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Tribe of harassed girl wants JD40,000 from alleged harasser

By - Jan 30,2016 - Last updated at Jan 31,2016

AMMAN — The family of a 16-year-old girl who was sexually harassed in the southern governorate of Aqaba has demanded JD40,000 and the confiscation of the harasser’s car in response to his act last week, tribal judge Majed Abufaraj Farajat said Saturday. 

The girl’s tribe, backed by several other tribes from the south, had wanted the harasser’s tongue to be cut off as punishment, but agreed instead to the fine and the vehicle confiscation, the judge said.

“[This occurred] when we received several complaints from a group of people about the harassment of a girl from a prominent tribe in Aqaba,” he said, adding that a motorist harassed the teenager when she left her house to head to a nearby destination.

The judge said the two belong to prominent tribes in Aqaba, some 330km south of the capital.

Despite the girl’s attempts to avoid and run away from the harasser, the 19-year-old reportedly kept following her in his car and asking her to get inside, Abufaraj Farajat told The Jordan Times over the phone. 

“He kept catcalling and saying inappropriate things to her in public, which led to clashes between the tribes,” he said.

The victim’s brother followed the harasser back home and used a Kalashnikov assault rifle against him, the judge continued. 

There were no reports of injuries.

“We wanted to end the issue and raise awareness about ending harassment in society," Abufaraj Farajat explained.

The tribes gathered in a meeting to come to terms regarding the issue, and members of the girl's tribe and their supporters called for cutting the harasser’s tongue off, impounding his car and seizing an amount of JD40,000.

“The punishment is just to … to say that the tongue he used to harass the girl verbally has to be cut off so he would learn not to do it again,” Abufaraj Farajat said. 

The judge said while the law might not authorise all the demands of the girl’s tribe, it would teach the accused a lesson.

“The girl shouldn’t stay silent about harassment. Some might be afraid they would lose their jobs or reputations, yet they must speak out,” he urged.

Punishment to the harasser must be implemented so anyone who reads the news or hears about it would be deterred, the judge said.

Abufaraj Farajat, who holds a degree in English literature and has worked in translation and wrote for several newspapers, noted that tribal leaders and judges in the south are “educated” and hold university degrees.

He emphasised that tribal leaders and judges “know how to react” to such acts and “work towards ending the phenomenon”, criticising some media outlets for depicting tribal figures as uneducated or ignorant. 

 

Harassment in the south is a varied phenomenon: in Aqaba it is widespread while in Wadi Musa it is less obvious and in Maan it is more likely to happen inside universities, the judge added.

‘Potato price set to rise after frost damages crops’

By - Jan 30,2016 - Last updated at Jan 30,2016

The price of 1kg of potatoes currently ranges between JD.20 and JD0.70, according to the website of the Amman central market for fruit and vegetables (File photo)

AMMAN — The price of potatoes is expected to increase starting this week as hundreds of dunums of the field crop were damaged when temperatures dipped below zero last week, Jordan Valley Farmers Union President Adnan Khaddam said on Saturday.

"The low temperatures in the Jordan Valley damaged several hundred dunums of potato crops. In addition, tomatoes grown upside down in greenhouses were also hit by the freezing temperatures," Khaddam told The Jordan Times.

The unionist expected a lower supply of potatoes to the local market in light of the damages.

According to the price list for Saturday posted on the website of the Amman central market for fruit and vegetables, the price of one kilogramme of potatoes currently ranges between JD0.20 and JD0.70.

"Prices of potatoes are expected to increase because supply of the crop will drop. On the other hand, prices of tomatoes will remain unchanged as the crop is grown in several locations," Khaddam said.

Freezing temperatures commenced last Tuesday, when mercury levels dropped to a low of -3ºC in Amman and -5ºC in the high mountains, according to the Jordan Meteorological Department, which expected ice formation to end on Sunday.

Mercury levels dropped to lows of 0ºC and -1ºC in the Jordan Valley, where the weather is usually fair in winter, according to Khaddam.

The spell of freezing temperatures followed a depression and a cold polar front that prevailed early last week, bringing heavy rain and snow to many parts of the country.

 

The scale of the damage to potato crops in the Jordan Valley is not clear as the spell has not ended yet, Khaddam said, expecting the evaluation of damages to be announced during this week.

SSC says street cleaning is on list of 'dangerous jobs'

By - Jan 30,2016 - Last updated at Jan 30,2016

The Social Security Corporation says the job of sanitation workers is among the professions recognised by law as hazardous (Photo by Osama Aqarbeh)

AMMAN — The job of street cleaners at municipalities around the Kingdom, is classified as a "hazardous" profession, Social Security Corporation (SSC) Spokesperson Musa Sbeihi said Saturday. 

Citing the list of dangerous professions included with the insurance benefits by-law issued under the SSC Law, Sbeihi said in a statement that the Greater Amman Municipality and other municipalities around the Kingdom must supply the SSC with the names of street cleaners and their wages.

Moreover, he said municipalities should also pay an additional 1 per cent for the subscription of each street cleaner in accordance with the law. 

The current SSC Law allows subscribers who work in dangerous professions, whether male or female, to apply for early retirement if they finish their services after the age of 45, according to Sbeihi.

He added that those applying for an early pension should also have paid at least 180 subscriptions for females and 216 for males. 

They should have also been working in the dangerous profession for no less than 60 months during the 10 years preceding the application. 

The SSC started applying the regulations related to early pension for workers in dangerous professions in March 2015 when the corporation's insurance benefits by-law was published in the Official Gazette, Sbeihi noted. 

 

He said the SSC defines hazardous jobs as those that could harm the health or life of the subscriber as a result of dangerous conditions in the workplace despite the implementation of professional health and safety standards. 

EU-funded project to enhance job prospects for young Jordanians, Syrians

By - Jan 30,2016 - Last updated at Jan 30,2016

AMMAN — A European Union delegation has announced two projects aimed at improving the lives of Jordanians in host communities and displaced Syrians through increased work preparedness and entrepreneurship. 

The delegates, during a visit last week to Luminus Education, a Middle Eastern technical and vocational training group, stated that both projects will be funded by the EU and managed by UNESCO, according to a statement sent to The Jordan Times on Saturday. 

"We are pleased to fund these two important projects facilitated by Luminus Group, and we anticipate that their outcomes will enable young Syrians and Jordanians to enhance their job prospects and create new businesses that will, in turn, create more jobs and raise local economies within Jordan," the statement quoted EU Commissioner for European Neighbourhood Policy and Enlargement Negotiations Johannes Hahn as saying. 

The first project will enhance work preparedness and life skills among young Syrians and Jordanians in Amman, Zarqa, Irbid and Mafraq and will be implemented by Al Quds Education, Training and Consultancy — Al Quds College, according to the statement. 

The second initiative is aimed at creating private sector jobs and enhancing the economic growth potential of local economies in the northern cities of Irbid and Mafraq.

 

The three-year project will establish an innovation and entrepreneurship centre called Fab Lab, which will provide comprehensive business development services to high potential start-ups and existing micro, small and medium enterprises. 

Religious leaders call for safeguarding environment

By - Jan 30,2016 - Last updated at Jan 30,2016

AMMAN — Religious leaders and environmentalists on Saturday stressed the importance of safeguarding nature and protecting the environment.

At a one day event organised by the Catholic Centre for Studies and Media in cooperation with Konard Adenauer Stiftung, Christian and Muslim scholars stressed the universality of environmental issues and highlighted Pope Francis' calls to protect "our common home".

The centre's director, Father Rifat Bader, said in an opening speech that in addition to safeguarding the natural environment, it is also important to protect Jordan's social environment against pollution by spreading love, encouraging hard work, and fighting extremism and hate speech.

Bader told The Jordan Times that it is the duty of every Jordanian — Muslim and Christian — to work together to counter climate change and fight mental pollution.

Also speaking at the meeting, attended by Royal Institute for Inter-faith Studies Director Majeda Omar, who was deputising for HRH Princess Rahma, Hassan Karirah, director of preaching and guidance at the Awqaf Ministry, said all religious scripts discuss the harmony between humans and the environment.

Local communities, he argued, are not fully aware of the need to protect the environment, calling for linking the issue to religious teachings.

Krikor Augustine Kusa, bishop of Jordan, Alexandria, and Jerusalem for Catholic Armenians, said God created Earth for humans to benefit from and preserve, and created humans to take care of each other as one big family.

Pope Francis brought this campaign for action on climate change to the United Nations in 2015, proclaiming the existence of a right of the environment and urging countries to stop abusing it.

Father Imad Alamat, a Catholic priest, highlighted the Pope's encyclical letter on the environment, noting that it is not directed to Catholics or Christians alone, but meant to reach all humans, since Earth is for all.

 

Alamat said the pontiff blamed environmental degradation on human selfishness and thirst for power.

'Work under way to open shelter for domestic helpers'

By - Jan 30,2016 - Last updated at Jan 30,2016

AMMAN — A shelter for domestic workers is in the pipeline at the Labour Ministry, in an initiative that aims at resolving issues facing domestic helpers in Jordan, an official source said on Saturday. 

The projected facility will have the capacity to accommodate around 300 residents, while being responsible for protecting them and resolving their problems, whether by sending them back to their countries, finding new employers or rectifying their legal status, according to Labour Ministry Secretary General Hamadah Abu Nijmeh. 

"The shelter will receive those who do not want to work for their employers anymore or want to find new ones, and those who want to go back to their counties," he told The Jordan Times, adding that the ministry will "keep open channels with their respective embassies".   

The ministry is currently preparing the mechanisms and standards required to open the shelter, which will be in line with international standards, the official said.

"The ministry is coordinating with the ministries of interior and social development as well as the Public Security Department and its women police division to draw up the criteria for the facility," Abu Nijmeh told The Jordan Times. 

“The shelter will be designed to provide temporary housing for domestic helpers until their problems and complaints are resolved. This needs careful preparations to ensure the decency of the place," he noted, adding that the ministry will also coordinate with civil society organisations in this regard. 

As preparations are still under way for the shelter, Abu Nijmeh said it is still early to announce the opening date.

There are currently 52,000 domestic workers in Jordan, according to the Labour Ministry's latest figures.  

A study conducted by Tamkeen Fields for Aid last year showed that the number of irregular domestic workers stands at 30,000.

 

A by-law that seeks to improve the rights of domestic helpers was published in the Official Gazette last year, stipulating several measures, including the establishment of a shelter for domestic helpers who leave their employers.  

Jordan condemns terror attack on Saudi mosque

By - Jan 30,2016 - Last updated at Jan 30,2016

AMMAN — His Majesty King Abdullah on Friday condemned the terrorist attack that targeted Imam Reda Mosque in Al Ahsa, Saudi Arabia, killing and injuring worshippers, a Royal Court statement said.

In a cable sent to Saudi King Salman Bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, the King stressed Jordan’s support for Riyadh in combating such terrorist acts, offering his condolences to the families of the deceased and wishing the injured a speedy recovery.

Minister of State for Media Affairs and Communications Mohammad Momani voiced the government’s condemnation of the terror attack, reaffirming the Kingdom’s unaltered stance in combating terrorism wherever it is, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

The Lower House also condemned the attack and voiced utter rejection of all “cowardly terrorist acts” targeting innocent people, Petra reported.

 

 

Army chief concludes Russia visit

By - Jan 30,2016 - Last updated at Jan 30,2016

AMMAN — King’s Military Adviser and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs-of-Staff Gen. Mashal Al Zaben on Friday returned to the Kingdom after an official visit to Russia where he met Defence Minister Sergey Shoygu and discussed military cooperation and regional issues.

Zaben conveyed His Majesty King Abdullah’s greetings to Russian President Vladimir Putin, highlighting the Jordanian role in achieving regional security and stability, in addition to the repercussions of regional instability on the Kingdom, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

The army chief also noted that the Jordan Armed Forces-Arab Army has been exerting “great efforts” to safeguard the country’s security. Shoygu commended Jordan’s role in working towards regional security, Petra added.

 

 

Public transport fares to drop by 10%

By - Jan 30,2016 - Last updated at Jan 30,2016

AMMAN — Public transport fares will go down by 10 per cent as of Sunday, Land Transport Regulatory Commission (LTRC) Director General Marwan Hmoud said Saturday.

The decision was taken after the LTRC board, chaired by Transport Minister Ayman Hatahet, completed a review of the operational costs of the different means of public transport.

The review examined the impact of the change in the prices of petrol and diesel on operation costs. Accordingly, the taxi rate per kilometre will drop and taxi drivers must adjust their meters within two weeks, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

 

 

Jordan calls for joint efforts to improve Arab education

By - Jan 30,2016 - Last updated at Jan 30,2016

AMMAN — The Arab Ministerial Committee concerned with studying the situation of education in the region discussed on Saturday ways to improve public education during a meeting chaired by Deputy Prime Minister and Education Minister Mohammad Thneibat, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

Thneibat called for the reform of education in the Arab world through studied steps and stressed the need to unify some of the subjects throughout the Arab world, like the Arabic and English language, chemistry, physics and mathematics courses.

He said there are 6 million school-aged Arab children who are not receiving any education, while there are more than 70 million illiterate Arabs, citing international studies. The ministerial committee comprises members from Jordan, the UAE, Bahrain, Morocco and Tunisia.

 

 

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