a ceremony attended by Minister of Awqaf and Islamic Affairs Wael Arabiyat and Secretary General of the Ministry Mahmoud Hadid, Director General of the Zakat Fund and Awqaf directors, the minister pointed out the important role of the Zakat Fund in providing assistance to the underprivileged.

He said that the delivery of the bags coincided with the beginning of the new academic year to help underprivileged parents to secure part of school supplies for their children, Petra added.

 

 

Four injured in Zarqa road accident

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

AMMAN — Four people were injured on Tuesday when an oil truck collided with three other vehicles in Zarqa, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

Civil Defence Department (CDD) personnel transferred the injured to Prince Feisal and Zarqa Hospitals, where they were reported to be in fair conditions. CDD personnel also put off a fire that erupted in the truck after the collision. 

‘Ancient terrace practice in Jordan a sign of innovation’

Workshop gathers experts in fields of archaeology, agronomy, architecture

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

AMMAN — A workshop titled "Ancient Terraces Practices in Jordan", was held  on  Sunday at the German-Jordanian University near Madaba. 

The event was organised as a joint venture between the German Protestant Institute of Archaeology in Amman and the Centre for the Study of Natural and Cultural Heritage of the German-Jordanian University, with the support of the German Institute of Archaeology, the organisers said. 

The workshop gathered experts in the fields of archaeology, agronomy and architecture. 

"I look at this topic [ancient terraces] as very important, because  that  is part of understanding our history," said Director General of the Department of Antiquities Monther Jamhawi  in his opening remarks.

Jamhawi, who was the official patron of the event, added that these terraces "show us how humans in the past were innovative to solve the problems they faced". 

For German researcher Bernd Muller-Neuhof, from the German Archaeological Institute, the implementation of terraces for gardening, in combination with run-off irrigation, is a strategy for applying agriculture in regions with low precipitation and no access to rivers for irrigation.  

This strategy has been applied by prehistoric societies in the Middle East and the southwest of the US, according to Muller-Neuhof, who for many years directed the research in northeastern badia. 

 One of the earliest known examples derives from the basalt desert of northeastern Jordan, where terraces have been introduced in the late 5th and the 4th millennium BC, he stressed. 

The UNESCO representative, Italian architect Giovani Fontana Antonelli, highlighted the Palestinian village of Battir, which lies 7km southwest of the Old City of Jerusalem, where locals constructed terraces using the same farming methods for centuries. 

“Battir’s  historic rural landscape is characterised by an extensive area of handmade agricultural terraces, dry-stone walls and ancient irrigation systems that survived until today, he said.

 The tool for safeguarding this cultural landscape was the “Battir Landscape Conservation and Management Plan”, Fontana Antonelli continued, adding that the plan was based on the detailed survey of 12sq.km of terraced landscape and the subsequent classification of its main typologies, which led to designate “land units”. 

While surveying the runoff water retention systems built by the Nabataeans in the Beidha area, mainly inside Little Petra,  the Swiss architect, archaeologist and restorer Ulrich Bellwald discovered a well-preserved, partially still backfilled and not fully excavated wine press at the eastern end of the wadi adjacent to the western end of Little Petra.  

The most frightening feature which could be discovered was a dam with a height of more than 25m, closing the outlet of the wadi with the winery into Wadi Beidha below the Neolithic settlement, Bellwald said.  

It was only the construction of this dam which allowed the set-up of the winery, as it tremendously reduced the gradient of the wadi bed, which finally led to the deposition of the required sediments for the plantation of the vines; hence, the wadi in its actual topography proved to be a completely artificial, manmade landscape, Bellwald claimed, noting that, after having been backfilled, the area was terraced for the plantation of the vines.  

Due to the remote location of the wadi, it was never used again for any agricultural use since the Nabataean period. Therefore, even the terraces laid out for the plantation of the vines are still visible today, the expert pointed out. 

According to Bellwald, the newly discovered “Little Petra Winery” is by far the most elaborate model of agriculture by terracing in the Petra area, and, furthermore, it bears witness for a long-term planning and investment in the field of agricultural production. 

Catreena Hammarneh, a Jordanian archaeologist from the German Protestant Institute of Archaeology, connected ancient with modern terraces in her presentation “Human Role in Reshaping the Landscape of Ancient Terraces of Petra as Response to Environment”. 

“Manmade agricultural installations are a common feature not only in Jordan, but around the Mediterranean,” she emphasised. 

Mohammad Najjar, a veteran archaeologist, presented a paper  Investigating two “Iron Age Agricultural Terraces in Faynan/Southern Jordan” where he analysed the potential impact of copper industrial production on the local environment. 

Based on the results of these analysis it will be argued that, although persistently high, the environmental pollution caused by industrial copper production during the Iron Age was restricted to the production locales and slag heaps,  and that these agricultural terraces had twofold function of minimising the heavy metal contamination and pollution of the soils, and sustaining the working on copper production, he added. 

 The region of Wadi Faynan is an "excellent" case study for the evolution of socio-political complexity and environmental degradation, Najjar claimed.

However, there is still a substantial amount of evidence that the valley was a place where different floodwater farming techniques were implemented, he said.

In addition, one of the biggest challenges was to date the ancient agricultural terrace systems, as there was a scarcity of material culture especially datable artefacts found during the excavations, the archaeologist said.

The workshop participants came up with a number of recommendations related to the protection of the natural heritage, and also emphasised a need of building a network of local and international specialists to work together in joint projects, organisers said.

 

Aims for future work could involve increased studies on terraces and their traditional patterns in order to revive traditional practices, which are imperative in order to counteract environmental threats, such as water scarcity and urban expansion at the expense of agricultural land.

Queen launches Jordan River Foundation’s annual handicrafts exhibition

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

Her Majesty Queen Rania launched the 22nd edition of the Jordan River Foundation’s annual handicrafts exhibition on Tuesday (Photo courtesy of Royal Court)

AMMAN — Her Majesty Queen Rania launched the 22nd edition of the Jordan River Foundation’s (JRF) annual handicrafts exhibition on Tuesday evening, titled “Vintage Dreams”.

Hosted at the JRF showroom in Amman, the exhibition showcases the foundation’s latest collections of traditional and contemporary handicrafts. 

All items on display were created by women from local communities, under JRF’s projects, Bani Hamidah Designs, Jordan River Designs and Wadi Rayan Designs, according to a statement from Her Majesty’s office.

Drawing inspiration from olive trees, pomegranates, and urban and bedouin symbolism, this year’s exhibition reflects local traditions across a selection of home furnishings, special gift items and fashion accessories. 

Her Majesty toured the exhibition in the company of JRF Director General Enaam Barrishi, as well as members of the JRF Board of Trustees and friends and supporters of the Foundation.

JRF projects have empowered more than 2,500 beneficiaries to date, providing local women with technical and entrepreneurial training to help them provide for their families, according to the statement. 

This year’s exhibition, which is being held with the support of Kathraba for Investments, is currently on display at the foundation’s showroom in Jabal Amman’s Rainbow Street.

JRF is a Jordanian non-profit, non-governmental organisation established in 1995 and chaired by Her Majesty Queen Rania. The foundation operates the Jordan River Child Safety and Jordan River Community Empowerment programmes, and aims to engage Jordanians to realise their full economic potential and overcome social challenges, according to the statement.

 

Since its establishment, JRF has launched numerous socio-economic projects for women, providing employment opportunities to enhance their livelihoods, while also focusing on programmes aimed at child protection from abuse, the statement added.  

CPF officials meet with NASA-trained Jordanian students

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

AMMAN — Crown Prince Foundation (CPF) officials on Tuesday met with Jordanian students who finished a training programme at NASA under the “Cooperation with NASA” initiative, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported on Tuesday.

The participants were enrolled in a 10-week intensive training programme under the supervision of NASA experts.

CPF Acting CEO Nour Abul Ragheb, who headed the meeting, expressed the foundation’s pride with what trainees presented during the programme.

Members of the participating team — consisting of Abdulrahman Bideir Muhiddin Zaatar, Maha Afif and Mohammad Salti — presented a detailed presentation of their academic and personal experiences during their stay in the US.

The initiative is the first NASA partnership with an Arab country, through which students from all engineering colleges in the Kingdom have the opportunity, in coordination and support from the CPF, to conduct academic and practical research at NASA’s Ames Research Centre to develop their skills in aviation and space sciences.

Zaatar, a student at Princess Sumaya University for Technology (PSUT), said that his experience at NASA was a “turning point” in his life.

His project included designing electric systems for a nano-satellite (CubeSat) that is composed of solar cells, batteries and electronic gadgets. 

CubeSats are a type of research spacecraft called nanosatellites that are flown as auxiliary payloads on previously planned missions. The cube-shaped devices are approximately 10.15cm long, have a volume of about one quart and weigh about 1.36kg, according to NASA.

Bideir, from the German-Jordanian University, said that one of the problems facing long space missions is the credibility of advanced life support systems and their costs and effects on the crew, noting that he worked on developing an artificial biological membrane that simulates human membranes.

This membrane has the ability to treat sewage water and is able to conduct self-maintenance when encountering physical or chemical damages, the student noted.

Afif, a student from the Jordan University of Science and Technology, said that exploring Mars is NASA’s next goal, and to ensure the success of the mission, it is necessary to present high level medical services to astronauts during their trip to Mars, which was the basis of her work on the “Medical Data Architecture” project.

Afif said that the project aims at designing a computerised medical system for space ships, which automatically records, saves and analyses biological signals and medical information, and then gives the proper diagnosis for the case.

Salti worked on a project that studied Earth surfaces that are similar to the surface of Mars. He concluded that the surface of Atacama Desert in Chilli has similar climate conditions to those on Mars.

His experiment included using the K-REX2 vehicle, which was developed at Ames and equipped with a digging tool that can reach a two-metre depth to extract soil samples and transfer them to special devices on the vehicle for analysis to look for any life indicators on Mars.

 

At the end of the meeting, students expressed their appreciation of CPF for giving them the opportunity to participate in the programmes and having a look at advanced learning environments. 

Razzaz outlines Education Ministry’s plan for structural change

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

Minister of Education Omar Razzaz holds a lecture at Abdel Hameed Shoman Foundation on Monday (Petra photo)

AMMAN — Minister of Education Omar Razzaz on Monday held a lecture about the “reality of education” in Jordan, outlining the failures and successes the system has gone through in the last 70 years and announced the ministry’s plans for future development.

The lecture titled “Education: Where did we fail and succeed and where are we heading?” was held at Abdel Hameed Shoman Foundation, witnessed the attendance of the public, who listened to the ministry’s vision, focusing on the four main elements of the educational system: the teacher, student, school and curriculum.

The current educational system, which relies on instructing rather than using techniques that enhance critical thinking and innovation, is facing major problems, Razzaz said. 

Taking the national strategy for Human Resources as the starting point, a draft on teaching Career Path will be issued by the end of 2017 in a bid to enhance career development for teachers, he added. 

Training, evaluating, occupational licensing will be covered in the draft, which will be formulated in coordination with the Teachers Syndicate, the minister noted. 

He stressed the importance of qualifying teachers before enroling them, and praised the “satisfying” outcomes of Queen Rania Teachers Academy, from which 200 teachers have so far graduated. 

The minister stressed the need to take care of the first five years of the student’s life, and the importance to achieve social equality. 

Noting the importance of pre-schools, he highlighted that they remain reserved to a small portion of the population, with only 13 per cent of the students, most of them in Amman, attending pre-schools. 

The minister also highlighted the importance of making use of technological development in the sector in order to suit the variety of the students’ needs.

Razzaz revealed the ministry’s intention to use adaptive learning, an educational method that uses computers as interactive teaching devices, by connecting 2,700 schools to broadband.

He stressed the importance of creating programmes for extracurricular activities whereby students acquire and improve important skills, citing the national summer programme “Basma” that was implemented by the ministry.

There are plans to prevent violence in schools by measuring it through a national pact between students, teachers and parents, the minister added. 

The transformation of Tawjihi (Secondary School Certificate examination) from a tool to evaluate performance to “a source of horror” affects a person’s work, marriage and even economic status, said Razzaz. 

Razzaz discussed the ministry’s long term vision which focuses on strengths rather than weaknesses, and in which the student’s participation in extracurricular activities can be considered part of the mark in his/her admission to university.

He added that the ministry is examining the possibility of building an automated question bank that will enable students to take the examination at any time of the year. 

 

Successes and failures 

 

His Majesty the late King Hussein was aware of the importance of the human element for a country like Jordan which lacks natural resources, Razzaz noted, adding that educational achievements were shaped with the introduction of the law making elementary education obligatory.

Between 1963 and 1993, Jordan recorded the lowest rates in illiteracy among Arab countries, he added. 

 

However, major defects have affected the system since then, including the lack of renewal and development in the educational institutions, the discrepancy between the quality of educational outputs and the needs of the market, in addition to the deterioration of teachers’ economic and social status.  

State Security Court examines 20 terror cases

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

AMMAN — The State Security Court (SSC) on Tuesday looked into 20 cases related to terrorism, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

During the session, SSC listened to a number of statements from prosecution witnesses.

The court charged an alleged terrorist group of 16 people, who already had criminal records, with using automatic weapon that led to the death of a person, planning terrorist actions, carrying terrorist acts using automatic weapons and explosives, in addition to consuming narcotics.

The alleged terrorist group, led by a woman, allegedly executed terrorist acts against police in Aqaba, using weapons and handmade grenades last March with the aim of spreading fear among citizens, according to Petra.

The alleged terrorist acts were carried out when police raided a house to arrest a dangerous suspect. The group then responded, using violent means against the security forces. 

If found guilty, defendants will face penalties ranging from death by hanging and life imprisonment.

The court adjourned the session until next week to enable the defendants to appoint lawyers.      

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