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Fair weather forecast for weekend

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

AMMAN – Fair weather is forecast to prevail in the Kingdom in the coming days, the Jordan Meteorological Department said Thursday. Temperatures in the capital on Friday and Saturday are forecast to range between a high of 30°C during the day, and a low of 21°C at night.

Fair conditions are expected to continue on Sunday, with temperatures in Amman expected to range between a high of 31°C during the day, and a low of 22°C at night. National Forecasting Centre Director Hussein Momani told The Jordan Times that rain is not expected in the coming days. 

102 Syrian refugees enter Jordan in two days

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

AMMAN — Border Guards received 102 Syrian refugees during the past 48 hours and transferred them to shelters and camps allocated for this purpose, an army source said Thursday.

Royal Medical Services cadres provided essential healthcare services and medications for the sick and injured, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

House panel discusses elections bill with Aqaba residents

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

AMMAN — The Lower House’s Legal Committee on Thursday resumed its meetings to discuss the 2015 draft elections law in an open public dialogue session organised at the Aqaba Chamber of Commerce.

Aqaba Governor Fawaz Irshaidat said comments from the public must be aimed at serving the Kingdom and enhancing its laws, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported. MP Mustafa Amawi, head of the committee, said the aim of the meeting is to receive feedback from the public on the draft law. 

Demonstrations, marches planned for Friday to support Palestinians

By - Oct 15,2015 - Last updated at Oct 16,2015

AMMAN — Various demonstrations and marches are scheduled to take place on Friday in solidarity with the Palestinian resistance, according to a statement sent to The Jordan Times on Thursday.

Rallies after Friday prayer include a march from Al Husseini Mosque to Nakheel Square in downtown Amman, and from the Kalouti Mosque in Rabiah neighbourhood to the Israeli embassy. In Irbid, demonstrations are planned in front of Al Mukhayam Mosque, Irbid Grand Mosque and Huson Refugee Camp.

A march is planned in Aqaba from Al Sharif Al Hussein Bin Ali Mosque, while a sit-in is scheduled to take place in front of the Tafileh Grand Mosque, and a march is planned to start from Al Quds Mosque in Baqaa Refugee Camp.

In Karak, protests are planned near Al Omari and Jafar mosques, while marches will start from Khaled Bin Al Walid Mosque in Souf Refugee Camp, Omar Bin Al Khattab Mosque in downtown Zarqa and Al Mafraq Grand Mosque.

A sit-in is also planned to take place in front of the Prime Ministry, while marches are scheduled to start in Ajloun from Abu Baker Mosque to Kufranjah and in Ruseifa’s Thahiriyeh neighbourhood.

RMS nursing department holds scientific day

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

AMMAN — Deputising for HRH Princess Muna, president of the Jordanian Nursing Council, Royal Medical Services Director General Maj. Gen.

Muin Habashneh inaugurated the 20th scientific day of the RMS’s nursing department. In a speech delivered on behalf of Princess Muna, Habashneh said the nursing profession contributed to developing the level of healthcare in the Kingdom, and Jordanian nurses have gained a good international reputation, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported. Brig. Gen.

Ibtisam Haddadin, head of the nursing department at the RMS, said the event discusses 16 research papers and features several workshops. 

19 injured in road accidents, fire

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

AMMAN — Nineteen people were injured in four separate incidents in Amman, Zarqa and Aqaba, the Civil Defence Department (CDD) said Thursday, according to the Jordan News Agency, Petra.

Six were injured in a two-vehicle collision in the Um Nuwara neighbourhood in east Amman. CDD cadres administered first aid to the injured and took them to Al Bashir Hospital where they were reported to be in good condition.

Also on Thursday, CDD cadres took six people, who were injured in a two-vehicle collision in Aqaba, to Prince Hashem Military Hospital, where they were listed in fair condition. Four people were also injured in another two-vehicle collision in the Jeriba region in Zarqa Governorate.

Meanwhile, East Amman CDD firefighters extinguished a fire that erupted in a house in Dahiyat Al Amir Hassan and took three injured people to Prince Hamzah Hospital, where they were listed in fair condition.

King wishes the nation a blessed New Year

By - Oct 14,2015 - Last updated at Oct 14,2015

AMMAN — His Majesty King Abdullah on Wednesday returned to Jordan from a private visit.

His Majesty greeted the nation via Facebook, posting a status commemorating the Prophet’s Hijrah anniversary, or Hijri New Year. 

“On the occasion of the Islamic New Year and the anniversary of the Prophet’s Hijrah, we remember the lessons of compassion, peace, and faith in God’s mercy and protection. I wish all Muslims a blessed year,” the King posted on his official Facebook page in both English and Arabic.

The post, which received thousands of “likes”, came ahead of the national holiday on Thursday. His Majesty encouraged Jordanians to reflect upon the teachings of the prophet and follow his example. 

The 14th of October this year, also the first day of the Islamic month of Muharram, marks Prophet Mohammad’s journey from Mecca to Medina in 622 AD.The government announced Thursday, instead of Wednesday, as a public holiday. 

Also on Wednesday, deputising for King Abdullah, HRH Prince Hashem attended the Awqaf Ministry’s celebration marking the occasion of the Muslim New Year, which was held at the Royal Cultural Centre.

 

At the celebration, attended by several senior officials, Awqaf and Islamic Affairs Minister Hayel Dawood delivered a speech, in which he spoke about the Hijrah, its significance, historic importance and lessons to learn. 

Jordan has options open as it addresses challenges — PM

By - Oct 14,2015 - Last updated at Oct 14,2015

AMMAN — Prime Minister Abdullah Ensour said on Wednesday that Israeli provocations in Jerusalem and the West Bank will affect Jordanian-Israeli relations, reasserting that Jordan has numerous diplomatic and legal tools at hand to address the aggression.

Ensour made his remarks during an interview with Al Hayat newspaper in London, in which he renewed Jordan's condemnation of Israeli violations and said that Israel should be held accountable as an occupying force under international law, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

Jordan, under the leadership of His Majesty King Abdullah, is following  the situation in Jerusalem and the recurrent violations of Al Aqsa Mosque closely, Ensour said.

He added that King Abdullah, as the custodian of Islamic and Christian holy sites in Jerusalem, is leading a diplomatic push against Israeli aggression and is intensifying contacts with the international community and powerful countries to stop Israel’s acts of aggression.

In regard to the Syrian crisis, the prime minister said it is predicted to last a long time and the only solution possible is political, adding that terrorist groups controlling wide swathes of Syrian territory are the responsibility of the international community as a whole as these groups are a threat to the entire world.

When asked about Russian interference in Syria, Ensour said that Syria’s future is only for the Syrians to decide, without external pressure or intervention. 

In response to a question about the government’s political and economic programmes, the premier outlined the current efforts to develop political life and encourage citizens to be an active part of it, referring to the political parties, municipalities and decentralisation laws, which have already been endorsed by Parliament.

He also highlighted the 2015 draft elections law, which he said was accepted by the nation and is now being examined by the Lower House’s Legal Committee. The draft’s most significant feature is cancellation of the one-person, one-vote system.

Ensour also said that the government has made a series of decisions and implemented measures to correct the country’s economic and financial situation in order to preserve the stability of the Jordanian dinar. He added that these decisions were made for the benefit of the nation, without consideration for the effect they may have on the government’s popularity and public approval ratings.

The premier noted that practical implementation of such measures will reveal shortcomings that may have not been clear beforehand, but that the government will fix them immediately in order to avoid the repercussions of unintended consequences. He asked that the people remain patient in awaiting the positive results of such measures.

The prime minister also said that Jordan has opened new export markets for agricultural products in Russia.

 

He noted that the Kingdom is currently studying ways to access other alternative markets like Africa and referred to the signing of free trade agreements with the US, Canada and Mexico, which will result in more opportunities for export to markets with a population of over a billion people.   

Cabinet discusses situation in Palestine

By - Oct 14,2015 - Last updated at Oct 14,2015

AMMAN — Israeli attacks targeting Jerusalem, and Muslim and Christian holy sites in the Occupied Palestinian Territories will only lead to more violence in the region, the Cabinet said Wednesday.

During a session dedicated to discuss the latest developments in Palestine and Al Haram Al Sharif, the Council of Ministers voiced its complete rejection and absolute condemnation of the recurrent attacks by Israeli occupation forces, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

The Cabinet also reaffirmed the Kingdom's utmost refusal of all illegal Israeli practices in the occupied Palestinian lands, including colonisation and attempts to change the status quo in Jerusalem. 

Jordanian state institutions are following up on these violations, the Cabinet said, adding that Jordan has several legal and diplomatic options it can utilise to serve Arab and Palestinian causes, and to stop Israeli attacks.    

 

Relevant international organisations and countries have to work to stop Israeli escalations which inflame violence in Palestine and legitimise the killing of unarmed Palestinians who are deprived of justice and national rights, the Cabinet said, warning that extremist organisations take advantage of such unrest to recruit new followers.

 

Badia figures question constitutionality of voting system for bedouins

By - Oct 14,2015 - Last updated at Oct 14,2015

AMMAN — Banning citizens of badia from running for parliamentary elections outside their electoral districts is "unconstitutional" and "unfair", an MP and a legal expert argued Wednesday.

Deputy Hind Fayez and jurist Omar Jazi told The Jordan Times on Wednesday that the 2015 parliamentary elections law deals with the people of the badia as "second-class citizens” in not allowing them to run in the elections under the open proportional list.

Paragraph B, Article 8 of the keystone reform law deals with the northern, central and southern badia districts as a governorate for purposes of election regulations.

Fayez said that unlike citizens from Amman, Irbid, Zarqa and other areas, the citizens living in or originally from badia are not allowed to register candidacy outside their districts under the new law, keeping a controversial old provision untouched. 

"This is against the constitutional principle that all Jordanians are equal,” she said.

"Badia citizens are only allowed to be candidates for their tribes. For us, the stronghold of the tribe determines where we run for the elections and who we represent," Fayez added.

The MP also explained that in not mentioning in the provision that elections in the badia will be on the basis of the open proportional list, it means it is by default subject to the closed-list system.

"Under the previous versions of the elections law, badia’s regions are classified as one governorate with the aim of empowering the bedouins and ensuring them a presence in the Lower House. But things have changed", she said. “The bedouin are no longer nomads. They are like all other Jordanians: highly educated, politicised and they held and continue to hold senior educational, military, political and economic posts. However, badia residents are still treated as 'incomplete' or 'second-class' citizens."

The same remarks were made by Jazi, an established lawyer and law professor, who said the 2015 elections law contains a suspicion of unconstitutionality. 

“All Jordanians are equal in the constitution. They should enjoy the same rights with no discrimination. The rights of the citizens of Badia remain incomplete,” he said.

He explained that the law divides electoral districts according to geography but, when it comes to the Badia regions, tribe is the determiner. 

“Lawmakers are for all Jordanians, not for one tribe only,” he said.

“Citizens originally from the badia regions who were born or have lived in cities for decades should be allowed to run in the elections outside the strongholds of their tribes.”

Jazi agreed with Fayez that bedouin are no longer nomads who move from one place to another in search of water and pastures for their animals, but are regular civilians with education and trade. 

According to the Department of Statistics, there are only 3,000 Bedouins still living as nomads.”

“It is so strange that a public figure like Faisal Al Fayez, for example, who once was a prime minister, cannot run in the parliamentary elections as a national candidate. By law, he has to run as a candidate for central badia,” Jazi said.

Under the 2015 elections bill, the number of Lower House members has been reduced to 130 from 150, based on the open proportional list at the district level.

The new law is based on the at-large voting system in which all candidates can run for parliamentary elections on one large multi-member ticket.

Under Article 9 of the law, eligible voters will have a number of votes equal to the number of seats allocated for their district in the Lower House. 

 

During the elections, each eligible voter has to vote for a multi-member list and for individual candidates on the same ticket.

 

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