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Gov’t taking measures to legalise Syrian labour

By - Apr 03,2016 - Last updated at Apr 03,2016

AMMAN — The government is studying a decision to give Syrians, who work in the country without permits, a three-month period to rectify their situation as a step to legalise their employment, sources familiar with the issue said on Sunday.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, they said the decision under consideration comes in line with the government’s plan to allow Syrians to work legally in the Kingdom in light of the outcomes of the London donor conference that took place in February.

Meanwhile, a government official said that the Ministry of Labour would continue to take measures to legalise the Syrian workforce in Jordan, according to the procedures and understandings reached with the international community. 

In a previous statement, the Labour Ministry said there are some 90,000 Syrians in the country’s job market, with less than 5,000 with work permits.

The Kingdom hosts some 1.3 million Syrians, with less than half of them registered with the UNHCR.

Following the London conference, the government announced that donor countries pledged millions of dollars to help Jordan cope with the Syrian refugee crisis in the form of grants and cheap loans, while the Kingdom has pledged to integrate Syrians into the labour market.

At a press conference in February, the government said that allowing Syrians to join the workforce would not "by any means" affect job opportunities for Jordanians.

Prime Minister Abdullah Ensour said at the time that Syrian refugees in the Kingdom will not compete with Jordanians over job opportunities, adding that they would be allowed to work in jobs usually shunned by Jordanians.

 

Last week, the World Bank announced a $100 million zero-interest loan to Jordan to provide jobs for 100,000 Jordanians and Syrians, as part of a larger package of assistance to help the country address the refugee crisis through development-oriented solutions.

Al Rai concludes training workshop for spokespersons

By - Apr 03,2016 - Last updated at Apr 03,2016

AMMAN — Al Rai daily on Sunday concluded a workshop, titled "Media Office and Media Spokespersons", in which 15 participants took part, Al Rai reported.

The participants represent public relations and media offices at several parties, including the Senate, the Gendarmerie Department, the foreign, agriculture and parliamentary affairs ministries.

The five-day workshop covered several topics including the importance of the media, the difference between a reporter and a public relations employee, and other media-related issues.

At the graduation ceremony, Chairman of the Jordan Press Foundation/Al Rai Ramadan Rawashdeh congratulated the graduates and urged them to invest their expertise and skills to advance the media sector. 

 

 

No plan to remove Syrians’ arbitrary structures — official

By - Apr 03,2016 - Last updated at Apr 03,2016

AMMAN –  An official source at the Interior Ministry  said on Sunday that there would be no campaigns to remove the arbitrary and illegal tents and caravans built for the Syrian refugees in Mafraq, some 80km northeast of the capital.

Border Guards receive 306 Syrian refugees

By - Apr 03,2016 - Last updated at Apr 03,2016

AMMAN — Border Guards received 306 Syrian refugees over the previous 24 hours and transferred them to shelters and camps, the Jordan Armed Forces-Arab Army said on Sunday.

Royal Medical Service personnel treated the injured, according to a statement by the Jordan News Agency, Petra.

 

 

Thousands visit Islamic shrines in Northern Ghor

By - Apr 03,2016 - Last updated at Apr 03,2016

AMMAN — Some 10,000 people visited the tombs of Prophet Mohammad’s companions in the Northern Ghor District in March, the area’s awqaf director, Abed Smeirat, said on Sunday.

Muslim tourists from Jordan and other Arab and Islamic countries visit the tombs of Muath Bin Jabal, Amer Bin Abi Waqqas and Sharhabeel Bin Hasna located in the area.

 

 

One dead, 33 injured in road accidents

By - Apr 03,2016 - Last updated at Apr 03,2016

AMMAN — A 21-year-old man died and five others were injured on Sunday in a two-vehicle collision in Naour area, according to a Civil Defence Department (CDD) statement.

CDD cadres administered first aid to the injured and rushed them to Al Bashir Hospital and Al Hussein Medical City where four were listed in fair condition and one in critical condition.

Also on Sunday, 22 people were injured in an accident between a public transport coaster bus and a private school bus near Zai area in Salt.

CDD cadres took the injured to Salt Public Hospital where they were listed in fair condition. Six people were also injured when their vehicle overturned on Abour road in Tafileh. 

 

 

 

Vaccination campaign against polio concludes

By - Apr 03,2016 - Last updated at Apr 03,2016

AMMAN — Some 1,215,000 children benefited from the Health Ministry's nationwide polio vaccination campaign for children under five conducted last week, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported on Sunday.

Hatem Azrui, the ministry's spokesperson, said that around 141,000 Syrian children from the targeted segment outside camps were vaccinated and that on Sunday the ministry started vaccinating the targeted segment of Syrian children residing in camps.

He added that around 51,000 children from different nationalities were also vaccinated. The campaign for Jordanian and non-Jordanian children under five lasted for five days, and was conducted in cooperation with the World Health Organisation, UNICEF, the Royal Medical Services, UNRWA, the Private Hospitals Association, the Jordan Medical Association and a number of civil society organisations.

Azrui also said that the Kingdom has not registered any polio case since 1992 and that  vaccination campaigns are to enhance immunity against the disease. 

 

 

Muslim Brotherhood body discusses stand on polls

By - Apr 03,2016 - Last updated at Apr 03,2016

AMMAN — The Muslim Brotherhood's shura council on Saturday discussed its position on the upcoming parliamentary elections and formed ad hoc committees to come up with suggestions upon which it will build its decision, the group said in a statement on Sunday.

The Islamist movement, the Kingdom's largest opposition force, also said it discussed a set of local and regional issues during the emergency meeting.

Panel restricts pardon in rape cases but activists not satisfied

By - Apr 03,2016 - Last updated at Apr 03,2016

AMMAN — The Legislation and Opinion Bureau (LOB), which is affiliated with the Prime Ministry, has made changes to the notorious Article 308 of the Penal Code, which allows rapists to escape punishment if they marry their victims.

Under the amendment, the article, which has been subject to bitter criticism by women and rights activists, has limited this exception to those who have consensual sex with minors between 15-18 years old.

“Following thorough examination of Article 308 and meeting with women groups, a legal ministerial committee at the Justice Ministry made recommendations that go in harmony with the demands made by the women’s movement and was approved last week by the LOB,” said Judge Yassin Abdullat, who heads the panel, which is revisiting the Penal Code.

Before its amendment, Article 308 allowed sexual assault perpetrators to escape punishment if they marry their victims, given that they remain married to their victims for periods ranging from three to five years, depending on the nature of sexual assault.

The committee comprises veteran jurists, police officers, academics, and civil society representatives who have met for over a year to make amendments to several clauses of the 1960 law. 

Abdullat explained that “the only way a perpetrator would be pardoned is if the sexual act was committed with minors aged between 15 to 18 and was consensual”.

Under the Penal Code, sexual intercourse with minors aged 15 to 18 is considered rape.

“Now it is up to Parliament to approve the amendments,” Abdullat, who is a serving judge at the Cassation Court, told The Jordan Times on Sunday.

The amended law needs Cabinet endorsement before it is referred to Parliament and if it is approved by both Houses and the King, it goes into effect upon its publication in the Official Gazette, according to the Constitution. 

Officials have said that the reason they kept a window for pardon in cases where the victim were between the ages of 15 to 18 was “to protect them, because in some instances she could be harmed or killed by her family if she does not marry her rapist”.

Women’s groups have rejected any exceptions in the draft law, saying that “allowing a man to marry a girl aged 18 and below who was subjected to rape or even involved in consensual sex has a negative impact on the child’s life” in case the woman became pregnant.

Instead, the women’s movement stressed that the minors should
“be treated as victims, who cannot make sound judgements or consider the consequences of such a marriage, and should not marry the rapist regardless of whether it was consensual or not”.

Activists have said recently that a staggering 95 per cent of rapists continue to go unpunished under Article 308.

A recent study by a local NGO in Jordan indicated that 71 per cent of surveyed Jordanians were opposed to allowing perpetrators to escape punishment if they marry their victims as stipulated in Article 308.

Meanwhile, 73 per cent cited shame and honour as the reasons why victims are wed to their sexual offenders. The study also revealed that many of the women who have married their sexual offenders ends up divorced before the end of minimum legal period, and there has been no legal prosecution by any party despite this breach.

 

Lawyers, journalists, activists, Muslim and Christian scholars have repeatedly called for eliminating Article 308 and adopting better psychological therapy and legal measures to protect victims of rape and molestation in Jordan.
Supporters of the article claim that “it is meant to protect the honour and reputation of the victim”.

A Mideast solution key to ending all regional crises — PM

By - Apr 03,2016 - Last updated at Apr 03,2016

AMMAN — Prime Minister Abdullah Ensour on Sunday discussed the Jordanian-American relations and the latest regional developments with chairman of the US House Committee on Foreign Affairs Ed Royce and an accompanying delegation. 

The meeting was attended by Minister of State for Media Affairs and Communications Mohammad Momani and the US Ambassador to Jordan Alice G. Wells.

Ensour reiterated Jordan's position on the Syrian conflict which advocates a comprehensive solution that can end the suffering of the Syrian people and safeguard the unity of their country. Ensour also underlined that finding a lasting solution to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict is the key to solving the regional woes. 

For his part, Royce expressed his country's appreciation for Jordan's humanitarian assistance to Syrian refugees.

 

Chairman of the Joint Chiefs-of-Staff Gen. Mishal Al Zaben also met with Royce and the accompanying delegation, in the presence of HRH Prince Feisal. 

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