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Industrial delegation visits Baghdad to boost economic ties

By - Feb 01,2025 - Last updated at Feb 01,2025

A Jordanian industrial delegation on Friday begins a visit to the Iraqi capital, Baghdad, aimed to enhance joint economic relations and benefit from the current opportunities in the Iraqi market to reach complementary industrial partnerships and projects (Petra photo)

AMMAN — A Jordanian industrial delegation on Friday began a visit to the Iraqi capital, Baghdad, aimed to enhance joint economic relations and benefit from the current opportunities in the Iraqi market to reach complementary industrial partnerships and projects.

Organised by the Jordan Chamber of Industry (JCI), in cooperation with Jordan Export House, the several-day visit will feature talks with Iraqi industrial and commercial activities and the Jordanian-Iraqi business forum on the sidelines of the Baghdad International Fair, as Jordanian industrial companies are set to participate through a special pavilion.

JCI Chairman Fathi Jaghbir said that the delegation's trip seeks to enhance the presence of Jordanian industries in the Iraqi market, as it is a "strategic depth" for national exports, according to the Jordan News Agency, Petra. 

Jaghbir stressed the chamber's efforts to increase Jordanian exports to Iraq to previous "high" levels years ago when the Iraqi market accounted for about 20 per cent of total national exports.

Jaghbir said the forum, which will be attended by Minister of Industry, Trade and Supply Yarub Qudah and Iraqi Minister of Industry and Minerals Khaled Batal, comes within the framework of "close" private-public sectors' cooperation to enhance mutual economic relations, adding that the event will see a dialogue session on Jordanian-Iraqi trade exchange, themed: "Visions and a Bright Future".

Jaghbir noted the private sector's "intensive" efforts made, in cooperation with the government to enhance trade exchange and deepen relations among Jordanian and Iraqi business owners and companies, have begun to yield "tangible" outcomes.

Jaghbir noted that this growth was reflected in the "remarkable" increase in Jordanian exports to the Iraqi market, which reached 45 per cent during 11 months of last year.

Two years ago, he said the JCI successfully organised a specialised exhibition for Jordanian industries in Baghdad, with the participation of the "largest" foreign industrial delegation, which was followed by holding several joint forums in Jordan and Iraq, concluding many understandings with the Iraqi private sector, and establishing joint chambers.

Head of the JCI's Iraq file Ihab Qadiri said that the forum will witness a "wide" presence from the Jordanian industrial sector, as 70 Jordanian companies will attend the event, which confirms the "strategic" position of the Iraqi market as a "major" destination for Jordanian exports.

National exports to Iraq achieved a "remarkable" growth of 45.6 per cent during 11 months of last year, reaching JD830 million, compared with JD570 million for the same period in 2023, according to official data.

Iraq also ranked second with 25.4 per cent of the total value of Jordanian exports to the countries of the Greater Arab Free Trade Area (GAFTA), which amounted to JD3.257 billion during 11 months of last year.

 

Cassation Court upholds 8-year sentence for man convicted of attempted murder

By - Feb 01,2025 - Last updated at Feb 01,2025

File photo

AMMAN — The Court of Cassation has upheld a February Criminal Court ruling, sentencing a man to eight years in prison after convicting him of attempting to murder a man at his house in Amman in January 2021.

The Criminal Court declared the defendant guilty of attempted murder on Jan. 21 and handed him a 12-year prison term.

However, the court decided to reduce the sentence to eight years because the victim dropped charges against the defendant.

Court papers said the victim and the defendant had old feuds because they were neighbours in the past.

The court maintained that on the day of the incident, the defendant invited the victim to his house to discuss their stalled matters.

While the victim was sitting in the saloon, the defendant excused himself and went to his room for a brief moment, court documents said.

“The defendant returned to the saloon with a gun in his hand and shot the victim once in the leg,” the court added.

The defendant fled from his house and was later arrested by the police, court papers said.

The victim was rushed to a nearby hospital where he survived the shooting incident due to medical intervention, the court transcripts added.

The defendant contested his ruling via his lawyer arguing that his client should receive a reduced sentence “since the intention of my client was to only harm him”.

The Criminal Court’s attorney general asked the higher court to uphold the eight-year sentence.

The higher court ruled that the Criminal Court proceedings were accurate and that the defendant was given the appropriate punishment.

The Cassation Court bench comprised judges Mahmoud Ebtoush, Nayef Samarat, Hammad Ghzawi, Mohammad Shreiri, and Mohammad Khashashneh.

 

Tamam Foods Industries Enhances Its Green Strategy and Adopts Solar Thermal Combined with Heat Pump to Totally Rid Itself of Fossil Fuel in Its Industrial Operations.

By - Jan 31,2025 - Last updated at Jan 31,2025

AMMAN — Tamam Foods of Jordan, best known for their organic high-quality chicken products, assigned Next Renewable Energy Co., also known as Millennium Energy Industries (MEI) to design and construct an innovative combined Solar Thermal & Heat Pump heating solution which will completely eliminatedependence on fossil fuels (diesel) for its main industrial Chicken processing facilities in Zarqa 

The innovatively designed combined solution fits perfectly with Tamam Foods’ ambitious and serious objective for fully green operations and falls in the Kingdom’s aspirations for a low-cost, carbon free industry and blends perfectly with Jordan’s food security directive aspired by its leadership.

King directs government to build new international football stadium

By - Jan 31,2025 - Last updated at Jan 31,2025

AMMAN — His Majesty King Abdullah has directed the government to build a new international football stadium to serve the Kingdom's sports and youth sector.

His Majesty also directed the government to develop the sports facilities at Al Hussein Youth City, Jordan's first sports city, in addition to continuing to develop other sports facilities in the capital and other governorates, according to a Royal Court statement.

The directives come in line with Royal support for sports and youth and in recognition of the achievements of Jordanian athletes, as the King stressed that the Nashama (the brave ones), who have raised Jordan's flag high in various international forums, deserve the utmost support from the government, including through the provision of quality sports facilities, the statement said.

Foreign minister, UNRWA chief discuss Gaza ceasefire, aid efforts

By - Jan 31,2025 - Last updated at Jan 31,2025

Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi on Thursday meets with UNRWA Commissioner General Philippe Lazzarini (Petra photo)

AMMAN — Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi on Thursday met with  UNRWA Commissioner General Philippe Lazzarini.  
Safadi reiterated the importance of consolidating the ceasefire in Gaza and ensuring the immediate and adequate delivery of aid into the Strip, stressing UNRWA’s crucial role in these efforts, according to a Foreign Ministry statement. 
The minister also underscored the importance of ensuring the continued operation of UNRWA, which plays an “indispensable and irreplaceable” role in providing vital services to Palestinian refugees under its UN mandate.

Labour minister, Egyptian counterpart discuss new recruitment mechanism

By - Jan 30,2025 - Last updated at Jan 30,2025

Minister of Labour Khaled Bakkar meets with his Egyptian counterpart Mohamed Gibran to discuss a new framework for the recruitment of Egyptian workers to Jordan (Petra photo)

AMMAN —  Minister of Labour Khaled Bakkar met with his Egyptian counterpart Mohamed Gibran to discuss a new framework for the recruitment of Egyptian workers to Jordan.

The discussion, held on the sidelines of the second Global Labour Market Conference in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, focused on ensuring that the new recruitment mechanism would address the potential issue of labour migration from specific sectors, such as agriculture, to others. Both ministers stressed the importance of mutual cooperation to maintain sectoral stability, according to the Jordan News Agency, Petra. 

Both ministers stressed the need for a new mechanism to prioritise the recruitment of skilled and trained Egyptian workers in sectors where demand is high in the Jordanian market.

The ministers also highlighted that this cooperation is a reflection of the long-standing and strong bilateral relations between the two countries, built on mutual trust and shared interests, and directed by the leadership of both countries.

Bakkar noted that the ministry would work closely with Jordanian industry sectors, including chambers of commerce and key sectors such as construction and agriculture, to assess their labour needs to coordinate efforts with Egyptian authorities to streamline the recruitment process.

Gibran reiterated Egypt’s commitment to ensuring that Egyptian workers are fully informed of their rights and obligations under Jordanian labour laws, underscoring Egypt’s focus on supplying a qualified workforce to meet Jordan’s specific sectoral needs.

Also on Thursday, Bakkar met with World Bank officials to discuss the potential extension and streamlining of the National Employment Programme in order to enhance job opportunities for Jordanians in the private sector.

Bakkar met with World Bank’s Social Protection and Jobs Sector Manager for the Middle East and North Africa Cristóbal Ridao-Cano, and economist Carol Chahartouni, Petra reported. 

The National Employment Programme aims to boost workforce participation by offering financial incentives, including a JD130 monthly wage subsidy for up to six months. 

The programme also provides a transportation allowance of JD10 per month for all workers, with an additional JD15 per month for women to encourage their employment. Furthermore, the program contributes JD10 per worker per month toward social security subscriptions.

Jordan chairs meeting on unified Arab water strategy in Beirut

By - Jan 30,2025 - Last updated at Jan 30,2025

A view of the King Talal Dam in Jerash, some 50km north of Amman (File photo)

AMMAN — Secretary-General of the Ministry of Water and Irrigation Hisham Heisa, during a recent meeting in Beirut, chaired a committee tasked with drafting a unified Arab vision and strategy to address regional interventions in the water sector.

According to a ministry statement on Thursday, cited by the Jordan News Agency, Petra, the meeting aimed to enhance water security and protect the sovereign rights of Arab states over their water resources. 

The initiative followed a decision by the Council of Arab Ministers of Justice at the Arab League to establish a committee of legal experts and specialists to develop a legal framework that safeguards Arab water resources and promotes regional cooperation in their management.

The committee recommended drafting a strategy rooted in an integrated legal framework that considers the technical aspects of water resource management, the impact of climate change and current and potential regional and international challenges. 

The draft will undergo a comprehensive review by experts from Arab countries, with feedback submitted to the Arab Centre for Legal and Judicial Research before its official adoption.

The committee also stressed the need to establish a legislative framework regulating the use of shared surface and groundwater resources among Arab states, ensuring their fair and sustainable utilisation amid increasing climate-related challenges.

 

Journalism faces challenges of AI, misinformation, declining trust

By - Jan 30,2025 - Last updated at Jan 30,2025

Dean Jelani Cobb delivered a keynote speech at Columbia Global Centre Amman on how we fact-check, combat hate speech and address misinformation (Photo courtesy of CGCA)

AMMAN — Facing challenges in a form of artificial intelligence (AI), economic turmoil and social dynamism, the journalism of 21st century strives to find a way to avoid all these pitfalls and remain relevant.

Columbia Global Centres Amman recently organised a talk titled" Fault lines and Deadlines" where issues related to problems of the modern journalism were addressed by Jelani Cobb, a writer, journalist and professor of Journalism at Columbia University in New York City.

The profession of journalism is experiencing tectonic changes and challenges of scale that is very difficult to find historical comparison, noted Cobb, adding that it has been the steady decrease in the media trust.

"For the long time, I had one understanding of this as a dynamic that was related to very particular, very specific and partisan dynamics in the US and its politics. But in time, I came to observe as have many scholars and people who studied that question about the extent to which this is in fact a global problem that we see a decrease in trust in media across the board," Cobb underlined.

The journalist noted that Reuters Institute conducted studies a few years ago in which only 38 per cent of people in 40 different countries trusted news.

The research was completed before the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic. The contradictory news, misinformation and systematic spread of panic, conspiracy theories and blatant lies, which characterised that period-contributed to even lower trust in printed and online media. 

At the point where calibre of the information on the pandemic could be a decisive factor to whether people survived or die from a virus the number of people who trusted media further dropped.

This problem is exacerbated not only by the growing distrust in news organisations but in the growing trust the people and outlets in which public bestowed its faith and given trust to, and the questionable nature of much of the information that is produce in these other kinds of outlets on the Internet and social media and so on, Cobb elaborated.

The writer added: "We can see always present possibility of violence becoming much more prevalent."

Last year, we saw, according to the Committee for the protection of journalists 98 journalists were killed around the world.

This trend is progressive as each year the higher number of journalists, war reporters and editors lose their life while being on duty.

Gaza Strip, West Bank and Lebanon have been places where around 160 journalists were killed and wounded by IDF since October 2023.

"I want to point out that these are not distinct crisis; the escalating number of journalists who have died while conducting their work is connected to the declining trust and faith that the public places in media." 

"The less people trust us the more vulnerable we are," Cobb underlined, noting that it is easier to discredit journalists and to make it seem that deaths of reporters have occurred in a course of conducting some nefarious practice on behalf of some questionable policy, but certainly in pursuit of particular agenda.

Another problem is the emergence of artificial intelligence as it greatly enabled the capacity of people to produce misinformation and disinformation at scale.

"AI has brought many challenges aside from gigantic quantity of misinformation and disinformation," Cobb said, adding "as we saw in June last year, the conflict between AI and Forbes Magazine. Forbes Magazine spent months to put in two of its best reporters into a story about Eric Schmidt, a co-founder of Google and his initiative to create a military-grade drone. 

"Within the moment of this story being published perplexity AI machinery had generated a lookalike story. A complete paraphrase of all the language, including the quotes but without the reference to Forbes Magazine."

The story was spun into social media posts which gained a great attention, more than the original story from the magazine.

It created also the conflict over copy rights, Cobb underlined, adding that investigative reporting is the most expensive undertakings in any new outlet, however, due to AI investigative reporting may become financially unsustainable.

"AI will cost us jobs. Most certainly in the media landscape and in other landscapes we cannot escape a reality that the emergence of these technologies will result in jobs that are currently filled with human beings no longer being necessary," Cobb underscored.

It is a reality and media employees should deal with it now before it is too late.

JNRCS, KOICA, IFRC launch $2.2m water initiative to support communities

By - Jan 30,2025 - Last updated at Jan 30,2025

The project, spanning 2024–2026, will be implemented in Irbid, Mafraq and Northern Shuna with the support of KOICA and IFRC, targeting communities facing severe water stress (Petra photo)

AMMAN — The Jordan National Red Crescent Society (JNRCS), in partnership with the Korea International Cooperation Agency (KOICA) and the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC), has launched a transformative three-year project with the aim of supporting Jordan’s water-stressed communities.

The initiative will be supported by regional funding from KOICA with $10.6 million (covering Jordan, Iran and Yemen) and an additional $760,000 from the IFRC, where $2.2 million from the project will be allocated to Jordan.

During a ceremony at JNRCS headquarters, the initiative was officially announced in the presence of Korean Ambassador to Amman Kim Pil-woo, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.  

The project, spanning 2024–2026, will be implemented in Irbid, Mafraq and Northern Shuna with the support of KOICA and IFRC, targeting communities facing severe water stress.

JNRCS President Mohammad Hadid said: "We will work hand in hand with local communities, IFRC, and KOICA to boost community capacity and implement sustainable water management practices in Southern Shuna District. Our goal is to mitigate water conflicts and build resilience, ensuring a secure future for the community."

KOICA, representing the government of South Korea, reaffirmed its commitment to tackling water insecurity as a pathway to regional stability and development. 

The Korean ambassador said: "Through this transformative three-year initiative, the IFRC, in partnership with the Jordan Red Crescent and KOICA, aims to prevent and reduce water-related stress, tensions, and conflicts at the community level. 

"This project is dedicated to creating sustainable and lasting solutions in water-stressed and fragile regions like Jordan, Yemen, and Iran, where conflict, poverty, and environmental degradation exacerbate water security risks," the diplomat added.

"The IFRC is committed to supporting local communities in severely water-stressed regions. In Jordan, we aim to develop joint responses to water challenges by improving water services, resource management and ecosystems while fostering stability and peace," said Atta Durrani, IFRC Head of Delegation in Jordan.

 

Jordan, Iraq sign updated air services agreement

By - Jan 30,2025 - Last updated at Jan 30,2025

The updated agreement will provide airlines from both countries with easier market access, offering benefits such as favourable tariffs and opportunities for code-sharing (Petra photo)

AMMAN — Jordan and Iraq on Thursday signed an updated air services agreement, opening a new chapter in their aviation cooperation.

Signed in Baghdad by Chairman of the Civil Aviation Regulatory Commission Captain Haitham Misto and Iraqi Minister of Works, Housing and Public Municipalities and Chairman of the Civil Aviation Authority Benkin Rekani, the agreement aims to enhance air services between the two countries, according to the Jordan News Agency, Petra.

This new agreement replaces the 1953 agreement that facilitated regular air services between Jordan and Iraq, and is designed to reflect the latest developments in civil aviation. 

It also reflects the evolving aviation policies and national strategies of both countries.

The updated agreement will provide airlines from both countries with easier market access, offering benefits such as favourable tariffs and opportunities for code-sharing. 

It also promotes fair competition and ensures the implementation of International Civil Aviation Organisation standards.

An executive memorandum has also been signed to establish operational arrangements for air services on new and existing routes.

Major additions include the Aqaba-Iraq and Amman-Kirkuk routes, while the number of passenger flights between Amman and Baghdad and Amman and Erbil will be increased.

The agreement also increased the number of cargo flights between the two countries to meet growing demand, as well as new regulatory provisions for code-sharing operations.

 

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