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King visits Civil Defence Department, Gendarmerie

By - Oct 27,2015 - Last updated at Oct 27,2015

His Majesty King Abdullah checks on an ambulance during a visit to the headquarters of the Civil Defence Department in Amman on Monday (Photo courtesy of Royal Court)

AMMAN — His Majesty King Abdullah, Supreme Commander of the Jordan Armed Forces-Arab Army (JAF), visited the Civil Defence Department (CDD) and the Gendarmerie on Monday where he checked on the progress of operations and their development plans. 

During his visit to the CDD and the Gendarmerie Department, the King expressed his pride in their distinguished efforts and sacrifices and underlined the need and importance of ongoing improvement of their performance, according to a Royal Court statement. 

The King was briefed by CDD Director General Lt. Gen. Talal Kofahi on the department's approach to implementation and development of its operations and plans, especially in terms of preparations for winter.   

Kofahi also outlined the steps taken by the department to ensure the preparedness of its equipment and machinery and steps in boosting its manpower capabilities to provide optimal services for the country's citizens and residents.    

At the Gendarmerie, the Monarch met with the department’s director general Brig. Gen. Hussein Hawatmeh to discuss several issues related to the agency’s mandate. 

During the meeting, Hawatmeh briefed King Abdullah on the achievements of his department and its future training plans.  

 

He also noted that department members work to implement His Majesty’s directives and to fulfil their duties in cooperation with other security bodies and in compliance with the law and human rights.     

The Jordan Times celebrates 40th anniversary

By - Oct 27,2015 - Last updated at Oct 27,2015

A group photo of The Jordan Times staff on the occasion of the daily’s 40th anniversary. Jordan’s only English-language daily first saw the light of day in 1975 as a six-page black-and-white newspaper (Photo by Nader Daoud)

AMMAN — The Jordan Times (JT) marks its 40th anniversary on Tuesday as the Kingdom’s only English daily.

Four decades after its establishment, the paper, issued six days a week, continues to face similar challenges, according to former and current staff members, but strives to offer professional journalism from Jordan to the world.

With the start of the Lebanese civil war in 1975, a major English newspaper in the region, The Daily Star, suspended publication, pushing officials and journalists in Jordan to consider filling that gap with a home-grown English paper, according to journalist Maaz Shukayr. 

Shukayr, who was director of programmes at Radio Jordan at the time, was contacted by Jumaa Hammad, then director of the Jordan Press Foundation (JPF), asking him to help produce an English language newspaper to appeal to the foreign community in the Kingdom.

Hammad had in the 1960s worked with Shukayr on The Jerusalem Star, an English paper that was published for a year.

“I made all the preparations. Hired the people, made the subscriptions to the international news and photo agencies… and saw to it that we had a nice room furnished at the Jordan Press Foundation,” said Shukayr, who was a managing editor with the founding team of the JT, while Mohammad Al Amad assumed the post of chief editor.

The paper was supported by HRH Prince Hassan, who was crown prince at the time, added Shukayr, who met with the prince along with key members of the JPF before the JT was officially published.

“I said… do you want a newspaper that looks like and reports like Al Rai, or do you want a newspaper that reports its own stories in its own style?

“If you want the first choice, then we’ll hire translators. If you want the other… then we’ll hire journalists,” recounted Shukayr, who worked with the paper in its first six weeks, and again between 1980 and 1982.

The prince laughed and said he wanted journalists at the JT.

Rami G. Khouri, who was chief editor from 1975 to 1982 and from 1987 to 1988, said it was a challenge “to have the owners of the paper, and the government in the background, appreciate that an English-language newspaper could not only be a translated copy of Arabic papers”.

“We had to compete to some extent with global English language media and therefore had to maintain a minimum of accuracy, thoroughness and credibility in covering even sensitive political news. I believe we made enough progress on both fronts to be satisfied and maintain our mission then,” added Khouri, a senior public policy fellow at Issam Fares Institute for Public Policy and International Affairs, American University of Beirut, and an internationally syndicated columnist.

With a limited number of staff members working through the night in one small room, on October 27, 1975, The Jordan Times hit the newsstands featuring an exclusive interview with Prince Hassan on the front page. A copy cost 50 fils.

“We’ve made mistakes over the years, and we’ve also done good things,” said Shukayr, recounting an incident when His Majesty King Hussein called to commend a headline in the paper.

“We were encouraged by the good comments we received,” he added. “But limited resources are always a problem for any journalist… we had to rely, I think more than necessary, on the tickers, the wire services” and translations of local news.

In covering local news, it was difficult at times to find cooperative sources, Shukayr said, citing cases when officials were unwilling to provide information or sit for interviews with The Jordan Times, instead of foreign media outlets.

“The paper operated within a tradition of professionalism that set it apart from all else in Jordan. It was thus the address for all those who wanted reporting and analysis they could trust were produced to the best traditions of the craft,” said former deputy prime minister Ayman Safadi, a former JT chief editor.

 

Technical resources

 

In its first year, the paper had to “import” an Egyptian, Abu Sraj, to do the typesetting. Although he did not know a single word in English, his typing using the linotype machine was flawless, according to Shukayr.

Yousef Jammal, who worked in the paper’s layout section from 1975 to 2007, said all the montage work was done manually, with staff staying until after midnight to finish the paper, which started as a six-page newspaper and expanded to eight pages around the time of the Gulf War.

Soon thereafter, the newspaper expanded to 12 pages, increasing again in the late 1990s to its current size of 16 pages and expanding online.

“We had to arrange the headlines, photos and advertisements by hand,” said Jammal, adding that the introduction of computers in the early 1990s made work easier.

Despite the long hours and tough workload, producing an issue every day was a labour of love for all staff members, who were aware of the importance of what they were doing, he added, noting that he had to spend the night at the paper on several occasions to keep up with the work.

“To this day, the paper has its readership,” Jammal said, recalling how foreign journalists used to throng the daily in the days of the first Gulf War and other crises in the region, interviewing editors and reporters and seeking their expertise and knowledge.

 

Legacy and impact

 

“The difficult conditions under which The Jordan Times operates remain. But that tradition of professionalism which has been protected and built on by all the generations that have kept The Jordan Times going still sets it apart today,” said Safadi, one of several former JT staffers who have gone on to achieve professional success.

“The Jordan Times spirit is alive and still producing some of the best journalism in the country and the region,” he added.

Former deputy prime minister Marwan Muasher also was one of The Jordan Times’ columnists. He is now vice president for studies at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. 

Past editors-in-chief also included George Hawatmeh, Walid Sadi, Elia Nasrallah, Abdullah Hasanat, Rana Sabbagh (the first female chief editor of a Jordanian daily), and Jennifer Hamarneh.

“As I join my colleagues in celebrating this special anniversary of the JT, I celebrate the memory of the dear friends and colleagues who have left The Jordan Times and us permanently: Abdullah Hasanat, Jennifer Hamarneh, P.V. Vivekanand, Tareq Ayoub and Ara Voskian we miss you. The Jordan Times and its warm personal memories would not have been the same without you,” said Safadi.

For many journalists, The Jordan Times has been the training ground that launched their careers into international journalism.

“It was The Jordan Times that opened new windows and new opportunities for me to practise my skills as a reporter… my reporting made it to a new audience inside and outside the Kingdom,” said former senior reporter Hani Hazaimeh, who started with the JPF, The Jordan Times publisher, as a graphic designer in 2001 and moved to the JT in 2007 as a reporter.

“I owe my success to the JT and its remarkable staff and to the high reputation the daily has garnered through its credible news,” said Hazaimeh, now managing editor at the Saudi Arab News daily. 

Similarly, Khouri said his years at JT served him well in his career.

“The most important lesson I learned and maintain in my life today is to take our professional work seriously, but not to take ourselves too seriously, and to remain humble but daring and respectful at all times. I will always value and appreciate the opportunity The Jordan Times gave me, and I hope I have repaid that gift to the paper and to society in some ways.”

Forty years on, the daily, which has over 110,000 followers on Twitter and around 194,000 likes on Facebook, is committed to building on the legacy of those who came before and have gone on to become leaders in media and other fields, said Samir Barhoum, who has been chief editor since 2007.

 

“We are striving to develop our newspaper and serve our country,” added Barhoum, who has been working in the JT since 1988, voicing hope that the JPF management would invest more in the paper and its digital services to build on its continued successes.

Rain channels 1m cubic metres of water to dams in north

By - Oct 26,2015 - Last updated at Oct 26,2015

Students walk in the rain near the University of Jordan in Amman on Sunday (Photo by Amjad Ghsoun)

AMMAN — Sunday’s rain channelled around a million cubic metres (mcm) of water into the country’s major dams in the north, a government official said Monday.

Jordan Valley Authority (JVA) Secretary General Saad Abu Hammour, as quoted by the Jordan News Agency, Petra, said the northern region received the largest amounts of rain, with around 1 million mcm being channelled into the Wihdeh, Wadi Al Arab and Sharhabil dams.

The northern Jordan Valley witnessed heavy rain on Monday which, accompanied by strong wind, caused 25 electricity poles to fall, according to the Electricity Distribution Company (EDCO).

Local news websites reported cars swept away by flash floods in the Northern Ghor, Irbid, Mafraq and Zarqa.

EDCO’s executive director in the Jordan Valley and the eastern region, Said Obeidat, said powerful winds toppled trees which fell on electricity cables, causing short-lived blackouts in many regions.

Maintenance teams then repaired the damage and restored electricity to 99 per cent of the subscribers, Obeidat told Petra.

Many places in Irbid Governorate had no water as a result of power cuts caused by Monday’s rain, according to Yarmouk Water Company President Mohammad Rababaa.

A slight drop in temperatures is forecast for Tuesday, with relatively cool weather, partly-cloudy to cloudy skies and a chance of rainfall, especially in hilly areas in the northern, central and southeastern regions, according to a statement sent from the Jordan Meteorological Department.

Winds are forecast to be westerly moderate to brisk, the statement added.

Temperatures in Amman are forecast to range between 12°C and 21°C, while they are expected to be between 17°C and 27°C in Aqaba.

The Greater Amman Municipality (GAM) said Monday it is still on alert until the effect of the depression eases off.  

The depression, which started affecting the country on Sunday, brought heavy rain accompanied by thunder and hail, causing flash floods and several road accidents. 

 

GAM urged the public to call 06/5359970 or 06/5359971 in case of emergencies, Petra, reported.

‘Gov’t preparing 10-year plan for construction sector growth’

By - Oct 26,2015 - Last updated at Oct 26,2015

AMMAN — A 10-year action plan for accelerating growth in the construction sector will be announced by the end of this year, Minister of Public Works and Housing Sami Halaseh said on Monday. 

The minister noted that a strategy to deliver growth and create jobs for Jordanians over the next decade has been developed by the Jordan Engineers Association, the Jordan Contractors Association, the Architects and Engineers Business Council and the Housing Developers Association. 

The plan has been designed to ensure that the sector can contribute to the realisation of the Kingdom’s broader goals and aspirations over the next decade, as outlined in the Jordan 2025 vision.

Halaseh made the remarks during a seminar on concrete, cement and soil technology in Amman, attended by a number of experts and executives of firms working in the field of construction. 

“All participants from across the sector have agreed that our biggest challenge over the next decade is ‘raising the bar’ on quality and excellence... the quality management systems of our companies, and the quality and integrity of our regulatory standards and procurement processes,” he added.

Halaseh said the construction, engineering and housing cluster is the second biggest economic sector in Jordan, behind manufacturing, and contributed around $3 billion to the country’s gross domestic product in 2014.   

“The cluster is also one of the fastest growing [sectors]; it experienced an 8 per cent annual average growth rate between 2000 and 2014,” he continued, adding that it is a “critical catalyst” for other sectors in Jordan as well. 

“We build the infrastructure for our ICT, energy and transport sectors, we provide significant demand for our financial services sector, and we build the resorts and infrastructure for our tourism and hospitality sector.”

“As we look ahead beyond the current turmoil across our region, Jordan sits in the middle and is well placed to help reconstruct the infrastructure and housing needs of our neighbours,” Halaseh added.   

The nation has engineers that are widely recognised across the region for the quality of their professional skills, he noted, adding that the Kingdom also has architect and consulting firms that have won international awards and win competitively tendered work around the world. 

 

“And we have contractors and housing developers ready and eager to export their knowledge and services around the region,” the minister said.

Father handed death sentence for raping underage daughter

By - Oct 26,2015 - Last updated at Oct 26,2015

AMMAN — The Criminal Court on Monday sentenced a 49-year-old father to death after convicting him of raping his minor daughter and transmitting HIV/AIDS to her.

The defendant stood motionless upon hearing the verdict read out by presiding Judge Fawzi Nahar, according to a senior judicial source.

“The defendant only said that he relies on God’s justice,” the judicial source told The Jordan Times.

Court transcripts said the father raped his daughter when she was 12-years-old and repeated his actions on several occasions, including sexual molestations.

“The defendant began assaulting his daughter sexually in 2011, and in 2014 the mother saw her daughter with her husband in a suspicious position and the father promised not to repeat his actions,” the court said in its ruling.

However, the court maintained, “the father began assaulting his daughter again and she ran away from home and filed a complaint against him at the Family Protection Department affiliated with the Public Security Department, and he was arrested.”

The defendant denied sexually assaulting his daughter in court, but the tribunal depended on the victim’s testimony and “the fact that she contracted the disease recently”.

“The court heard experts’ testimony that the disease was not hereditary and that it was contracted to her through sexual intercourse.”

The defendant’s wife also carries the disease from her husband, according to the judicial source.

Criminal Court Prosecutor Jihad Dureidi had asked the court to inflict the maximum punishment on the defendant.

The tribunal also comprised judges Ibrahim Bawareed and Mohammad Zyoud.

 

The verdict will automatically be reviewed by the Cassation Court within the next 30 days.

Transparency International chief to address Gov’t Leaders Forum

By - Oct 26,2015 - Last updated at Oct 26,2015

AMMAN — Managing Director of Transparency International Cobus De Swardt will be a guest at the 10th Government Leaders Forum, slated to be held Saturday and to be attended by Prime Minister Abdullah Ensour, organisers said Monday.

Minister of Public Sector Development Khleef Al Khawaldeh told The Jordan Times that De Swardt will address participating government employees on instilling principles of transparency, fighting corruption and improving public administration performance. 

The minister said De Swardt will also discuss Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index and how Jordan can improve its score and ranking, adding that the ministry will brief the international expert on the achievements the government has made in the field of enhancing integrity and transparency. 

Khawaldeh indicated that the ministry will release in the first quarter of next year a report analysing the main international rankings of governments and Jordan’s performance in these indices, adding that the report’s goal is to enable public departments to benefit from and follow up on content relevant to their work.

In the annual Corruption Perceptions Index, released last December, Jordan ranked 55th among 175 countries, scoring 49 out of 100, up from the 66th place among 177 countries and territories in 2013.

The Government Leaders Forum, the minister said, seeks to help leaders such as secretaries general and directors of public agencies learn from the experiences of countries that achieved economic growth by reforming public administration.

 

Over the past two years, the forum has hosted a number of foreign politicians and experts in the field of public administration, such as Ireland’s Minister for Public Expenditure and Reform Brendan Howlin and Deputy Secretary General of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development Mari Kiviniemi.

Social media sites boost TV viewership — experts

By - Oct 26,2015 - Last updated at Oct 26,2015

AMMAN — Social networking sites can help TV channels increase their viewership tremendously, according to media experts.

Public and private TV stations can use sites such as YouTube, Twitter and Facebook to reach a wider audience and thus drive traffic to their channels, the experts said on the sidelines of a conference on the current state of media held this week by the Jordan Press Association.

“We at Jordan TV believe that social networking sites have a great role to play in driving traffic and increasing viewership. Thus, we have allocated special teams to focus on this issue and have a department to handle social media,” Mohammad Tarawneh, director general of the Jordan Radio and Television Corporation, told The Jordan Times at the event.

“TV stations need to focus on social media sites because they are becoming increasingly dominant among all segments of society,” Tarawneh said Monday.

Walid Ateyyat, news director at Ro’ya TV station, echoed Tarawneh’s remarks.

“YouTube and Facebook in particular drive tremendous traffic and viewership to the channel,” he told The Jordan Times.

“The majority of viewers watch the channel due to its activity on social networking sites. People are very eager to watch videos,” said Ateyyat, noting that channels should pay more attention to social media in light of the increasing number of Internet users and smartphone owners.

According to recent figures by the Telecommunications Regulatory Commission, by the end of June this year, the number of Internet users in Jordan reached 6.2 million, compared to 5.7 million at the same time last year. 

The number of Internet subscribers in the Kingdom reached 2.029 million at the end of June, compared with 1.7 million at the end of 2014.

 

Smartphone penetration in Jordan is estimated at more than 60 per cent, while there are 12.3 million active mobile subscriptions in the Kingdom.

Ensour calls for acceleration of Irbid development zone project

By - Oct 26,2015 - Last updated at Oct 26,2015

AMMAN — Prime Minister Abdullah Ensour on Monday called for adopting the necessary measures to accelerate work on the Irbid development zone project.

At a meeting with project stakeholders, Ensour highlighted the importance of the scheme, launched by His Majesty King Abdullah in 2007, to attract investments that would develop northern areas of the Kingdom, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

The meeting tackled challenges facing work progress in the project, with the premier expecting the project to be a “strong addition” to the national economy, according to Petra.

Discover Jordan Rally 2015 to start Thursday

By - Oct 26,2015 - Last updated at Oct 26,2015

AMMAN — The Discover Jordan Rally Tour 2015 will be held from October 29 to 31 under the patronage of HRH Princess Ayah, according to a statement from the organisers released this week.

Tourism Minister Nayef Al Fayez stressed the importance of his ministry’s continuous support for this annual global event to promote tourism and showcase the Kingdom’s ancient cultural heritage, the statement said.

All contestants must comply with road safety instructions and traffic rules, the statement said. On their first day, contestants will start from Amman to Petra and head the next morning to the Dead Sea, where they will spend the third day of the rally.

Queen Rania Teacher Academy launches BATT project

By - Oct 26,2015 - Last updated at Oct 26,2015

AMMAN — Queen Rania Teacher Academy (QRTA) launched the “Blended Approach to Teacher Training (BATT)” project in partnership with UNESCO, a according to a statement released Monday.

The event featured remarks from QRTA, the EU, the Education Ministry and UNESCO. QRTA CEO Haif Bannayan stressed the importance of the programme’s focus on psychosocial instruction, pedagogy, maths and physics. He also highlighted the programme’s hybrid model featuring online and face-to-face training.

Costanza Farina, UNESCO representative to Jordan, stressed the timeliness of the project in encouraging self-development of maths and science teachers as well as offering flexibility in their training and teaching.

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