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Jordan, Pakistan discuss military cooperation

By - Feb 14,2016 - Last updated at Feb 14,2016

AMMAN — King’s Military Adviser and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs-of-Staff Gen. Mashal Al Zaben on Sunday received Pakistani Director General of the Inter-Services Intelligence Lt. Gen. Rizwan Akhtar and an accompanying delegation, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

At the meeting, attended by HRH Prince Feisal, discussions covered the latest regional developments and means to enhance military cooperation.

 

 

12-year-old dead, five injured in road accidents

By - Feb 14,2016 - Last updated at Feb 14,2016

AMMAN — A 12-year-old boy died and a man was injured on Sunday when their vehicle overturned in Irbid, a Civil Defence Department (CDD) statement said.

CDD cadres administered first aid to the injured man and took him to Princess Raya Public Hospital where he was listed in fair condition.

Four people were also injured in a two-vehicle collision in Amman and were taken to Tutanji Hospital where they were listed in fair condition. 

 

 

Cabinet approves funding for desert highway rehabilitation project

By - Feb 14,2016 - Last updated at Feb 14,2016

AMMAN — The Cabinet on Sunday approved funding a project to revamp the desert highway at $105 million through a soft loan from the Saudi Fund for Development.

The Council of Ministers had earlier approved a $65 million grant agreement from the fund for the project, which seeks to rehabilitate the heavily used desert highway between Jordan and Saudi Arabia.

The project's total cost amounts to $170 million, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported. The Council of Ministers also approved a draft law on the protection from family violence and submitted it to Parliament. 

'Korea to offer support for Jordan in water, health and education'

By - Feb 14,2016 - Last updated at Feb 14,2016

Minister of Planning and International Cooperation Imad Fakhoury holds talks with Korea International Cooperation Agency President Kim Young-mok and an accompanying delegation in Amman last Thursday (Photo courtesy of Ministry of Planning and International Cooperation)

AMMAN — South Korea plans to provide Jordan with financial and technical support this year in the sectors of water, wastewater, health and education, according to Korea International Cooperation Agency (KOICA) President Kim Young-mok.

The assistance is a response to the requests submitted by Jordan under the Better Life for Girls programme, recently launched by the Korean president to support priority projects in refugee hosting communities, as well as in line with the Jordan Compact, Kim said at a meeting last Thursday with Minister of Planning and International Cooperation Imad Fakhoury, according to a ministry statement released Sunday.

The projects include supporting the construction of four new schools in the governorates of Irbid, Mafraq, Amman and Zarqa, whose costs are estimated at $11 million, in line with the Jordan Response Plan 2016-2018.

Those projects, Kim said, aim to empower Jordan to meet the pressures imposed by the Syrian influx while also ensuring that the government continues to provide quality education to both Jordanian and Syrian children in an appropriate environment. 

"Korea would very much like to be among the partners supporting in delivering on the Jordan Compact," he reiterated.

The compact was the final statement issued by the Kingdom following the London donor conference earlier this month. It outlined Jordan’s “holistic approach” to the refugee crisis and listed pledges made by donors to the Kingdom.

Projects also include the construction of a specialised industrial school in Zarqa, some 22km east of Amman, at an estimated cost of $6.5 million. 

KOICA, its president said, is looking positively to providing support in the sectors of water, health and education in regions affected by the refugee crisis in cooperation with UNICEF at a cost of $8 million.

The government of Jordan and KOICA will work closely over the coming months to finalise details of these projects, he added.

The KOICA official is in Jordan to follow up on His Majesty King Abdullah's visit to Seoul in September last year and Fakhoury's visit in December 2015. 

Fakhoury thanked the republic of Korea for its continuous support for Jordan. 

Korea is a key development partner for Jordan, especially in supporting the sectors of water and wastewater, health and education, the statement said. 

In addition, Korea provides Jordan with a technical cooperation programme implemented by KOICA through the provision of volunteers, experts and training programmes, and scholarships aimed at building the capacities of public officials and institutions.

Fakhoury briefed the KOICA president on the impact of regional crises on Jordan, in addition to priorities for the coming period in line with the outcomes of the London conference and the Jordan Compact.

The planning minister also thanked the Korean side for including Jordan as a beneficiary country in the Better Life for Girls initiative.

 

Korea extended support to Jordan in 2015 in the amount of $45.8 million, in a number of key projects.

PM says anti-graft agency safeguards Kingdom’s security

By - Feb 14,2016 - Last updated at Feb 14,2016

AMMAN — Prime Minister Abdullah Ensour on Sunday stressed the government’s support for the Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC), noting that the monitoring agency’s mandate is not merely to protect public money but also safeguard the country’s security and stability.

Ensour’s remarks came during a visit to the ACC, where he met with its newly appointed president Mohammad Allaf and its board members. The premier highlighted the importance of the ACC’s role in enforcing the law, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

 

 

CDD chief receives Swiss ambassador

By - Feb 14,2016 - Last updated at Feb 14,2016

AMMAN — Civil Defense Department Director (CDD) Lt. Gen. Talal Kofahi met on Sunday with Swiss Ambassador to Jordan Hans-Peter Lenz and discussed cooperation between the civil defence departments of the two countries.

The Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation has provided a grant to finance the CDD’s emergency services development project, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

The Swiss grant includes providing ambulances and medical equipment and devices, as well as enhancing CDD personnel’s capacity in advanced emergency services. Kofahi thanked the Swiss government for its support.

The Swiss ambassador praised the CDD’s services, stressing his country’s readiness to provide the necessary support for the department, Petra reported

 

 

‘Ramtha police seize 333 bags of synthetic cannabis’

By - Feb 14,2016 - Last updated at Feb 14,2016

AMMAN — Ramtha police on Sunday seized 333 bags of synthetic cannabis (locally known as joker), according to Ramtha Police Department Director Col. Ammar Qudah.

A group of people from Sahab who reportedly came to deliver the drugs to a dealer in Ramtha, some 90km north of Amman, had them hidden in a black bag on an olive tree on the highway between Shajara and Amraweh towns.

Police forces from the Houran Plains security centre headed to the place and seized the drugs in an ambush. A police patrol was placed in the area to detect any movements or search operations for the drugs at the site. 

 

 

Lower House panel receives World Bank experts

By - Feb 14,2016 - Last updated at Feb 14,2016

AMMAN — Chairman of the Lower House Finance Committee Deputy Abdul Rahim Biqaai met on Sunday with a delegation of World Bank experts.

Biqaai said the experts were briefed on the financial committee's tasks in discussing and approving the budget bill, and the mechanism of studying the Audit Bureau's reports that are referred to it, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported. 

King concludes Germany visit with more meetings with top delegates

By - Feb 13,2016 - Last updated at Feb 13,2016

His Majesty King Abdullah meets with Bulgarian President Rosen Plevneliev in Munich on Saturday (Photo courtesy of Royal Court)

AMMAN — His Majesty King Abdullah on Saturday continued a series of meetings he held with heads of delegations and officials on the sidelines of the 52nd Munich Security Conference in Germany, a Royal Court statement said. 

At the opening of the meeting on Friday, His Majesty delivered a speech in which he stressed that the world is fighting the next war, which he described as "a new and complex struggle for the future" (see full speech).

His Majesty said: "I've called this struggle a ‘third world war by other means’,” noting that "the point is not simply that the threat is global – although, indeed, it does impact the entire international community. But world wars share something else as well: they are massive change agents. Winning or losing this global war will shape global values and define our security and way of life long into the 21st century".

“Success cannot be achieved by focusing on uprooting Daesh from Syria and Iraq as there are other terrorist groups and affiliates growing in Africa and Asia,” the Monarch said.

He noted, "It is time for a new level of global action focusing our resources, coordinating our responsibilities and synchronising our military and security efforts. Our countries, our international institutions, must work collectively, as a true global alliance."

In his meetings, the King focused on the developments in the region, especially in regard to the Syrian crisis and the Palestinian issue.

The agenda also included the importance of the international community’s support to countries affected by the crisis and refugee-hosting communities.  

On Saturday, the King met with President of Bulgaria Rosen Plevneliev, UK Secretary of State for Defence Michael Fallon, NATO Supreme Allied Commander Europe Philip M. Breedlove and a US Senate delegation headed by Senator John McCain.

His Majesty and Plevneliev discussed the developments in the Middle East where the Bulgarian president voiced his country’s appreciation of the Kingdom’s efforts, under the leadership of King Abdullah, to promote peace in the region and commended His Majesty’s speech during the UN General Assembly meeting in New York. 

The meeting also covered Jordanian-Bulgarian relations and ways to boost them, especially at the economic and commercial levels. 

His Majesty returned home later in the day, Royal Court said. 

A day earlier, King Abdullah met with United Nations and Arab League Envoy to Syria Staffan de Mistura, President of the Iraqi Kurdistan Region Masoud Barzani, Iraqi Prime Minister Haider Al Abadi and Israeli Defence Minister Moshe Ya’alon.

The King had similar encounters with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, Canadian National Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan, Italian Defence Minister Roberta Pinotti, German Defence Minister Ursula von der Leyen and High Representative of the European Union for Foreign Affairs Federica Mogherini.

The meetings with Fallon, Breedlove and the US Senate delegation covered ways to combat terrorism as well as regional and international efforts and the need to adopt a comprehensive approach in addressing the terror threat.

In the meeting with de Mistura, His Majesty stressed the importance of finding a comprehensive political solution to the Syrian crisis that ends the violence and preserves the unity of the Syrian land and people. 

The King also stressed the importance of the international community’s support to countries affected by the Syrian refugee crisis and discussed the dangers of terrorism and how to rise to this threat. 

In the meetings with Barzani and Abadi, the Monarch discussed developments in Iraq and the importance of supporting efforts to deter the terrorist group Daesh, stressing Jordan’s support to all efforts that enhance the security and stability of Iraq.

King Abdullah and the Israeli defence minister discussed bilateral relations, developments in the region and the means to revive Palestinian-Israeli peace negotiations. 

Lavrov and the King discussed international efforts and the Russian role in finding a solution to the Syrian crisis as well as bilateral relations.

They reviewed the outcome of the recently held “Supporting Syria and the Region Conference” in London and the importance of building on it to enable host countries, especially Jordan, to deal with the repercussions of the crisis. 

The meeting with Pinotti covered a follow-up on His Majesty’s visit to Rome last year, where he met with senior officials to discuss the importance of enhancing bilateral relations.  In the talks with the German defence minister, the King voiced Jordan’s interest to cooperate with Germany, especially in the military field. 

For her part, Ursula von der Leyen commended the King’s participation in the Munich conference and stressed on the importance of Jordan’s role in endeavours to end the Syrian crisis and serve the refugee population. 

While in Munich on Friday, the King received a telephone call from US Vice President Joe Biden. 

During the telephone conversation, the King and Biden discussed the latest developments in the Middle East, especially regarding regional and international counterterrorism efforts as well as developments in Syria, according to a Royal Court statement.  

 

All meetings were attended by Royal Court Chief Fayez Tarawneh, Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh and King’s Office Director Jafar Hassan.

‘Failed states, conflict zones and sectarian divisions are fertile grounds for terrorism’

Feb 13,2016 - Last updated at Feb 13,2016

Following is the full text of His Majesty King Abdullah’s speech at the 52nd Munich Security Conference in Germany on Friday:

In the name of God, the Most Merciful, the Most Compassionate,

Minister von der Leyen,

Ambassador Ischinger,

Distinguished colleagues:

Vielen Dank. Thank you. It is a pleasure to be here in Germany again. The Jordanian and German people share many bonds, but above all, deep common values: peace, mutual respect, the well-being of all. Such principles have empowered Germany’s vital role in the peaceful transformation of Europe and the world. No one symbolises that better than my good friend Chancellor Merkel. I have closely witnessed her strong leadership in the war on terror and in facing international challenges. As a close friend of Germany, I greatly respect her wisdom and tremendously admire her vision.

My friends,

We have all heard strategists warn about the dangers of being stuck in the past — ‘fighting the last war’ instead of the present one. Let us recognise that, here and now, we are all fighting the next war: a new and complex struggle for the future.

I’ve called this struggle a ‘third world war by other means’. The point is not simply that the threat is global – although, indeed, it does impact the entire international community. But world wars share something else as well: they are massive change agents. Winning or losing this global war will shape global values and define our security and way of life long into the 21st century.

Today, we share a core strategic interest in coalition victory in Syria and Iraq. The end for Daesh in Syria and Iraq requires our concerted action, and it is a priority in our region. Yet, winning the war for the future requires more. We need to acknowledge that Daesh is only part of a global threat.

Failed states, conflict zones and sectarian divisions have been fertile grounds for this cancer. It has instigated violence and inhumanity across borders and lured agents from across the world. We in this room know better than anyone that no region has been exempt.

My friends,

This is why I cannot overstate the importance of a holistic approach. We cannot succeed by focusing on uprooting Daesh from Syria or Iraq while other terrorist groups and affiliates strengthen in Africa and Asia. It is time for a new level of global action focusing our resources, coordinating our responsibilities and synchronising our military and security efforts. Our countries, our international institutions, must work collectively, as a truly global alliance.

We, as Arabs and Muslims, have a responsibility and duty to be in the lead in the fight against the khawarej, or outlaws of Islam. This is a war to protect our religion, our values and the future of our people.

But it is also an effort that must be global in partnership, just as it is global in scope. All our peoples are threatened by the outlaws’ ideology of violence and contempt for human life. To counteract this threat, our countries must be equally committed to the ideas that unite us in this war — from our shared humanity, to the search for political solutions, to the importance of global justice.

The Syrian refugee crisis is an urgent case in point. One of the biggest humanitarian tragedies of our age is unfolding on our shores and borders. Nowhere has this been brought closer to home than in Jordan, which now hosts one Syrian for every five Jordanians.

Our world must also act as one on the diplomatic front. The killing in Syria has to stop if we are to move forward and find a political solution, one that protects Syria’s independence and integrity, and enables the Syrian people to live with dignity and enjoy the rights they deserve. Achieving that solution is key to winning this war together, and will help us focus on the global threat.

My friends,

There are other key steps we must take together. Supporting the Iraqi government in clearing its towns and villages of the control of Daesh also requires support for serious steps towards reconciliation. We should not allow sectarian and religious differences to be used to advance political agendas or gain influence.

And the community of nations cannot talk about universal rights and global justice, but continue to deny statehood to Palestinians! This failure has created a festering injustice, and continues to be exploited by Daesh and its kind. Our whole world has paid the price. Left unresolved, the Palestinian-Israeli conflict will become a religious conflict of a global dimension. And it is only a matter of time before we may be faced by yet another war in Gaza or in south Lebanon. This is why reaching a two-state solution should remain a priority for us all.

My friends,

I would like to add a word about Europe.

Europe, clearly, has a special interest in supporting us across the Mediterranean. But it is also essential not to ignore the challenges that face us in the Balkans. Muslim-majority countries in the Balkans deserve our support to pre-empt the threat of extremism.

These countries are Europe’s front line against extremism and its first line of defence. Nothing could be more costly to Europe than rising instability and extremism in the Balkans. It is, therefore, vital to shut out extremists, on all sides, who seek to manufacture division in that area of the continent.

A key challenge today lies in the ability of some, who take advantage of the cover of Islam, to advance political agendas in the Balkans that are not in the interest of Europe. This is something we should act together to prevent.

I appeal to you here to reach out to countries such as Bosnia-Herzegovina, Albania and Kosovo. These countries, including others in the  Balkan region, should be an integral part of Europe’s architecture and pillars of your security and prosperity. Bring them closer to you as models of coexistence, moderation and tolerance so they become Europe’s front line of stability.

I hope that here, at the Munich Security Conference, we can address this issue. Let’s not find ourselves meeting again in a few years to discuss threats that we could well have prevented.

It is you, the national and international leaders gathered here, who know best what we are up against. And it is you who can best help our countries come together in response. For if we do not act now, the dangers will only grow; and if we do not act in concert, we will miss further opportunities for success.

 

Thank you.

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