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One dead, eight injured in Aqaba, Zarqa accidents

By - Jan 17,2016 - Last updated at Jan 18,2016

AMMAN — One man died and four people were injured on Sunday in a road accident in Aqaba, while another four were injured in a separate accident in Zarqa, according to a Civil Defence Department (CDD) statement.

CDD cadres administered first aid to the injured and took them to nearby hospitals.

 

 

Two arrested for livestock theft

By - Jan 17,2016 - Last updated at Jan 18,2016

AMMAN — Criminal Investigation Department (CID) personnel have arrested two suspects involved in several cases of livestock theft in the Northern Badia, according to a Public Security Department (PSD) statement released Sunday.

An investigation led to the arrest of a Jordanian who confessed to committing 14 livestock thefts with an Arab accomplice, who was later arrested. The two suspects confessed to taking the stolen sheep to a farm where CID personnel found 475 stolen sheep, three stolen vehicles and two weapons, the PSD statement said.

Man stabbed to death in Mafraq

By - Jan 17,2016 - Last updated at Jan 18,2016

AMMAN — A 28-year-old man was stabbed to death in his house in east Mafraq, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, quoted Mafraq Public Hospital Director Smeir Mashaqbeh as saying on Sunday.

Mashaqbeh added that the man was stabbed twice in the chest, noting that Mafraq Civil Defence Department cadres took his body to the hospital and it was sent to the forensic medicine centre in the northern region. Investigation into the case is under way, Petra reported.

Families of Jordanian prisoners protest ‘lack of public, gov’t attention’

By - Jan 16,2016 - Last updated at Jan 17,2016

Activists hold a protest in solidarity with Jordanian prisoners in Israel in Amman’s Shmeisani area on Saturday (Photo by Merza Noghai)

AMMAN — Families of Jordanian prisoners in Israel and activists on Saturday organised a solidarity sit-in mainly dedicated to Abdullah Abu Jaber who has been on hunger strike for 68 days.

At the event, held by the Jordan Engineers Association (JEA) in front of the Professional Associations Complex in Shmeisani, Mohammad Abu Jaber said his brother Abdullah began his strike after the "Jordanian embassy in Israel failed to meet his demands".

The 40-year-old prisoner wants the Jordanian authorities to work on his release or move him to the Kingdom to spend the last third of his prison term, in addition to arranging a visit for his family.

"Abdullah's health is getting worse day by day, and officials are not paying enough attention to prisoners' issues," Mohammad charged, noting that his brother previously went on a 20-day hunger strike to draw attention to the same demands.

The Foreign Ministry has reiterated that it follows up on the conditions of all Jordanian prisoners in Israel, through the embassy in Tel Aviv.

Speaking at the event, attended by around 50 people, Akram Abu Zahrah's mother said her son completed his 14-year prison term last Thursday, and was scheduled to be released and arrive in Jordan, but he did not.

"Israeli authorities transferred Akram from Magedo prison to an immigration court, then to the deportation department, and we don't know what happened after that," the mother said, blaming official and private institutions for not following up on prisoners.

She said she was at the border crossing from 9am until 11pm waiting for Akram to arrive; and when he did not, she contacted officials at the Foreign Ministry who told her Israel had not informed them of Akram's release.

JEA Vice President Khalid Abu Rumman deplored the lack of official action on Abdullah's case and wondered about the silence of the Parliament and the public on prisoners' issues, calling on local and international human rights institutions to play a role in securing Abdullah's release.

"I also wonder how a freed prisoner needs a permit from the government to be allowed entry into the Kingdom," Abu Rumman said, in reference to Abu Zahrah's situation.

Mazen Malasah, head of the JEA's freedoms committee, called on the government to exert more efforts on prisoners' issues in general and Abdullah's case in particular, noting that he holds a Jordanian national number and enjoys all the rights stipulated in the Constitution.

 

Last month, Malasah said there are currently 26 Jordanian prisoners in Israel and 30 missing.

Anti-normalisation group banned from performing play on Rainbow Street

By - Jan 16,2016 - Last updated at Jan 17,2016

AMMAN — “Itharrak” members were banned from performing a play on Thursday near the capital’s Rainbow Street, where they aimed at “providing educational facts” on boycotting Israeli products and “normalisation”, Muath Qasrawi, the group's founder, said Saturday.

“Itharrak”, which literally translates into “move”, planned to stage a sketch performed by more than 50 participants of different ages near the 1st Circle.

“We were surprised to see gendarmerie officers and police cars surrounding the area when we arrived,” Qasrawi told The Jordan Times, adding that they were informed that the governor bans such activities on streets.

Amman Governor Khaled Abu Zaid said group members did not ask for permission to perform the play, adding that they could have chosen another venue, not on a street.

“We have many other places in Jordan to perform plays and such activities; when people gather to watch, they block the street and cause traffic jams,” he told The Jordan Times.

Abu Zaid emphasised that the best interest of citizens should be taken into account, since it was during the weekend.

“The aim was not to cancel the play and limit their freedoms; we did not want to cause chaos on the street… many residents need to pass by that street to go to hospital or deal with emergency cases,” the governor said.

Qasrawi said the group had announced plans for the performance on several social media outlets a few days before the event. 

“There were several activities taking place on that street, yet, they only told us to cancel our event, we believe this limits our right to freedom of expression,” he charged.

 

Since its establishment in 2009, the group has organised several activities such as peaceful rallies, according to Qasrawi.

King, Biden follow up on Washington visit

By - Jan 16,2016 - Last updated at Jan 16,2016

AMMAN — His Majesty King Abdullah on Friday received a telephone call from US Vice President Joe Biden, who underscored the importance of the King's visit to Washington in the past few days. 

In their telephone conversation, the King and Biden discussed some of the key files that were raised and discussed during the King's Tuesday through Thursday visit to Washington DC, according to a Royal Court statement.  

Biden stressed the US' support for Jordan in its efforts to achieve peace and security in the Middle East. 

 

During his Washington visit, His Majesty met with Biden, Defence Secretary Ashton Carter, Secretary of State John Kerry, key lawmakers and representatives of Arab and Islamic organisations. 

Jordan denounces new terror strikes in Africa

By - Jan 16,2016 - Last updated at Jan 17,2016

AMMAN — His Majesty King Abdullah on Saturday denounced the terrorist attacks that took place in Ouagadougou, the capital of Burkina Faso, which killed several innocent civilians and injured others. 

In a cable to Burkina Faso's President Roch Marc Christian Kabore, the King expressed his condolences and sympathies over the victims of the terrorist attack and wished the injured a speedy recovery, according to a Royal Court statement. 

Also on Saturday, His Majesty sent a cable to Kenya's President Uhuru Kenyatta, offering his deepest condolences over the killing of several Kenyan soldiers in the attack on a base for African Union peacekeepers in southwestern Somalia.

In the cable, the Monarch voiced Jordan's support to Kenya in the face of terror, which is threatening the region and the world.

The government on Saturday denounced the terrorist attacks that targeted a hotel and a restaurant in Burkina Faso as well as the terrorist attack that occurred at an African Union base in Somalia on Friday.

Minister of State for Media Affairs and Communications Mohammad Momani asserted Jordan's rejection of all forms of violence and terrorism and he stressed the need for orchestrated international efforts to confront terror groups worldwide. 

Momani, who is the government's spokesperson, expressed the government's condolences and wished the injured a speedy recovery, according to the Jordan News Agency, Petra.   

 

At least 26 people from 18 different nationalities were killed in the assault on the Splendid Hotel and a nearby casino in Burkina Faso, while scores of troops were killed in the attack at the base of the African Union, according to news agencies.

Debate arises over impact of crashing oil prices on commodity service costs

By , - Jan 16,2016 - Last updated at Jan 16,2016

A man leaves a mall after shopping in Amman last week (Photo by Hassan Tamim)

AMMAN – Consumers, activists, suppliers and regulators are involved in a blame game over prices of commodities as global oil prices have plummeted to a 12-year low.

Consumers and their advocates blame businessmen, both manufacturers and importers, of seeking to line their pockets, while suppliers blame the government for not lowering transportation fares and Aqaba Port’s handling fees. 

Late 2012, following the government decision to remove fuel subsidies, traders said prices of commodities might go up by at least 30 per cent because importers would seek to offset the increase in shipping costs. At that time global oil prices were around $120 a barrel. 

Some consumers say that prices were hiked then, but never went down when oil became much cheaper.

They urge a 1970s style of government interference in the price of every item on shops’ shelves. 

In response, a commercial sector leader claims that people need to learn how to shop, directing fire at activists for not educating the public in the right spending behaviour, with another representative for foodstuff merchants insisting that prices of many commodities have already gone down.

"Why do prices of goods and services surge when the price of oil is high but they never come down when it is low?" asked Rawan Ababneh, an employee at an NGO based in Amman.

Ayham Otoom accused traders of taking advantage of the fact that the government does not set a cap for prices of commodities, charging that suppliers focus only on making profits without taking into account financial and living conditions of citizens. 

"What goes up never comes down," said Otoom, a private sector employee. 

Lubna Qasem, a teacher in Amman, said prices on the local market should be monitored by the government as “prices of the majority of products –– either made in Jordan or imported –– are becoming more and more expensive”. 

Consumer Protection Society (CPS) President Mohammad Obeidat said that as oil prices have seen a sharp decline over the past three years, prices of goods and services should also drop. 

Energy used to represent a burden on goods manufactured in the Kingdom in terms of cost, but this is no longer the case, he told The Jordan Times, adding that shipment costs for imported goods also declined.

According to the CPS president, prices of oil on the global market have plummeted by as much as 75 per cent since 2012 — from a peak of around $125 a barrel to around $30 now. 

Although the government cannot interfere in prices, it still can make indicative prices for essential products, Obeidat suggested.  

 

Traders’ counter-claims

 

Ghassan Kharfan, vice president of the Jordan Chamber of Commerce, said the government is to blame for the rising living costs in the country although it had lowered fuel prices sharply. 

He said shipment costs from Aqaba Port have not dropped, citing other costs importers have to pay such as fees for handling at the port as well as fees to the Aqaba Container Terminal. 

Kharfan said shipping a 40-foot container-from China to Aqaba costs around $500, while shipping the container from Aqaba to Amman would cost around $1,000. 

Commenting on the Cabinet decision in October last year that lowered sales tax on clothes, bags, watches, perfume, jewellery, toys and cosmetics from 16 to 8 per cent, he said retailers are offering large discounts on such items, so a large part of people’s needs is witnessing falling prices.  

“A weakening purchasing power and the huge competition in the domestic market are pushing traders to lower prices and to make attractive discount offers,” Kharfan said, blaming consumers for insisting on buying certain brands of food and other goods. 

“Why don’t people check more than one supermarket and buy from the cheaper place?” he asked, adding that consumers would not find a difference in quality between certain brands and other alternative products due to strict measures imposed by the Jordan Standards and Metrology Organisation, the Jordan Food and Drug Administration and other regulatory agencies.  

Kharfan said the CPS should direct consumers on how to save while shopping instead of accusing merchants of seeking higher profits. 

Foodstuff Traders Association President Khalil Haj Tawfiq agreed with Kharfan, stressing that there is a high degree of diversity in products offered on the local market that would give consumers the choice to pick according to their budgets. 

Prices of food commodities have dropped by between 10 to 40 per cent over the past two years, Haj Tawfiq added, noting that merchants are not making high profits as many consumers assume because of the increasing competition between them. 

Spokesperson of the Ministry of Industry, Trade and Supply Yanal Barmawi told The Jordan Times that prices have either been stable or dropped, adding the ministry is monitoring the domestic market by surveying changes in prices. 

The ministry is watching how the drop in oil prices is reflected the prices of goods and services by urging traders to lower the prices of their products, he added. 

 

“If there were any unjustifiably high prices, the government can intervene. We have done this before when it came to essential items,” he said. 

UN General Assembly president due in Amman Tuesday

By - Jan 16,2016 - Last updated at Jan 16,2016

AMMAN — President of the UN General Assembly Mogens Lykketoft will visit the Kingdom on Tuesday, during which he will meet with several Jordanian officials and UN workers in Jordan.

Ulla Oestergaard, special media adviser and deputy spokesperson within the Office of the President of the 70th Session of the UN General Assembly, said Lykketoft is to meet on Tuesday with Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh and representatives of the UN in Jordan.

He is also scheduled to visit the Zaatari Refugee Camp for Syrian refugees on Wednesday. 

The main topics that will be addressed in Jordan pertain to the goals of sustainable development and the crisis of Syrian refugees, besides the UN report on humanitarian financing that will be launched in Dubai on Tuesday, she said, as quoted by the Jordan News Agency, Petra.

Jordan hosts around 1.3 million Syrians, more than 80 per cent of whom live in host communities outside the main Zaatari and Azraq camps, according to official figures.

 

According to government sources, funding the needs of Syrians and their host communities has not been proportional to response requirements. As of November 2015, roughly $1.07 billion was committed to the Jordan Response Plan 2015, which corresponded to 36 per cent of the funding requirements.

Commerce chamber says brand retailers have no gripe with government measures

By - Jan 16,2016 - Last updated at Jan 16,2016

AMMAN — The intent of several international brands to exit the local market continues to be widely argued by sector leaders, with owners of shopping malls complaining about “outdated” government measures.

Two major companies representing eight international brands recently announced their plans to leave the market or restructure their businesses, citing “high” operational costs and taxes and ‘’poor” purchasing power.

Although, the Ministry of Industry, Trade and Supply met traders and sector representatives last week and promised to look into the challenges they face, the Amman Chamber of Commerce (ACC) said the brands are “not leaving the local market for reasons related to government measures”.

“The mother company that owns the brands wants to restructure itself and reconsider its prices, especially since some of them are considered expensive,” ACC Chairman Issa Murad said in a statement sent to The Jordan Times late last week.

“This measure is not considered as withdrawing from the Kingdom, as other brand shops are still successfully operating in the country,” Murad added.

He noted that some brands have relocated from Amman to other governorates to reduce financial costs due to the high rents of shops in the capital.

Dismissing any connection between the contemplation of the brands in question to exit the market the government measures covering investors, Murad cited last year’s Cabinet’s decision to reduce sales tax on international brands from 16 to 8 per cent.

However, Khalid Abu Hassan, the spokesperson of shopping mall owners, disagreed, saying that the brands considering withdrawing from the Jordanian market are “doing very well in the Gulf and Egypt”.

Abu Hassan linked the difficulties facing brands to the challenges shopping malls face to remain operational.

“Malls have their own problems and despite this, we continue to grant incentives for investors. We sometimes exempt brand retail shops from rent for up to six months,” he told The Jordan Times.

Abu Hassan explained that the current Property Tax Law dates back 50 years, while malls, which employ around 40,000 people, have emerged in the last decade.

“The tax is imposed on the entire area of the mall, although usually 70 per cent of it is not utilised for commercial purposes, such as halls and parking lots,” he said, adding that electricity prices are also a major hurdle for the sector.

“A mall is a tourist facility that also serves Jordanians. Some malls pay JD2 million a month on electricity. We should be treated on an equal footing with hotels, which pay 90 fils per kilowatt hour for electricity, while we pay 180 fils,” Abu Hassan said.

The “high” operational costs, salaries and rents contribute to “expelling” brands and piling losses on malls, he added.

Trade Ministry spokesperson Yanal Barmawi said the ministry has asked traders and brand agents to outline their challenges.

“We are waiting for them to provide us with their demands in order to examine them thoroughly and see what we can do to address them,” Barmawi told The Jordan Times.

In previous remarks to The Jordan Times, Garment Traders Association President Sultan Allan called for providing international brand representatives with partial exemptions on duties and taxes, also stressing the need to schedule sales seasons twice a year to enhance competitiveness.

 

Furthermore, he said official permits for new retail outlets must be in harmony with the population growth so that the markets are not flooded with an excessive number of new businesses.

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