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'Amman's Everest Hotel closed down over safety, health violations'

By - Feb 18,2016 - Last updated at Feb 18,2016

An aerial view of Everest Hotel on the airport road (Photo by Osama Aqarbeh)

AMMAN — The Greater Amman Municipality (GAM) has closed down Everest Hotel in Amman over public safety violations, a GAM official said on Thursday. 

GAM Spokesperson Izzedin Shammout said the place served as a hotel although it did not meet the tourist regulations for that purpose. 

"They do not provide hosting services and a hotel should do that," he told The Jordan Times over the phone. 

The municipality official said Everest Hotel only has entertainment facilities including a swimming pool, an events hall and a gym.

He noted that Everest also served expired meals that jeopardise public health. 

"We are concerned about people's health and we cannot accept this." 

Shammout said the municipality gave Everest Hotel with a grace period to address violations that were recorded last year, but it did not do so. 

"In order to reopen the place, they have to pay the fine, which is JD20, and get the approval of the Civil Defence Department, because the hall does not meet safety requirements," he added. 

 

The publicity of the hotel's closing for not following safety and health regulations should provide a motive for other business owners to abide by the rules, Shammout said.

30 women training to work as gas station attendants

By - Feb 18,2016 - Last updated at Feb 18,2016

A gas station attendant serves a customer in Amman recently (Photo by Amjad Ghsoun)

AMMAN – In what has been deemed a "progressive" move, Jordanian women will soon be working in gas stations affiliated with a public shareholding company.

In a bid to "break the culture of shame and strike a balance in an industry that is considered male-dominated", the Jordan Petroleum Refinery Company is currently training 30 young women to become "professional" gas station attendants.

"Once we decided to recruit women, we received an overwhelming number of females wishing to work in our stations. We picked 30, who are currently being trained in ways to deal with customers and machinery," JoPetrol Gas Company Director General Khalid Zu'bi told The Jordan Times on Thursday.

He noted that the trainees are also being equipped with the necessary knowledge to deal with emergencies.

"We have heard contradicting opinions on the issue. I think it is time to eradicate the stigma associated with women working in this particular field," said Zu'bi, who noted that women will work in stations located in specific areas due to their "proximity" and "suitability".

"Salaries will be rewarding. The shifts will not exceed four hours and we will establish convenient offices for women," he added, without giving an exact date for the commencement of their work.

The decision to recruit women as gas station attendants was met with debate from commentators, some of whom accused the company of taking such a step for "promotional reasons and to seek attention".

"This could not be further from the truth. Our company is a national corporation owned by Jordanians and is doing very well," Zu'bi said, adding that Jordanians should not be portrayed as "thugs" who cannot accept women working in decent places.

"It is my sister and yours who will work in these stations. That is the message we want to convey clearly. It is time to overcome backward mentalities," he stressed.

Commenting on a social media website, Amal Hammouri described the decision as a "step forward", saying that there is no need for a "public condemnation, particularly as the women will be working in a safe and suitable environment".

Wijdan Touqan agreed, noting that "every new idea is considered strange and jaundiced at the beginning before being fully accepted".

On the other hand, Alaa Al Habashneh strongly criticised the move, viewing it as a "mere promotional idea that will not succeed in Jordan".

Ramzi Majali said, "those who support the move out of the idea of poverty and unemployment among women will not accept their son marrying a woman who works as a gas station attendant", describing the move as a kind of "exploitation".

According to a recent report issued by the National Council for Family Affairs, the number of Jordanian households led by women has increased to reach 12.6 per cent, compared with 8.8 per cent in 1979.

 

"Do people really believe that it is better for women to remain unemployed and in need rather than work in a gas station?" asked Sami Qiblawi in a comment on social media. 

Activists to demonstrate under Dome for more women seats in elections bill

By - Feb 18,2016 - Last updated at Feb 18,2016

AMMAN — Women activists will head to Parliament's gallery next week to demand a seat for women in each of the constituencies that will be designated in the 2015 draft elections law.

The decision to escalate their demands was made after the Lower House Legal Committee last week endorsed the 2015 draft elections law without taking into consideration the women movement’s demands.

Several women's rights activists, who are part of a national coalition campaigning for one seat in each constituency, expressed their discontent over the legal committee’s decision to pass the bill almost exactly as referred by the government with some "insignificant" changes.

Jordanian National Commission for Women (JNCW) Secretary General Salma Nims expressed her frustration over the bill, saying “this will only make us more persistent in our demands”.

It seems that “women’s empowerment is not part of the government’s priorities, because they turned their backs on us when they drafted the law and now the House Legal Committee did the same”, Nims told The Jordan Times recently.

“We have called on local organisations to be present in the gallery in Parliament when the law is set to be discussed by MPs to emphasise our demands,” she said, adding that the organisations will also meet with women parliamentarians.

Jordanian Women’s Union President Tahani Shakhshir echoed Nims’ frustration, saying the committee's decision on the draft elections law was a “real step backwards for the women’s movement”.

“Although we have our reservations regarding the entire election law, we decided to join the national coalition demanding a seat for women in each constituency,” Shakhshir told The Jordan Times in a recent interview. 

Shakhshir charged that the government is not interested in women’s empowerment, “although Jordan signed and ratified many international conventions pledging to increase women’s participation in public life to a minimum of 30 per cent”.

Jerash MP Wafa Bani Mustafa was also dismayed by the legal committee’s decision.

“This is way below expectations. There is an embedded patriarchy in dealing with women’s issues in Jordan.  But we will not give up,” Bani Mustafa told The Jordan Times.

“We will lobby from inside the Lower House to ensure that women get a seat in each constituency as stipulated in the draft bill,” she said.

In remarks to The Jordan Times last week, the House’s First Deputy Speaker Mustapha Amawi said the legal committee has "turned its back on all the suggestions it received from the people it had met with", adding that "99.9 per cent of the law remained exactly as in the government version".

For his part, MP Abdul Munim Odat, head of the legal committee, defended the outcome of its deliberations, saying: "If the draft bill specifies a seat for women in each constituency then female candidates cannot win in direct competition outside a quota.”

Odat told The Jordan Times in a recent interview that the committee had met with several groups and organisations to listen to their demands “but this does not necessarily mean that we will comply with them”.

He called on the women’s movement to work on changing the attitudes of women voters “who almost always prefer to vote for men because they do not believe in women MPs”.

Under the 2015 elections bill, the number of Lower House members has been reduced to 130 from 150, based on the open proportional list at the district level.

The new law is based on an at-large voting system in which all candidates can run for parliamentary elections on one large multi-member ticket.

 

Under Article 9 of the bill, eligible voters will have a number of votes equal to the number of seats allocated for their district in the Lower House. 

Indonesia invites King to OIC summit in March

By - Feb 18,2016 - Last updated at Feb 18,2016

AMMAN — Deputising for His Majesty King Abdullah, Royal Court Chief Fayez Tarawneh on Thursday received Elwi Abdul Rahman Shihab, the special envoy of the Indonesian president, who conveyed a letter to King Abdullah from Indonesian President Joko Widodo.

The letter included an invitation to the King to attend the extraordinary summit for the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation on Palestine and Jerusalem, which Jakarta will host on March 6 and 7, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

Tarawneh highlighted the "deep-rooted" relations between the two countries, and expressed the Kingdom's keenness to develop them for the interest of both peoples. Shihab voiced his country's readiness to maintain coordination and consultation with Jordan, Petra added.

 

 

Army chief, Senate panel receive US delegation

By - Feb 18,2016 - Last updated at Feb 18,2016

AMMAN — King’s Military Adviser and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs-of-Staff Gen. Mashal Al Zaben on Thursday received a delegation of senior officers from the US Army's National Defence University (Capstone Fellows) headed by Joseph Hoar.

Discussions covered military cooperation and efforts to combat terrorist organisations and extremist ideologies. In addition, talks at the meeting, also attended by HRH Prince Feisal, addressed the latest regional and international developments, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

Also on Thursday, the Senate Arab, International and Expatriates Affairs Committee met with the delegates. Committee Chair Senator Abdul Ilah Khatib highlighted Jordan's Syrian refugee burden.  Hoar praised Jordan's stances over the war against terrorism, and urged the international community to assist the Kingdom in facing the repercussions of the Syrian crisis.

EU committed to supporting Jordan — ambassador

By - Feb 18,2016 - Last updated at Feb 18,2016

AMMAN — The EU will continue supporting Jordan’s role in the region, EU Ambassador Andrea Matteo Fontana said Thursday.

At a symposium organised by the Middle East Study Centre/Jordan, Fontana reiterated that the Kingdom is a key partner for the EU in the region, according to the Jordan News Agency, Petra.

The union is committed to working with the Kingdom on its comprehensive response to the Syrian crisis, he added. The EU is also committed to reaching a comprehensive and just solution to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, the ambassador noted.

 

 

One dead, 15 injured in various incidents

By - Feb 18,2016 - Last updated at Feb 18,2016

AMMAN — One man died and 15 people were injured on Thursday in various incidents across the Kingdom, according to the Civil Defence Department (CDD). In Karak, a 50-year-old man died when he was hit by a car.

In Amman, nine people were injured in two separate collision accidents in the industrial zone and on the Airport Highway, a CDD statement said. In Irbid, four people sustained injuries in a two-vehicle collision on Petra Street.

In Jerash, two people received mild burns and suffered breathing difficulties when an electric heater overturned and caused a fire in a house in Souf area.  The 15 injured people were transferred to hospitals and listed in fair condition, the statement added.

 

 

Education Ministry to sue alleged teacher assailants

By - Feb 18,2016 - Last updated at Feb 18,2016

AMMAN — Deputy Prime Minister and Education Minister Mohammad Thneibat on Thursday was following up on a Wednesday attack on a teacher at Um Abhara Secondary School by a student and his father. 

Thneibat renewed the ministry’s rejection of assaults on teachers, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

Ministry Spokesperson Walid Jallad said the minister directed the legal department to file a lawsuit against the alleged perpetrators. The ministry’s secretary general for education affairs, Mohammad Okour, visited the teacher at hospital and listened to a briefing on his health condition.

 

 

Two suspects arrested in Irbid for possession of valuable artefacts

By - Feb 18,2016 - Last updated at Feb 18,2016

AMMAN — Irbid Preventive Security Department personnel have arrested a wanted person in possession of valuable artefacts and other counterfeit pieces he reportedly used for fraud, the Public Security Department (PSD) said Thursday.

Preventive security agents received a tip on the suspect, identified his whereabouts and arrested him, according to a PSD statement. Narcotics, hashish cigarettes, synthetic cannabis (locally known as joker), a pistol and ancient artefacts were found during a search of the suspect’s house.

Agents raided another house in Irbid, some 80km north of Amman, after verifying its owner had artefacts and ammunition. Experts said some of the pieces were genuine; and the suspect was referred to court, the PSD added. 

 

 

 

Vaccination campaign targets Syrian refugees

By - Feb 18,2016 - Last updated at Feb 18,2016

AMMAN — The Royal Medical Services, in cooperation with the Ministry of Health and international organisations, on Thursday organised a vaccination campaign for Syrian refugees.

The campaign is part of the Jordan Armed Forces-Arab Army’s efforts to facilitate the work of international and humanitarian organisations, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

The campaign offered children under the age of 15 vaccinations against polio and measles, in addition to Vitamin A. Women within the delivery age of 15 to 49 years also received tetanus vaccination, Petra added.

 

 

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