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King to begin Europe visit this week

By - Nov 15,2015 - Last updated at Nov 15,2015

AMMAN — His Majesty King Abdullah will begin working visits to Kosovo, Austria and Spain in the middle of this week, a Royal Court statement said Saturday.

The King is scheduled to hold talks with leaders and senior officials of the three European countries that focus on enhancing political and economic relations as well as the latest regional developments, the statement said.

Prince Ali: We stand shoulder-to-shoulder with people of France

By - Nov 15,2015 - Last updated at Nov 15,2015

AMMAN — HRH Prince Ali on Saturday expressed sympathy with the families of the victims of the Paris attacks. “I am horrified by the terrorist attacks that took place throughout Paris, last night.

My thoughts and prayers are with the victims and their families,” the prince said in a statement released by his office.

Prince Ali, who is a candidate for FIFA presidency, stressed that “we stand shoulder-to-shoulder with the people of France” and that “heinous acts of terror in Paris, Beirut or anywhere else in the world will never prevail over the core values of humanity”. 

 

 

Issawi checks on Zarqa projects implemented under Royal directives

By - Nov 15,2015 - Last updated at Nov 15,2015

AMMAN — Royal Court Secretary General Yousef Issawi on Saturday checked on the progress of projects in Zarqa Governorate implemented under Royal directives in the health, educational, youth, sports and social sectors.

In the Hashemiyeh District, Issawi, who is also in charge of a committee to follow up on Royal initiatives, checked on progress in the construction of a comprehensive education centre that will offer education and rehabilitation services to people with disabilities, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

Accompanied by several concerned officials, he also checked on other projects including public parks, youth and health centres. 

 

 

 

Eight detained for 'attacking electricity workers'

By - Nov 15,2015 - Last updated at Nov 15,2015

AMMAN — Eight people have been detained for reportedly attacking three workers from the Irbid District Electricity Company, after which they were taken to the Speciality Hospital, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

The company's director, Ahmad Theinat, said the workers were attacked because they refused to supply a house with power because of unpaid dues of around JD1,000. 

MENA religious leaders prepare strategy against incitement to violence

By - Nov 15,2015 - Last updated at Nov 15,2015

AMMAN — Middle East and North African religious leaders have developed a regional strategy to counter incitement to violence and agreed on steps for its implementation, according to a UN official.

UN Special Adviser on the Prevention of Genocide Adama Dieng said incidents of politically motivated violence and sectarian violence are "too often" preceded by incitement, including the abuse of religion to fuel hatred, and that in some cases religious figures are responsible for inciting violence, while others are at risk standing against it. 

He made the remarks at a two-day event organised in Amman last week by the United Nations Office on Genocide Prevention and the Responsibility to Protect, the Columbia Global Centre Middle East in Amman, and Columbia Global Freedom of Expression.

Dieng added that the event aimed to establish a network of religious leaders from the MENA region that would enable them to support each other and act as agents of peace in their local communities.

He told The Jordan Times during a press conference that the participants were committed to working together to promote and implement strategies to counter incitement that could lead to atrocities. 

“Decisions have been taken to move from words to deeds... not forgetting to make use of the talents of the young,” Dieng said.

He explained that relevant atrocities included war crimes, crimes against humanity, ethnic cleansing and genocide.

Dieng used Daesh as an example, noting that the terror group uses highly sophisticated means to spread its message of fear, supported by records of inhuman and brutal acts.  He said there are indications of genocide by Daesh against the Yazidi people. 

Agnes Callamard, director of Columbia Global Freedom of Expression, said hate speech is a threat to people’s equality and is becoming a global issue and a source of tension. 

She added that governments’ responses to hate speech have been “very blunt”.

“Governments use charges of hate speech to target political minorities and legitimate expression, and thus it is not enough to counter hate speech without improving the text of the law... to focus on the right education to create resilience in communities,” Callamard told The Jordan Times.  

She said the way to tackle hate speech is through raising awareness among religious leaders to focus on universal values of love and acceptance.

The meeting built on earlier work by religious leaders in Fez, Morocco and Treviso, Italy, which resulted in a plan of action for religious leaders in the European region to prevent incitement to violence and contribute to preventing atrocities, according to a statement from the organisers.

 

The Fez meeting called for monitoring incitement, developing alternative messages, engaging in dialogue, revising education to appreciate all cultures, strengthening inter-religious and intra-religious dialogue and activities to ensure understanding, respect and communication, and engaging with political leaders, according to the UN News Centre.

Sustainable development panel discusses preparations for Paris conference

By - Nov 15,2015 - Last updated at Nov 15,2015

Minister of Planning and International Cooperation Imad Fakhoury chairs a meeting of the Higher National Committee on Sustainable Development on Saturday (Photo courtesy of Planning and International Cooperation Ministry)

 

AMMAN — The Ministry of Planning and International Cooperation said Saturday it will cooperate with UN agencies to hold capacity-building programmes for ministries, the private sector, civil society and academia to mainstream the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) into multi-sectoral strategies and plans.

At a meeting of the Higher National Committee on Sustainable Development, Minister of Planning and International Cooperation Imad Fakhoury, who also chairs the panel, highlighted its role in coordinating national efforts to achieve the SDGs with a participatory approach.

Fakhoury stressed the importance of the meeting as a follow-up to the global summit on sustainable development held last September in New York, when world countries endorsed the Sustainable Development Agenda 2030. The agenda includes sustainable development goals and targets that will form the foundation of a new international cooperation and partnership era that will be achieved by 2030, according to a ministry statement.

He said the ministry took the SDGs into consideration when drawing up the Jordan 2025 document.

The minister reiterated that the government is also keen to make those indicators reflected in the executive development programme 2016-2018. 

Discussions at the meeting addressed preparations for Jordan’s participation at the UN Conference on Climate Change 2015, due to be held in Paris between November 30 and December 11, 2015.

Environment Minister Taher Shakhshir, vice chair of the panel, said the Paris conference will lead to a new agreement on climate change. 

Although Jordan’s contribution to carbon emissions is limited, it has drawn ambitious goals in this respect that can be implemented if donors provide the necessary funding, Shakhshir added.

Raouf Dabbas, adviser to the minister of environment, said the outcomes of the Paris conference should be ambitious, comprehensive, fair and balanced for all countries, according to the statement. 

The conference should also come up with an international consensus to provide sufficient financial support from developed countries to developing ones to enhance their efforts in facing the impact of climate change, Dabbas noted. 

The level of voluntary procedures to face climate change should be relevant to and compatible with the national priorities and characteristics of each country, he added. 

The panel recommended highlighting a number of issues of high priority to Jordan, the most important of which is the impact of regional challenges on the Kingdom’s efforts to achieve sustainable development. 

On top of those challenges is the burden of Syrian refugees that strains the infrastructure and natural resources, the statement said.

The panel also recommended that all Jordanian institutions should strive to attract additional funding to face the impact of climate change.

 

All institutions should work — starting from next year — to maximise benefits from international assistance targeting climate change so that Jordan can play a leading role in this regard at the regional level, the committee added.

Authorities say Salti sisters suffered ‘psychological, financial problems’

By , - Nov 15,2015 - Last updated at Nov 15,2015

Interior Minister Salameh Hammad, flanked by Government Spokesperson Mohammad Momani and PSD Director Maj. Gen. Atef Saudi, holds a press conference on Saturday (Photo by Raad Adayleh)

AMMAN — Soraya Salti, one of the two sisters who were found dead after falling off a roof of an under-construction building in south Amman earlier this month, left a note addressed to her mother, police said Saturday.

In the note, Soraya asked her mother to tell her 11-year-old daughter Raya that she loved her so much and that she will be her guardian angel.

“I love you so much…This is so much bigger than us,” she added in the note, which the authorities revealed at a press conference.

Experts and Soraya’s father identified the handwriting in the note as belonging to her, Criminal Investigation Department Director Brig. Gen. Qasim Al Ibrahim told reporters.

He said the investigation revealed that the two sisters suffered from psychological problems.

Soraya suffered from a psychological disorder that could lead to suicidal tendencies and tests revealed she was on anti-depressants, according to experts at the press conference.

The investigation also revealed that some pills were found in Soraya’s pockets.

Ibrahim quoted their father as saying that Soraya, who was divorced, suffered from pressure at work.

The second sister, Jumana, had financial problems with her husband, who is a Greek national, and she told her father she regretted quitting her job, the investigation revealed, Jumana died in an ambulance en route to hospital, the officials said.

Soraya called her mother from a golf club near the airport road that day (November 6), added the police, who released images and a video of her on the phone, while Jumana was in the car all the time.

The mother refused to reveal details of the conversation, the investigation revealed. Aged 45 and 37, the Saltis, who have Jordanian and US nationalities, were successful businesswomen from a prominent Jordanian family.

Soraya, who used to serve as the regional director of Injaz Al Arab, was named among Arabian Business’ Top 100 Most Powerful Arab Women in 2013.

Jumana, who used to play for the national basketball team, was a director at PricewaterhouseCoopers in the UAE.

Mansour Maaytah, forensic medicine director at the Health Ministry, said Soraya’s clothes had traces of soil and blood, citing the autopsy report, and she had multiple contusions on her face, torso and lower extremities, in addition to multiple fractures in the pelvis and ribcage, the Jordan News Agency, Petra reported.

She also had bruises in the scalp, fractures in the lower part of the skull and a cerebral haemorrhage.  

Tests showed traces of the anxiety drug Diazepam in Soraya’s blood, Maaytah added, noting that the injuries are consistent with the incidence of falling from a great height and crashing onto a solid surface.

The cause of death, he said, was ruled to be internal bleeding as a result of internal organ lacerations and severe fractures.

The same cause of death was ruled in Jumana’s case, who suffered fragmented fractures in the ankles and vertebrae, in addition to a fracture in the skull and brain haemorrhage, according to Maaytah.

Petra quoted Nasser Shraiqi, director of Rasheed Psychiatric Hospital, as saying that the drugs found in the blood tests are used to treat depression in the long, medium and short terms, and that depression could lead to suicide while the medications are used to calm the nerves and aid in sleep.

A Public Security Department (PSD) statement issued last week quoted an eyewitness, the guard of a nearby building who reported the incident to authorities, as saying he heard the sound of something hitting the ground, and — upon inspecting the area — saw the bodies of the two women.

The guard said he did not see another person in the vicinity or leaving the area in Jweideh.

Another witness, a woman who resides in an apartment opposite the under-construction building, said she saw a vehicle that stopped near the building, and a woman stepping out hurriedly.

The woman, the witness added, “looked nervous” while entering the building and she was followed by another woman who was also in a hurry, according to the PSD statement.

The witness added that she did not see anyone else in the area and after a while, she saw PSD personnel and learned that the two women fell, the statement said.

Friends and acquaintances of the sisters have been expressing shock over their death, paying tribute to their achievements and casting doubt over suicide claims.

“I find it hard to believe that they committed suicide,” former deputy prime minister Marwan Muasher wrote on his Facebook page, saying they were “an example of vitality, love of life and enthusiasm”.

“I was the basketball coach of Jumana when she was eight. I pray to God to give their parents patience and fortitude,” he wrote.

“Soraya was one of the kindest and most soft-hearted [people] I have ever worked with. A true angel, a hard worker and sincere... I wrote her the longest recommendation letter in my entire professional life. She used to help everyone. Her absence is unbearable. May she rest in peace,” Aqaba Special Economic Zone Authority Deputy Chief Commissioner Yusuf Mansur wrote on his Facebook page.

Former ICT minister Marwan Juma said Soraya was “vibrant, inspiring, positive, energetic and full of life”. 

 

In a Facebook post, he wrote: “… This is how Soraya should be remembered and how her memory should be honoured! May yours and Jumana’s beautiful souls rest in eternal peace!”

Muwaqqar shooting a 'lone wolf attack' — minister

By - Nov 14,2015 - Last updated at Nov 15,2015

AMMAN — The deadly shooting by a Jordanian police officer last week was a “lone wolf attack” and not linked to any group, Interior Minister Salameh Hammad said Saturday.

On November 9, the officer, Captain Anwar Abu Zaid, killed five contractors working with the Public Security Department (PSD), and injured six people before he was killed. 

At a press conference to announce the results of the investigation into the incident, Hammad stressed that it was an individual act, and Jordan remains a safe and stable country despite the unrest in the region.

The investigation showed that the perpetrator committed the attack due to psychological and financial problems, the minister added.

“We followed all required procedures in the investigation and will announce any further details that might come up in the future,” Hammad told reporters at the press conference, also attended by Government Spokesperson Mohammad Momani and PSD Director Maj. Gen. Atef Saudi.

He noted that the countries of the victims had been informed about the investigation and its findings. However, as the incident took place in Jordan, Jordanian authorities were in charge of the investigation.

“They trust the Jordanian authorities, they were informed of all the details and we have nothing to hide,” the minister stressed.

Two US contractors, one South African and two Jordanian translators were killed in the shooting, which took place at the King Abdullah II Special Operations Training Centre (KASOTC) in Muwaqqar.

Elaborating on the details of the incident, Saudi said Abu Zaid came from his hometown in the northern governorate of Jerash on a bus used to transport members of the PSD on the day of the attack. 

The perpetrator was carrying a Kalashnikov, the weapon he used in the shooting, in a bag that he claimed contained his winter clothes. In addition, he had 120 bullets for the Kalashnikov and 31 bullets for another pistol.

Brig. Gen. Hussein Abbadi, director of the Preventive Security Department, said Abu Zaid did not serve at KASOTC, noting that he worked at the Prince Hussein Bin Abdullah II Training Centre in the same area. 

After performing the noon prayer, he took his weapon and went to KASOTC on foot and started shooting at a truck that was transporting three people, one of whom was a US national who was shot dead, according to Abbadi.

Then Abu Zaid went inside KASOTC, where he killed four more people until he was killed, the official said.

The source of the weapon used in the attack has not yet been identified, according to Abbadi, and investigations are ongoing.

Meanwhile, Hammad confirmed news reports that Abu Zaid had submitted his resignation a few days before the attack, adding that his colleagues said he was not acting normal.

 

“We assure you that we are doing our job with the utmost integrity. Members of the PSD are efficient at their jobs and we do not accept any doubts over their work,” he stressed.

Jordan stands by France – King

By - Nov 14,2015 - Last updated at Nov 15,2015

 

AMMAN — His Majesty King Abdullah on Saturday condemned the “cowardly terrorist incident” that targeted Paris Friday evening.

In a cable of condolences to French President Francois Hollande, the King voiced rage at the attacks, which killed over 100 people.

In a statement issued by the Royal Court, His Majesty strongly deplored this terrorist act, expressing solidarity with the French people.

He stressed that Jordan stands with France under all conditions.

Commenting on the attacks, Her Majesty Queen Rania on Saturday tweeted, "Horrified by the outrageous atrocity in the #ParisAttacks. Terrorism claims more victims. #ThisIsNotIslam." 

 

“From Beirut to Paris, terrorism knows no borders & no religion. Humanity must unite against enemies of humanity #ParisAttacks #ThisIsNotIslam,” the Queen wrote on Twitter.

Also on Saturday, HRH Prince Ali expressed his sympathies over the incident.

Jordan also condemned the Beirut twin bombings that took place last Thursday, expressing condolences to the Lebanese people.

Prime Minister Abdullah Ensour on Friday phoned Lebanon’s Prime Minister Tammam Salam and voiced Jordan’s condemnation of the suicide blasts that targeted Beirut’s southern suburbs, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported. 

Ensour delivered His Majesty’s condolences to the Lebanese government and his wishes of speedy recovery to those who were injured. 

Salam commended the support of King Abdullah and the Jordanians for Lebanon and the Lebanese people.

Minister of State for Media Affairs and Communications Mohammad Momani, who is also government spokesperson, extended condolences to the French government and the families of the victims.

The Senate and the Lower House also expressed their utter condemnation of the terrorist blasts in Paris and Lebanon, Petra reported, adding that Parliament expressed its condolences and solidarity with both countries.

Meanwhile, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said Jordan’s embassy in Paris is checking on the condition of Jordanians living in the French capital. 

Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Sabah Al Rafie said no information has been received so far about any citizens being injured, according to Petra.

 

She said the embassy formed a team to follow up on the expatriates, urging the public to call the ministry on 065501444, extension 4572, the ambassador on 0033623260876, the consulate official on 0033683050081 and the Foreign Ministry’s operation centre on 065735166.

Jordan condemns Lebanon blasts

By - Nov 12,2015 - Last updated at Nov 12,2015

AMMAN — Jordan on Thursday condemned the suicide blasts that targeted Beirut's southern suburbs and killed several Lebanese. 

At least 37 people were killed and more than 181 wounded in two suicide bomb blasts in a crowded district in Beirut's southern suburbs on Thursday, according to news agencies. 

The government denounced the attack and expressed its support for Lebanon, under all circumstances, stressing its rejection of all forms of terrorism, regardless of their origin or motive, according to the Jordan News Agency, Petra. 

 

Minister of State for Media Affairs and Communications Mohammad Momani, who is also government spokesperson, extended condolences to the Lebanese government and the families of the victims.  

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