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Prince El Hassan calls for positioning Jordan as regional hub for health services

By - Apr 06,2025 - Last updated at Apr 06,2025

HRH Prince El Hassan Bin Talal, Chairman of the Higher Council for Science and Technology, on Sunday visits the World Health Organisation headquarters in Jordan (Petra photo)

AMMAN — HRH Prince El Hassan Bin Talal, Chairman of the Higher Council for Science and Technology, on Sunday visited the World Health Organisation (WHO) headquarters in Jordan, where he called for positioning Jordan as a regional hub for health services.

During the meeting attended  by WHO Representative in Jordan  Jamela Raiby, Chairman of the Senate Health Committee Yassin Husban, former minister of education and minister of higher education and scientific Research Walid Maani,  former minister of health Saad Jaber and WHO staff, Prince El Hassan stressed the importance of developing standardised models to monitor and evaluate health needs and achievements across the region, thereby enhancing Jordan’s role in regional health cooperation

Prince El Hassan also underlined the need for clear, targeted health goals and robust national partnerships to realize a comprehensive, humane health vision, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported. 

He also emphasised the significance of including mental health as an integral part of broader healthcare efforts, advocating for regional, cross-border collaboration in health advancement.

On health emergency preparedness, he stressed the necessity of adopting scientific methods, including statistical tools, to identify risks, propose proactive solutions, and minimize impacts before crises emerge.

He also highlighted the vital role of international and humanitarian organisations in reducing the adverse effects of conflicts and wars on affected populations.

For her part, Raiby affirmed that the WHO’s accomplishments in Jordan align with national health priorities and reflect the goals outlined in the Economic Modernisation Vision and the joint country strategy between Jordan and the WHO.

She highlighted four key objectives of the WHO's work in Jordan: ensuring universal health coverage with an emphasis on primary healthcare and financial protection; promoting public health awareness and cooperating with national stakeholders, particularly youth, on issues such as mental health, smoking, and substance abuse. 

Additionally, the WHO aims to strengthen preparedness and response to health emergencies, drawing on the organisation's support during the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as enhancing the use of data to guide effective health policies and decision-making.

Palm Sunday, Easter holidays announced for Christians

By - Apr 06,2025 - Last updated at Apr 06,2025

In observance of Palm Sunday, Prime Minister Jaffar Hassan announces on Wednesday that April 13 will be a holiday for Christian employees working in public institutions (JT file)

AMMAN — In observance of Palm Sunday, Prime Minister Jaffar Hassan announced on Wednesday that April 13 will be a holiday for Christian employees working in public institutions. 

Easter holidays would be observed on April 20 and 21, as outlined in a circular issued by the Prime Ministry, the Jordan News Agency (Petra) reported.

 

2.9m transactions completed at gov't service centres, 1.16m visitors recorded

By - Apr 06,2025 - Last updated at Apr 06,2025

The total number of transactions processed through the Comprehensive Government Service Centres reach 2.9 million by the end of March (Al Mamlaka TV photo)

AMMAN — The total number of transactions processed through the Comprehensive Government Service Centres reached 2.9 million by the end of March, according to the Ministry of Digital Economy and Entrepreneurship.

Currently, the centers offer 182 traditional and electronic services on behalf of 34 government institutions and have welcomed over 1.16 million visitors to date.

Minister of Digital Economy and Entrepreneurship Sami Smeirat underscored the centers’ role as a cornerstone in facilitating citizens’ access to efficient, high-quality services, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported. 

The minister said that the centers embody the state's vision of enhancing the citizen experience while promoting transparency and fairness through unified service points and integrated service environments.

He noted that efforts are ongoing to expand the centers’ geographical coverage and enhance their technological infrastructure, ensuring equal access to government services across the Kingdom and aligning with Jordan’s broader administrative and economic modernisation goals.

The minister reiterated the ministry’s commitment to equipping the centers with advanced technologies and skilled personnel to meet public expectations and boost citizens’ trust in public institutions.

To date, 9 out of the planned 15 centers are operational, with full completion expected by the end of 2025. The centers aim to expand access to government services across all governorates, particularly in densely populated areas.

Cabinet endorses bylaws for data protection, anesthesia, cosmetology professions

By - Apr 06,2025 - Last updated at Apr 06,2025

  • Gov't extends professional license renewal deadline to June 2025
  •  New agreements on crisis management, maritime education, workforce development

AMMAN — The Cabinet, during a session chaired by Prime Minister Jafar Hassan, approved on Sunday the 2025 Data Disclosure Bylaw.

The bylaw aims to protect citizens' data and prevent misuse, such as promotional or advertising exploitation or intrusive messages that violate privacy to track consumption patterns.

 It ensures personal data is only used with user consent and in compliance with data protection laws, which allow the use of personal information solely for legitimate purposes, according to a Prime Ministry statement. 

The primary goal of the bylaw is to maintain the confidentiality and integrity of citizens' data, regulate disclosure procedures, and define authorized recipients of disclosed information. 

It also strengthens the personal data protection framework, acknowledging the increasing ease of data collection, storage, and processing, while upholding citizens' privacy rights as guaranteed by the Constitution and relevant laws.

Aligned with the government's digital transformation agenda, the bylaw enhances secure and efficient digital services, fostering public trust and supporting the Economic Modernisation Vision.

The Cabinet also approved the justifications for the 2025 draft anesthesia profession practice bylaw, which will be sent to the Legislation and Opinion Bureau for the next procedural steps. 

The bylaw aims to regulate the growing number of anesthesia graduates in Jordan, introducing the profession of "anesthesia technician" to set regulatory standards.

The bylaw also stipulates that those wishing to practice as anesthesia technicians must hold a relevant diploma or pass an accredited exam, with tasks defined for emergency cases in the absence of a doctor.

The Council of Ministers also endorsed the justifications for the draft cosmetology profession practice bylaw, which will be sent for legal review. 

The bylaw regulates cosmetology practices in line with health standards, addressing the increasing demand for professional regulation due to the rising number of cosmetology graduates. 

It requires practical experience, specifies accredited training institutions, and establishes guidelines for training venues, including limits on the number of trainees and prohibited procedures for cosmetology technicians.

The Cabinet also approved a deadline extension for the renewal of professional licenses without penalties, extending until June 30,  2025. 

This follows the Ministry of Local Administration’s introduction of electronic services for professional licensing, ensuring ample time for investors and professionals to complete the necessary processes electronically.

Any fees previously paid by some beneficiaries as penalties during their license renewals will be credited or refunded.

On the international front, the Cabinet approved agreements aimed at enhancing cooperation in disaster and crisis management with Azerbaijan, maritime crew certification recognition with Kazakhstan, and workforce skills development with Saudi Arabia. 

These agreements are set to strengthen Jordan’s international collaborations, fostering knowledge exchange, training opportunities, and mutual benefits in areas of crisis management, maritime education, and labor market development.

 

Jordan's GDP records 2.7% growth in Q4 2024 – DoS

Apr 06,2025 - Last updated at Apr 06,2025

The Gross Domestic Product (GDP) recorded a growth of 2.7 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2024 compared with the same period in 2023, exceeding the estimated rate of 2.5 per cent for the same quarter, according to the latest figures released by the Department of Statistics (JT file)

-Growth  driven by ‘strong’ performance across key sectors, despite regional, global challenges
-For full year, GDP growth reaches 2.5% in 2024, exceeding initial forecast of 2.3%

AMMAN — The Gross Domestic Product (GDP) recorded a growth of 2.7 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2024 compared with the same period in 2023, exceeding the estimated rate of 2.5 per cent for the same quarter.

For the full year of 2024, GDP growth reached 2.5 per cent, exceeding the initial forecast of 2.3 per cent, according to preliminary estimates released by the Department of Statistics (DoS).

The data showed that growth in the fourth quarter was driven by strong performance across key sectors of the economy, despite the challenges posed by regional instability and shifting geopolitical dynamics that affected various productive sectors, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

The GDP growth rates reflected the resilience and strength of the national economy in overcoming regional challenges, supported by government-led economic policies and reforms, and strengthened public-private partnerships that turned challenges into opportunities and contributed to growth across multiple sectors.

According to the data, all major sectors of the economy experienced varying degrees of GDP growth. Among the goods production sectors; agriculture grew by 8.4 per cent, manufacturing by 9.4 per cent, extractive industries by 4.5 per cent and electricity and water by 4.2 per cent.

As for the services sector, most segments posted solid growth in the fourth quarter of 2024, with transport, storage and communications expanding by 3.7 per cent and wholesale and retail trade, hotels and restaurants by 3.1 per cent.

In terms of sectoral contributions to GDP growth in Q4, manufacturing led with a contribution of 0.9 percentage points, followed by agriculture with 0.53 points and transport, storage and communications with 0.33 points.

Regarding sectoral contributions to total GDP, the manufacturing sector led with 18.7 per cent, followed by finance, insurance and real estate with 17.2 per cent and government services with 14.8 per cent.

As for the breakdown of contributions between the goods producing sector and the services sector, it is estimated that the goods producing sector made the larger contribution to the growth achieved, at 1.6 percentage points, while the services sector contributed around 1.1 percentage points, the data revealed.

 

154 applications for exemption from medical expenses issued in March — Report

By - Apr 06,2025 - Last updated at Apr 06,2025

AMMAN — The Social Development Ministry on Sunday said that in March it had received 154 applications for exemption from medical expenses, processed 141 requests to settle heirs' rights and 609 others to obtain exemption from work permits for non-Jordanian employees

In its monthly achievements report for March, the ministry said that 39 children were placed in foster care homes, 44 others were discharged, seven others were handed over for foster families, and four nurseries were licensed, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

The report indicated that a total of 187 juveniles benefited from the ministry's juvenile rehabilitation and education facilities, while 75 others received vocational rehabilitation under these facilities' programmes.

Also, 37 children received psychological and social services according to the case management methodology for children working in conditions that violate legislation and six juveniles benefited from legal aid services.

The ministry added that this effort was made by field directorates and psychological and social support offices, in cooperation with partner agencies and organisations.

To date, the report said that the cumulative number of registered and existing associations under the Associations Law reached 6,099, including 22 new facilities.

According to report data concerning the National Aid Fund (NAF), a total of 1,411 families benefited from regular and immediate emergency financial aid programmes, while 47,728 households received monthly financial assistance in March.

The NAF noted that 85 families also benefited from the training programme, while the NAF's response rate to calls reached 88 per cent.

As for anti-vagrancy efforts, the report revealed that 971 campaigns were conducted, resulting in the arrest of 1,386 beggars.

 

Dams hold 33% of total storage until Sunday — Official

By - Apr 06,2025 - Last updated at Apr 06,2025

A view of Al Mujib Dam, which is located in Madaba Governorate (File photo)

AMMAN — Spokesperson of the Ministry of Water and Irrigation Omar Salama revealed that storage percentage in the dams in Jordan as of Sunday has reached 33 per cent.

Salama said that the total amount of water stored in the dams until Sunday is 97 million cubic metres, a decrease of more than 50 million cubic metres compared to the same period last year.

He pointed out that the storage rate during the same period last year was 50 per cent, with a quantity of 150 million cubic metres of water.

Salama highlighted that the rainy season in Jordan will continue until mid-May.

 

Road closures announced in conjunction with Dead Sea Ultra Marathon

By - Apr 06,2025 - Last updated at Apr 06,2025

AMMAN — The Jordanian Marathon Association (Run Jordan), in coordination with the Greater Amman Municipality and the Central Traffic Department, announced the closure of several roads leading to the routes of the Bromine Dead Sea Ultra Marathon, which is scheduled to take place next Friday.

This annual event, held with wide participation from local and international runners, underscores Jordan’s geographic importance as a key destination for tourism and sports. 

The marathon is held in accordance with international federation standards, with a primary focus on ensuring the safety of all runners.

The Run Jordan stated that all roads leading to the ultra marathon course will be closed from midnight on Friday until 1:00pm on the same day. The road from Rama traffic lights towards the Baptism intersection will be closed in one direction starting at midnight until 1:00pm. 

The road from the Baptism intersection towards the hotel area and up to Amman Tourist Beach will also be closed in one direction starting at 2:00am until 1:00pm. 

The main road leading to the Baptism Site will be completely closed from 2:00am to 1:00pm. The road between the security checkpoint and the hotel area will be partially closed starting at midnight and fully closed from 5:00am until 1:00pm.

Authorities have prepared alternative routes to accommodate traffic during the closures.

The Dead Sea Ultra Marathon features three main races: the 50 kilometre-race individual ultra marathon, the 50 kilometres relay, and the 21 kilometres race. 

These races will begin at 6:00am opposite Amman Tourist Beach. In addition, a 10-kilometre race will start at 9:00 am, two kilometres before the Baptism intersection.

Khirbet Al Batrawy reveals rural rebirth after urban collapse

By - Apr 06,2025 - Last updated at Apr 06,2025

Khirbet Al Batrawy, located near Zarqa, was a significant Bronze Age centre (Photo courtesy of Sapienza University of Rome)

AMMAN — The final destruction of the EB II-III city at Khirbet Al Batrawy was followed by a relatively short period of abandonment (BatrawyIVa, Early Bronze IVA, 2,300-2,200 BC), said an Italian archaeologist Daria Montanari.

Montanari added that the ruins of the city were re-occupied by several clusters of dwellings irregularly displaced all over the mound and belonging to a rural village dating to the final part of the Early Bronze IV (BatrawyIVb, Early Bronze IVB, 2,200-2,000 BC). 

"The earliest nucleus of houses arose just inside the collapsed EB II-III city-wall in the northern sector of the site, in Area B, along the edge of an embankment made up with the remains of earlier collapsed structures," the archaeologist noted. 

"Here, a sequence of two occupational phases of domestic units and installations illustrates the progressive growth of the village," said Daria Montanari, adding that the latest phase included several dwellings with domestic devices for food preparation and storage. 

From east to west, it was represented by the corner of a quite substantial house which showed a relatively solid fieldstone masonry, and a rectangular stone-paved installation inside it, while outside the building to the west an open area with a very partially preserved stone-flagged pavement had been badly ravaged by later pillage activities.

"To the west, in the central sector of the excavated area, the more recent phase included a wide square house, with working platforms and a semi-circular central installation devoted to food production and storage [with a platform and a bin], while outside the northern wall of the house a square juxtaposed unit with a bench probably represented an auxiliary storeroom," Montanari explained.

The archaeologist added that further north, a child burial was set underneath the northern boundary wall of the dwelling.

To the west, a rectangular structure, abutting directly over the inner edge of the collapsed city-wall, was characterised by a stone-paved double installation, presumably devoted to the processing of liquids (grape juice/wine), Montanari elaborated.

The archaeologist pointed out that in the central sector, underneath central House, sparse remains of an ephemeral earlier occupationof the village were uncovered, including hearths, cistsand stone platforms. 

"Hole-mouth jars fragments found in large quantity spread all over the area belong to the same EB IVB local horizon of pottery as the ones retrieved in the overlying more substantial structures, thus testifying to that the latest sedentary occupation of the site homogenously belongs to the final part of the Early Bronze IV [BatrawyIVb, Early Bronze IVB, 2,200-2,000 BC]," Montanari underlined.

She stressed that a major cluster of houses was excavated on the Acropolis.

To the west, two major rectangular units opened towards a courtyard, each showing a series of installations for food transformation and other devices.

 

Finds in dwellings

 

Flint and stone tools, as well as pottery from these dwellings, provide a wide representative inventory of domestic materials of this period. In the eastern sector of the Acropolis, a distinctive feature was a boundary wall (W.23+W.5), which delimitated the eastern edge of the village by terracing the collapsed remains of the underlying town, she said.

The archaeologist added that two domestic units flanked a path, each one consisting of a main rectangular living room, subsidiary chambers and several annexed spaces, with installations for food preparation and storage, including circular silos, working platforms, benches and some curvilinear devices. 

"A distinguished feature of this architecture was the irregular arrangement around courtyards and lanes, the curvilinear layout of annexes in respect of the main rooms, and the adoption of single-line unworked stone walls, which supported ceilings made of leafy branches or, in some cases, simple corbelled vaults." 

"The overall picture provided by Area A is, thus, that of a relatively small village with rectangular houses flanked by courtyards and subsidiary structures in use for a single constructive phase," Montanari elaborated.

Moreover, a third group of houses was excavated on the easternmost terrace of the khirbet, in Area F, where again rectangular units represented the main dwelling model, with some food processing installations inside (platforms, mortars, etc.) and adjoined curvilinear storage devices. 

"Such dwellings, similarly to the ones in Area A, showed only a single stratigraphic phase, and they presumably represent a somewhat short-lived occupation of Terrace V, towards the end of Early Bronze IV," Montanari said.

The archaeologist added that a major house was identified, including a large unit, with a raised platform and a cist in the middle, a round bin in the south-eastern corner, and a separated rectangular room in the opposite south-western corner. 

"The above mentioned structures spread over several spots of the site, providing a quite rich set of materials belonging to the last phase of the Early Bronze IV," the archaeologist said.

"These structures also testify to the process of ephemeral re-sedentarisation and reverse to a rural based economy at the end of Early Bronze Age in the Upper Wadi az-Zarqa Valley, when the major site of the district was Jebel er-Reheil," Montanari concluded.

 

Agricultural sector achieves 6.9% economic growth - DoS

By - Apr 06,2025 - Last updated at Apr 06,2025

The Department of Statistics says that Jordan’s agricultural sector demonstrated economic growth, contributing 6.9 percent to the national economy last year (JT file)

AMMAN — Jordan’s agricultural sector demonstrated economic growth, contributing 6.9 percent to the national economy last year, according to the Department of Statistics (DoS). 

A report released by the department on Sunday highlighted a "strong" performance in the fourth quarter, with a notable 8.4 percent increase in GDP, marking a new phase of momentum in agricultural development, Al Mamlaka TV reported.

The growth aligns with the Royal Vision for Economic Modernisation and supports the National Strategy for Sustainable Agriculture, which focuses on strengthening both crop and livestock production. 

The sector's success has been driven by increased investment, enhanced support for agricultural cooperatives, and the organisation of specialised exhibitions that foster innovation and knowledge sharing. 

A key indicator of progress is the rise in agricultural exports, which surged from JD1.1 billion in 2023 to over JD1.5 billion in 2024, reflecting a 39 per cent increase. 

To sustain this positive trend, the government has prioritised the development of production and supply chains through strategic public-private partnerships. 

These initiatives have not only helped manage surplus production but have also facilitated the establishment of 20 new food processing factories, further bolstering the sector’s infrastructure.

A separate study by the DoS revealed that agriculture, through its interconnected sectors, now influences 23.5 per cent of the national economy, a significant milestone for the industry. 

Additionally, 27 per cent of the Kingdom’s agricultural output is exported, underscoring the sector’s increasing international competitiveness. 

The figures also indicate that 52 per cent of agricultural inputs are locally sourced, showcasing the resilience of the sector and its capacity to withstand external economic challenges.

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