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Jordan to host int'l talks on legally binding regulations on mercury

By - Mar 02,2016 - Last updated at Mar 02,2016

AMMAN — Over 800 participants will take part in the upcoming seventh session of the intergovernmental negotiating committee on mercury (INC 7), which seeks to prepare a global legally binding instrument on mercury, a senior official said Wednesday.

The INC 7 is scheduled to be held between March 10 and 15 at the King Hussein Convention Centre on the shores of the Dead Sea, Minister of Environment Taher Shakhshir said at a press conference to announce the event.

"During the seventh session, several technical, legal and guiding documents will be presented to facilitate the implementation of the Minamata Convention on Mercury…," Shakhshir said.

The Minamata Convention on Mercury is a global treaty to protect human health and the environment from the adverse effects of mercury. 

It was agreed at the fifth session of the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee in Geneva, Switzerland in 2013, according to its website.

The major highlights of the Minamata Convention include a ban on new mercury mines, the phase-out of existing ones, control measures on air emissions, and the international regulation of the informal sector for artisanal and small-scale gold mining. 

The convention draws attention to a global and ubiquitous metal that, while naturally occurring, has broad uses in everyday objects and is released to the atmosphere, soil and water from a variety of sources. 

Controlling the anthropogenic releases of mercury throughout its lifecycle has been a key factor in shaping the obligations under the convention, according to its website.

"Jordan signed the Minamata Convention on Mercury in 2013 and ratified it in 2015," Shakhshir told The Jordan Times.

 

He underscored that the Kingdom has banned the import of thermometers and blood pressure monitors that contain mercury, noting that there is high inspection on toys entering the country to make sure they don’t contain mercury, while the use of the element in paint factories, electronics and computers has also been banned.

'Jordan's stability makes it departure point for MSF in region'

By - Mar 02,2016 - Last updated at Mar 03,2016

Médecins Sans Frontières' Al Mowasa Hospital in Jordan has treated over 3,000 people since it opened in August 2015 (Photos courtesy of MSF)

AMMAN — Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) eyes further official Jordanian facilitation for the process of cross-border aid supply to hospitals in Syria, according to the organisation's international president, Joanne Liu.

Liu told The Jordan Times in an interview that MSF has been supporting 14 hospitals in Syria, mainly in Daraa province, over the past two years, a matter the organisation seeks to continue to do "regularly".

Furthermore, she added that addressing "administrative hurdles" regarding mobility and visas issued to war-injured patients receiving medical care at MSF facilities in Jordan would allow a larger number to receive treatment, mainly at Al Mowasa Hospital, officially inaugurated last August.

She cited 200 cases on the hospital's waiting list although occupancy rates in MSF facilities have not reached 100 per cent yet. 

Liu expected MSF's activities in the region to "remain the same if not increase", citing Jordan's stability as a departure point for providing aid for unstable countries in the region.

The Hospital for Reconstructive Surgery, located in the capital’s Marka neighbourhood, treats war-wounded people from Iraq, Yemen, Syria and Gaza, through reconstructive surgeries, orthopaedics, maxillofacial and plastic surgeries, in addition to physiotherapy and psychosocial support.

"So far, Al Mowasa hospital has treated over 3,000 people," Liu said Tuesday in an interview on the sidelines of her visit to Jordan, which is part of a regional tour that included the West Bank and Gaza, in addition to Lebanon, Iraq and Turkey.

In her visit, Liu seeks to get "firsthand accounts" of the impact of the Syrian war on neighbouring countries and to bridge it with the current refugee crisis in Europe where MSF is involved as well.

In addition to the major hospital in Amman, MSF has been working since 2013 in Ramtha hospital on treating war-wounded Syrians evacuated into the border town, some 90km north of Amman, in addition to a number of clinics for non-communicable diseases, mental health, antenatal and maternal health.

"Since the beginning of our activities in Ramtha hospital, we have treated close to 2,000 people and we have done close to 3,000 surgical interventions," she said, adding that MSF also works at a rehabilitation centre in Zaatari for war-injured patients. 

Liu added that MSF clinics for antenatal and mother care oversee an average of 300 deliveries per month.

"All activities are open to Syrian refugees and Jordanians." 

During her visit, Liu met with Prime Minister Abdullah Ensour and discussed the organisation’s work in Jordan and its services to Syrian refugees.

She expressed "understanding" of Jordan's national security concerns regarding allowing the entry of the 20,000 Syrian refugees camped in the no-man’s land near the  Jordanian border, yet she mentioned "difficult" humanitarian conditions among them.

The MSF chief said the camped refugees lack food, water supply, sanitation services and healthcare, noting that 60 per cent of them are under the age of 11.

Liu said MSF works in Syria through a network of physicians and supports 153 facilities.

Based on recently published data collected from 70 hospitals and clinics that MSF supports in northwestern, western and central Syria, the facilities received over 154,000 war-injured civilians in 2015, and some 7,000 war-deaths were documented, with up to 40 per cent of them being women and children.

"In 2015 we sustained 94 aerial or shelling attacks on 63 MSF facilities in Syria, 12 of them were completely destroyed," Liu said.

But the situation in Yemen is different, she noted, as the organisation still has 90 international and 700 national staff members working in fixed facilities and in mobile clinics around the country.

In 2015, MSF's eight facilities treated over 20,000 war-wounded Yemenis, who occupied over 95 per cent of the total bed capacity, Liu said.

 

She noted that the embargo on imports that took effect in the spring of 2015 has delayed the entry of food and medicine to Yemen, noting that almost all of the people's needs are imported.

‘Border Guards receive 90 Syrian refugees’

By - Mar 02,2016 - Last updated at Mar 02,2016

AMMAN —The army said on Wednesday that Border Guards received 90 Syrian refugees during the previous 24 hours.

Border troops transferred the refugees to shelters and camps, and Royal Medical Services cadres treated the injured, according to a military statement carried by the Jordan News Agency, Petra.

Court upholds jail sentence for man who beat son to death

By - Mar 02,2016 - Last updated at Mar 02,2016

AMMAN — The Cassation Court has upheld a recent Criminal Court ruling sentencing a man to seven years in prison after convicting him of beating his son to death in Balqa Governorate in August 2014.

The Criminal Court had declared the man guilty of beating his son to death with a wooden stick to discipline him on August 27, 2014.

The court said the defendant and the victim owned a car maintenance shop in Ein Basha.

“The defendant became suspicious that his son was stealing money from the shop and was taking money from customers without accomplishing the job,” the Criminal Court ruling said.

On the day of the incident, the court maintained, the defendant went to his son’s house and beat him up with “a wooden stick on different parts of his body, including his head, to discipline him”.

The defendant then prevented the victim from seeking medical attention so that the “abuse marks would disappear from his body”.

Instead, the court maintained, “the victim’s condition deteriorated and he died three days later of internal bleeding from bruises and injuries he sustained from the assault.”

The defence lawyer had contested the Criminal Court’s ruling, arguing that his client should benefit from a reduction in penalty as stipulated in Article 98 of the Penal Code because he “committed his crime in a moment of rage”.

“The defendant was defending himself because the victim attacked him with an iron bar,” the defence said.

However, the attorney general asked the higher court to uphold the verdict because the Criminal Court “followed the proper procedures when convicting the defendant”.

The Cassation Court said the Criminal Court’s ruling falls within the law and its proceedings were proper.

 

The Cassation Court tribunal comprised judges Mahmoud Ababneh, Basel Abu Anzeh, Yassin Abdullat, Mohammad Tarawneh and Bassem Mubeidin.

Fakhoury discusses Syrian crisis with German official

By - Mar 02,2016 - Last updated at Mar 02,2016

AMMAN — Planning and International Cooperation Minister Imad Fakhoury on Wednesday met with Special Representative of the German Federal Government for Middle East Stability Partnership Joachim Rücker, and acquainted him with the economic, humanitarian, financial and social repercussions Jordan is bearing due to the prevailing regional conditions.

Fakhoury thanked the German government for its support for Jordan through the EU, especially the assistance presented since 2012 to help communities hosting Syrian refugees in fields of water and wastewater, which amounted to 53.5 million euros, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

Rücker, who was recently appointed in this post to follow up on the outcomes of the London donor conference, expressed his country’s readiness to assist Jordan at all levels.

One dead, 15 injured in road accidents

By - Mar 02,2016 - Last updated at Mar 02,2016

AMMAN — A tipper truck driver died on Wednesday, when his vehicle overturned near Ajloun’s Wahadneh town, a Civil Defence Department (CDD) statement said. Ajloun CDD Director Col. Hani Smadi said the driver lost control of the truck on a sharp curve. Also on Wednesday, six people were when their pickup truck overturned in Zarqa.

CDD cadres took the injured to Prince Feisal Hospital where they were listed in fair condition. Near the Hashemite University, four people were injured when their vehicle overturned. CDD personnel took them to Zarqa Public Hospital where they were listed in fair condition.

In Madaba, five people were injured in a two-vehicle collision. They were taken to Al Nadim Public Hospital where they were reported to be in fair condition.

Interior minister meets Tunisian, Libyan counterparts

By - Mar 02,2016 - Last updated at Mar 02,2016

AMMAN — Interior Minister Salameh Hammad on Wednesday met separately with his Tunisian and Libyan counterparts Hédi Majdoub and Maj. Gen. Mohammed Al Fakhri, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

The meetings were held on the sidelines of Hammad’s visit to Tunisia, where he is taking part in the 33rd session of the meetings of Arab interior ministers that started Wednesday. Hammad discussed bilateral relations and cooperation with Majdoub and Fakhri.

‘0.5% of Jordan’s families are food insecure’

By - Mar 02,2016 - Last updated at Mar 02,2016

AMMAN — Around 0.5 per cent of the Kingdom’s families are food insecure, while the food security of 5.7 per cent is between fragile and lacking, according to a Department of Statistics’ (DoS) survey whose results were announced on Wednesday by DoS Director General Qasim Zu’b.

The highest rate of food insecure families was registered in Maan and Karak (0.9 per cent), while Aqaba did not record any family that suffers food insecurity, the survey showed. DoS implemented the survey between July 1, 2013 and June 30, 2014, covering 24,000 families across the Kingdom, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

Council of church presidents express condolences over officer’s death

By - Mar 02,2016 - Last updated at Mar 02,2016

AMMAN — Theophilos III, patriarch of the Holy City of Jerusalem and all Palestine and Jordan, and president of the council of church presidents in Jordan, on Wednesday expressed his condolences to Jordanians and His Majesty King Abdullah over the death of officer Rashed Zyoud in the line of duty.

In a statement, the council of church presidents in Jordan said it stands with Jordan’s people and leadership and is praying for the speedy recovery of the security forces injured during a raid against Daesh-affiliated outlaws.

The council denounced acts of terror and violence around the world, and stressed that prayers for Jordan’s continued safety and stability will not stop. The church leaders’ council also voiced support for Jordan’s security forces.

GID says Irbid raid targeted Daesh – affiliated terrorists

By - Mar 02,2016 - Last updated at Mar 02,2016

A security officer is seen in the area where seven terrorists were killed by specialised security forces in the northern city of Irbid on Wednesday (photo by Muath Freij)

AMMAN – The General Intelligence Department (GID) said Wednesday that the seven armed men killed in Irbid during a raid by specialised security forces were Daesh affiliates who were planning to carry out attacks on military and civil sites in the Kingdom.

In a statement carried by the Jordan News Agency, Petra, the GID said that it foiled a terror plot by thorough intelligence, adding that ahead of Irbid operation, 13 members of the group were arrested.

Security forces identified the location of the other seven members, who holed up in a residential building in Irbid. They refused to surrender and opened fire from automatic rifles, prompting the specialised force to respond and kill the entire cell members.

During the clashes, Captain Rashed Zyoud was killed and five other security officers injured in addition to two civilians who happened to be in the area.

The seven terrorists were wearing explosive belts, according to GID, which said that weapons and explosives were seized from the location.

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