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Cassation Court upholds over 5-year sentence for man convicted of sexual assault on woman with disabilities

By - Feb 17,2025 - Last updated at Feb 17,2025

AMMAN — The Court of Cassation upheld a November 2023 Criminal Court ruling, sentencing a repeated offender to over five years in prison after convicting him of engaging in sexual activities with a woman with mental disabilities in June 2023.

The court declared the defendant guilty of sexually assaulting a person with disabilities and handed him five years in prison.

However, the court decided to increase the sentence to seven-and-a-half years in prison because the defendant was a repeat offender.

The 21-year-old victim suffered from minor mental disabilities that made her act as a nine-nine-year-old, according to court transcripts.

Court papers said the victim ran away from her home on June 2 and met with the defendant whom she knew a few months before the sexual assault incident.

“The two engaged in sexual activities eight times before the matter was exposed” court papers said.

The family alerted the authorities and the defendant was arrested, court papers added.

The defendant contested his verdict through his lawyer claiming that he “had no knowledge that the woman suffered from mental disabilities and that he planned to marry her,” court papers said.

Meanwhile, the Criminal Court’s attorney general asked the higher court to uphold the sentence.

The higher court ruled that the Criminal Court brushed the defendant’s claims aside stating that “it is very clear that the victim suffered from mental disabilities that made her unaware of what is right and what is wrong”.

Therefore, the higher court ruled that the court proceedings were accurate and that the defendant was given the appropriate punishment.

The Court of Cassation was headed by Judge Mohammad Ibrahim and included judges Fawzi Nahar, Ibrahim Abu Shamma, Qassem Dughmi and Majid Rafaya.

 

Labour experts discuss challenges facing textile workers

By - Feb 17,2025 - Last updated at Feb 17,2025

The discussion highlights the vulnerabilities of workers under subcontracting models (File photo)

AMMAN – Labour experts, professionals, and policymakers on Monday discussed the challenges facing textile and garment workers, particularly those employed under subcontracting agreements and in small and medium-sized sewing workshops.

The event, titled “Challenges Faced by Workers in the Textile and Garment Sector under Subcontracting Agreements and in Small and Medium-Sized Sewing Workshops,” provided a platform for key stakeholders to address the sector’s most pressing issues.

Organised by Tamkeen for Legal Aid and Human Rights, the session brought together representatives from government agencies, employers, worker unions, and industry experts to exchange insights and explore practical solutions aimed at improving labour conditions and ensuring the long-term sustainability of the sector.

The discussion highlighted the vulnerabilities of workers under subcontracting models, where employment terms are often unstable, social protections are lacking, and wages are inconsistent. 

Employees in small and medium-sized workshops face challenges such as informal contracts, limited access to labour rights and few opportunities for career advancement, according to a statement from Tamkeen.

The session aimed to foster an open dialogue, to generate policy recommendations and strategies to improve the livelihoods of textile and garment workers, while strengthening the resilience of the sector as a whole. 

The outcomes of this discussion could influence labour policies and industry practices, supporting both equitable economic growth and sustainable employment.

Vice Chairman of the Jordanian Association of Garment Exporters Sanal Kumar stressed the crucial role of the textile and garment sector in employment, noting its contribution to the local workforce. 

He highlighted that the sector currently employs around 25,000 Jordanians, including 6,000 workers in rural areas, and plays a key role in attracting workers from regions with limited job opportunities.

President of the General Trade Union of Workers in the Textile Garment and Clothing Industry Fathallah Imrani reiterated the union’s commitment to supporting workers, emphasising the union’s ongoing efforts to improve workers’ rights and enhance their working conditions.

Other sector experts and stakeholders discussed the need to classify subcontracted factories into two categories, those not associated with exporting factories and those connected to global export chains that adhere to international compliance standards.

Participants also highlighted the importance of achieving greater production flexibility while addressing the sector’s various challenges.

 

Social Development Ministry, UNFPA sign agreement to boost protection services

By - Feb 17,2025 - Last updated at Feb 17,2025

Minister of Social Development Wafa Bani Mustafa and United Nations Population Fund representative in Jordan Himyar Abdulmoghni on Monday sign a cooperation agreement (Petra photo)

AMMAN — Minister of Social Development Wafa Bani Mustafa and United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) representative in Jordan Himyar Abdulmoghni on Monday signed a cooperation agreement aimed at supporting the ministry’s social service offices in managing family and juvenile protection cases.

The agreement focuses on enhancing the capacity of 19 social service offices across the Kingdom that specialise in handling domestic violence cases, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

During the signing ceremony, attended by UNFPA Programme Coordinator Tsovinar Harutyunyan, Bani Mustafa highlighted the significance of the partnership with UNFPA and its role in supporting various joint programmes. 

She stressed the need to establish a classification mechanism for domestic violence cases within a comprehensive case management framework that prioritises the best interests of individuals.

Bani Mustafa also highlighted the importance of training social workers to enhance their skills theoretically and practically, ensuring that the cooperation leads to tangible results during the agreement’s implementation period.

The UNFPA representative expressed appreciation for the ministry’s efforts, noting their alignment with UNFPA’s goals and programmes in areas such as policy development, institutional capacity-building, and awareness programmes on domestic violence.

 

Jordanian ambassador presents credentials to Czech president

By - Feb 17,2025 - Last updated at Feb 17,2025

AMMAN — Mohammad Hindawi on Monday presented his credentials to Czech President Petr Pavel as Jordan's accredited, non-resident extraordinary and plenipotentiary ambassador to the Czech Republic.

The ceremony took place at the presidential headquarters in Prague Castle, according to a Foreign Ministry statement.

Hindawi conveyed His Majesty King Abdullah's greetings of to President Pavel, along with his best wishes for further progress and prosperity for the Czech people.  

President Pavel extended his regards and appreciation to King Abdullah, praising His Majesty’s wise policies and the strong, distinguished relations between the two countries.  

The Czech president also expressed his government's interest in boosting and developing ties, wishing Jordan and its people continued progress and prosperity.  

Czech First Deputy Foreign Minister Jiří Kozák and presidential advisors attended the ceremony.

 

AQACHEI, Pearson sign MoU to streamline students' higher education pathways

By - Feb 17,2025 - Last updated at Feb 17,2025

The MoU aims to align Pearson’s Business and Technology Education Council approval process for higher education institutions in Jordan with AQACHEI’s regulatory requirements (Photo courtesy of AQACHEI)

AMMAN — The Accreditation and Quality Assurance Commission for Higher Education Institutions (AQACHEI) and Pearson, the world’s lifelong learning company, have signed a memorandum of understanding. 

The MoU aims to align Pearson’s Business and Technology Education Council (BTEC) approval process for higher education institutions in Jordan with AQACHEI’s regulatory requirements, broadening the educational pathways available to Jordanian students, according to a statement for The Jordan Times. 

This initiative will enhance opportunities for students pursuing higher education following the completion of their BTEC programmes.

The agreement underscores a shared commitment to advancing technical and vocational education and training (TVET) in Jordan. 

As part of the MoU, providers offering BTEC higher national qualifications will be required to comply with AQACHEI and Higher Education Council (HEC) guidelines to achieve local recognition. 

The agreement also facilitates collaboration on quality assurance measures and approval processes while maintaining Pearson’s established global standards. 

Commenting on the MoU, AQACHEI President Thafer Assaraira said that signing this MoU with Pearson Education will contribute to aligning the accreditation standards for technical specialisations at AQACHEI with the global standards adopted by Pearson. 

Assaraira added that it will also enhance collaboration between AQACHEI and Pearson in accrediting and ensuring the quality of technical programmes offered by Pearson and implemented by Jordanian higher education institutions under joint agreements between Pearson and higher education institutions in Jordan. 

BTEC qualifications have significantly enhanced the education system in Jordan. Since their introduction in 2012, more than 74,000 students have enrolled in BTEC programmes across various disciplines. 

In 2023, the inaugural year of the partnership between the Ministry of Education and Pearson, over 15,500 school students earned a Level 2 diploma. 

Jane Baker, vice president for vocational qualifications, UK & international, Pearson, said: “This MoU with AQACHEI strengthens our commitment to empowering Jordanian youth through globally recognised qualifications that equip them with the skills needed to thrive in today’s dynamic workforce."

 

Cultic sites in Transjordan reveal ritual practices of ancient peoples

By - Feb 17,2025 - Last updated at Feb 17,2025

Remains of the fortified Iron Age town Khirbet Al Mudayna (Photo courtesy of ACOR)

AMMAN — Some of cultic places during the Bronze and Iron Age on a territory of Transjordan are Ataruz, Deir Alla, Ammon, Mudayna and Busayra.

Cult places such as temples, shrines, or open-air cultic complexes are an important part of the "religious landscape’" of ancient peoples. 

" The identification of excavated buildings as cult places is not unambiguous. Much research has gone into the question of how cult practices and ritual behaviour express themselves in the material culture and how to follow the trail, so to speak, from cult to excavated remains," said Margreet Steiner from Leiden University.

Steiner added that the problem many field archaeologists are struggling with is rather how to interpret archaeological remains and which criteria to apply in order to define these remains as related to cultic practices. 

Rituals concerning the communal consumption of meat may leave traces in the ground in the form of hundreds of animal bones. But not every find of large amounts of animal bones should be interpreted as evidence of those rituals and thus of the cultic nature of the site in question. 

Other explanations are possible, such as butchering for household consumption, the communal consumption of meat not connected with a religious ritual but, for instance, a wedding, or it being the remains of a dump site, Steiner continued.

She added that the placing of figurines as votive objects in a shrine often results in the excavations of many such objects in a building, but not every building containing figurines is by definition a shrine. 

"Figurines may have been used and are often found in domestic contexts and tombs. The building may be the place where such objects were made, stored or sold, or maybe figurines were used not only as votive objects."

"Arguing from cult practices [the placing of votives in a shrine] to archaeological finds [the presence of figurines in a building] is much more straightforward than arguing from the excavated remains [figurines in a building] to cult practices [so this building is a shrine], " Steiner explained. 

She added that the "backward trail" is hard to follow, archaeologists have to use the criteria that argue from cult practice to material culture, bearing in mind that other explanations are possible and should be examined.

One of mentioned cultic sites had been Khirbet Al Mudayna in the Wadi ath-Thamad, located in the norther part of ancient Moab and dating to the 7th century BC. The site is located southeast of Madaba.  

"The cultic structure was 5.5 × 5.5 m with plastered benches on three sides. Two pillars connected by a bench divided the room into the main area and a small annex." 

"One libation altar and two shaft altars, all three made of stone, were found inside the building, one bearing an inscription reading 'the incense altar that Elishama made for YSP, the daughter of WT'," Steiner underlined.

She noted that other finds in the shrine include five ceramic oillamps, several fragmentary female figurines, two large stone pegs, two Wadjet-eye amulets, two murex shells, a spouted vessel and some beads. 

Some household pottery (bowls, storage jars) was also found and it seems that most material was removed from the building when the town was attacked and it was used to forge iron arrowheads. 

A large pit was cut into the floor and later resealed while the building was still in use. Only a few objects were found in this pit: Ceramic sherds from seven fragmentary vessels and a stone with a depression, possibly a mould for the manufacture of metal tools, Steiner said, noting that the courtyard west of the building was an open plaza behind the gate through which one entered the town. 

"Embedded in the floor of the plaza, thousands of animal bones were excavated, mostly of sheep and goat. These remains have been tentatively interpreted as butchering waste for rituals involving the offering of meat in the shrine." 

The town was destroyed when it was attacked around 600 BC. 

"It is remarkable that the gate and many buildings in the town were destroyed by a heavy fire, but that the shrine remained relatively unscathed. This can be coincidental, or the attackers respected the shrine and did not set fire to it," Steiner speculated.

She added that the identification of the building as a shrine or small temple was based on its architecture with benches, although it isn't known to which deity the shrine was dedicated.

 

Jordan Food Exhibition kicks off next Monday

By - Feb 17,2025 - Last updated at Feb 17,2025

AMMAN — The 8th Jordan International Food Exhibition, (Jordan Food), will open next Monday at the Amman International Motor Show, bringing together local and international food manufacturers.

The exhibition spans 7,000 square meters and is organised by International Promoters Company (IPCO), according to the Jordan News Agency, Petra.

IPCO General Manager Raed Abu Saadeh was quoted in Petra as saying on Monday that the five-day event will feature over 100 companies, including 80 from Jordan, and also exhibitors from Palestine, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Syria, Turkey, and Lebanon.

The exhibition will showcase a range of activities, including live cooking shows by top Jordanian and Arab chefs and special promotions on food products, Petra said.

Abu Saadeh noted that "Jordan Food" emphasises local industry participation, providing an opportunity for visitors to experience the quality and diversity of Jordanian food products alongside international imports.

Arab summit on Trump's Gaza plan postponed to Friday: diplomats

By - Feb 17,2025 - Last updated at Feb 17,2025

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia — A planned Saudi meeting of Arab leaders in response to US President Donald Trump's plan to take control of Gaza has been postponed by a day and expanded, Arab diplomats said on Monday.


"The mini Arab summit in Riyadh has been postponed from Thursday to Friday, February 21," a Saudi source told AFP. An Arab diplomatic source confirmed the new date.

Three Arab states had been expected to attend the summit, but the Saudi source said the expanded meeting will "include the leaders of the six Gulf Cooperation Council countries along with Egypt and Jordan to discuss Arab alternatives to Trump's plans in the Gaza Strip".

The member states of the Gulf Cooperation Council are the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, Oman, Qatar and Kuwait.

The Saudi source said that "an influential Gulf country expressed its dissatisfaction at being excluded from the Riyadh summit, which prompted the organisers to include all the Gulf countries", without specifying which country was involved.

Trump had proposed taking over the war-batted Gaza Strip and moving its more than two million residents to Jordan or Egypt -- a plan experts say would violate international law.

Arab countries have unanimously rejected the idea or any prospect of displacing Palestinians from their lands.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said on Thursday that Washington was open to proposals from Arab countries concerning the Palestinian territory, where a fragile ceasefire in the Israel-Hamas war came into effect on 19 January after more than 15 months of fighting.

Rubio said he hoped to be able to discuss these ideas during a tour that took him to Israel on Sunday, Saudi Arabia on Monday, and on to the United Arab Emirates.

Jordan, Kuwait Fund sign $65.2m agreements for education, infrastructure projects

By - Feb 17,2025 - Last updated at Feb 17,2025

Minister of Planning and International Cooperation Zeina Toukan and Director General of the Kuwait Fund for Arab Economic Development Waleed Shumlan Al Bahr, sign on Monday two agreements to finance the third phase of the General Education Infrastructure Project and the Roads and Bridges Rehabilitation Project (Petra photo)

AMMAN — Minister of Planning and International Cooperation Zeina Toukan and Director General of the Kuwait Fund for Arab Economic Development Waleed Shumlan Al Bahr, on Monday signed two agreements to finance the third phase of the General Education Infrastructure Project and the Roads and Bridges Rehabilitation Project.

Each project is valued at 10 million Kuwaiti dinars, which equals some $32.6 million.

The signing ceremony was attended by the Minister of Public Works and Housing Maher Abu Samhan, Minister of Education and Minister of Higher Education and Scientific Research Azmi Mahafzah, and the Kuwaiti Ambassador to Jordan Hamad Rashid Al Marri.

The agreements are part of Kuwait's commitment at the 2018 Makkah Summit to provide Jordan with a concessional loan programme totalling $500 million, meant to support the Kingdom's key development priorities and improve essential public services in various sectors.

The General Education Infrastructure Project will address the need for vocational education facilities through the construction of five technical and vocational schools in Irbid, Amman, Ajloun, Karak and Zarqa. 

With a total of 108 classrooms, these schools will provide expanded opportunities for technical and vocational education and training for students in grades 10 to 12. The new facilities will also help alleviate overcrowding in existing schools.

The Roads and Bridges Rehabilitation Project, which aims to improve traffic flow and road safety throughout the Kingdom, includes the rehabilitation of approximately 2,528 kilometres of roads and the maintenance of several bridges in the northern, central and southern regions of Jordan. The project will also upgrade water drainage systems and implement road safety improvements.

Toukan thanked Kuwait for its continued support, highlighting the strong bilateral relations and fruitful partnership with the Kuwait Fund for Arab Economic Development. Since 1962, the Fund has contributed some $2.1 billion to Jordan's development, including $1.33 billion in grants and $778 million in concessional loans.

For his part, Bahr reaffirmed Kuwait's commitment to supporting Jordan's development goals, stressing the continued cooperation between the Kuwait Fund and the Jordanian government to help implement the Kingdom's economic and development plans and ensure the delivery of essential services to its citizens.

 

Kazakhstan president to start official visit to Jordan on Tuesday

By - Feb 17,2025 - Last updated at Feb 17,2025

AMMAN — Upon the invitation of His Majesty King Abdullah, Kazakhstan President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev is scheduled on Tuesday to start a two-day official visit to Jordan, according to a Royal Court statement.

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