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Key jurists slam UN for failure to deliver relief aid inside Syria

By - Apr 29,2014 - Last updated at Apr 29,2014

AMMAN — Overcautious United Nations’ interpretation of international law threatens thousands of lives in Syria, a group of prominent international lawyers said on Tuesday, arguing that there is “no legal barrier” for the UN to provide cross-border aid in the war-torn country.

The 37 scholars, including well-known current and retired legal experts at international organisations, top universities and lawyers, said in a letter to UN agencies that the “appalling” humanitarian situation inside Syria has been compounded “by an overly cautious interpretation of international humanitarian law, holding them back from delivering humanitarian aid across borders”.

More than three years into the Syrian conflict, 9.3 million people are in urgent need of relief assistance inside the country with around 3.5 million in “hard to reach” areas mostly concentrated in the opposition-controlled north, they wrote.

“While the United Nations and humanitarian agencies based in Damascus are able to deliver some aid to these people by undertaking ‘cross-line’ operations, both the UN and other humanitarian agencies have long argued that many hundreds of thousands can only be reached effectively from neighbouring countries such as Turkey and Jordan,” the letter read.

But despite a clear UN Security Council demand for humanitarian access across borders, the Syrian government is arbitrarily denying it as it might be inflicting starvation on its own people to weaken opposition groups, a Syrian defector told The Jordan Times speaking on condition of anonymity.

Hakeem Yusuf, senior lecturer of human rights at University of Strathclyde in Scotland and one of the signatories, told The Jordan Times in a telephone interview that the UN has the duty to ensure aid gets to the civilian population in Syria.

“The UN has been influenced by political considerations and opinions by the parties who are at war. This risks bringing international law and international human rights law into disrepute. UN operations should be above politics,” Yusuf said.

“If the UN does not move as it should, then it would show a very doubtful continuing legal standing. It is flouting its obligations instead of showing a pro-active and firm support for ensuring that the humanitarian aid gets to the people in need,” he added.

Other signatories include renowned South African jurist and former international war crimes prosecutor Richard Goldstone and former UN legal counsel Hans Corell.

The letter, sent to The Jordan Times and published earlier on Tuesday in The Guardian and the London-based Al Hayat newspaper, came on the eve of a report on Resolution 2139 in which the UN Security Council in February unanimously demanded unhindered humanitarian access across the Syrian borders.

In spite of the resolution, UN agencies have not been willing to deliver cross-border aid without the government’s consent, according to the lawyers.

“Because the Syrian government has refused to consent to cross-border aid, the UN has not undertaken these vital operations for fear that some member states will find them unlawful,” the lawyers wrote.

Humanitarian agencies said hundreds of thousands more could be reached if the UN undertook cross-border operations and directly funded and supported NGOs to scale up existing cross-border efforts.

“The stakes for correcting this overly cautious legal interpretation are high — hundreds of thousands of lives hang in the balance. We urge the UN to apply international humanitarian law so that it enables, rather than prevents, life-saving assistance reaching those in need,” the letter said.

Spokesperson for the UN Secretary General Stéphane Dujarric told reporters in New York on Tuesday that the UN and humanitarian partners faced serious challenges with humanitarian access in crises like Syria and there is a consistent push for the UN to provide cross-border assistance into opposition-held areas, although the primary responsibility for the terrible humanitarian situation in Syria lies with the parties to the conflict.

Many of the areas humanitarians are trying to reach are not under government control. The issue is how best to reach people who have huge needs in those areas where the operating environment is extremely difficult; for example where there are numerous groups in control, a UN official told The Jordan Times in an e-mail.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon demanded last week a deadlocked Security Council to take action in Syria on violations of international law, calling on the warring parties to allow cross-border aid access particularly from Jordan and Turkey.

Russia and China had already vetoed three resolutions in the Security Council that would have condemned Syria’s government and imposed possible sanctions.

At least 150,000 people have so far been killed in Syria’s civil war, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said earlier this month, and 2.5 million have sought refuge in neighbouring countries since the onset of the conflict in March 2011.

Foreign Ministry investigating case of missing Jordanian student in Libya

By - Apr 29,2014 - Last updated at Apr 29,2014

AMMAN — The Ministry of Foreign Affairs is following up on the disappearance of Jordanian student Mohammad Obeid, whose family lost contact with him last October.

Sabah Al Rafie, the ministry’s spokesperson, said Obeid’s family has been living in Libya since 1976.

“Our embassy in Tripoli, is following up on the issue with the Libyan authorities,” Rafie told The Jordan Times on Tuesday, adding that there is “still no information about his whereabouts”.

The 25-year old is studying medicine at Al Fateh University in Tripoli.

Renovated Karak Hospital departments inaugurated

By - Apr 29,2014 - Last updated at Apr 29,2014

AMMAN — Health Minister Ali Hiasat, US Ambassador to Jordan Stuart E.

Jones and USAID Mission Director Beth S.

Paige on Tuesday inaugurated the newly renovated obstetrics, neonatal and emergency departments at Karak Hospital.

The renovations, which cost nearly $4 million, were provided through USAID.

The hospital’s obstetrics, neonatal and emergency departments have now “more than doubled in size to 3,250 square metres”, a USAID statement said.

The increased space and new medical equipment are expected to reduce maternal and neonatal diseases and deaths, the statement said.

Border guards receive 741Syrian refugees in past 48 hours

By - Apr 29,2014 - Last updated at Apr 29,2014

AMMAN — Border guards received 741 Syrian refugees during the past 48 hours, sources said on Tuesday.

Meanwhile, US Assistant Secretary of Defence for Nuclear, Chemical and Biological Defence Programmes Andrew C.

Weber, Director of the US Defence Threat Reduction Agency Kenneth A.

Myers on Tuesday visited the headquarters of the border guard troops and were briefed on their mission.

The US officials expressed their appreciation of the border guards’ efforts in dealing with the influx of Syrian refugees over the past three years.

Jordan, Palestine discuss cooperation

By - Apr 29,2014 - Last updated at Apr 29,2014

RAMALLAH — Minister of Municipal Affairs Walid Masri and Palestinian Minister of Public Works Maher Ghneim on Tuesday discussed ways to boost joint cooperation.

At a meeting in Ramallah, Masri asserted Jordan’s support for the Palestinian cause, noting that what he has seen in Ramallah, Beira and Nablus reflects the Palestinians’ steadfastness in protecting their homeland.

Ghneim stressed the strong Palestinian-Jordanian relations and the importance of maintaining contacts at all levels, highlighting Israel’s continued attempts to isolate the Palestinian people and deprive them of their rights.

Embassies receive domestic helpers’ insurance policies

By - Apr 29,2014 - Last updated at Apr 29,2014

AMMAN — The Domestic Helpers Recruitment Agencies Association (DHRAA) on Tuesday presented the insurance policies of foreign domestic helpers to their countries’ respective embassies to be applied as of next month.

The Labour Ministry endorsed the policies in March, according to DHRAA President, Khalid Hseinat, who underlined the importance of the insurance in guaranteeing the rights of domestic helpers and their recruiters.

Under the new compulsory insurance policy, recruiters of domestic workers will be compensated if the helpers escape or refuse to work, while the workers will be compensated in cases of deaths and injury.

King urges further cooperation among Arab lawmakers

Apr 29,2014 - Last updated at Apr 29,2014

AMMAN — His Majesty King Abdullah on Tuesday stressed the importance of Arab inter-parliamentary action in serving Arab causes, a Royal Court statement said.

Receiving Arab Parliament Speaker Ahmad Al Jarwan, His Majesty called for maintaining constant cooperation and coordination among all Arab lawmaking bodies, voicing appreciation at the same time for the pan-Arab legislature’s support for Jerusalem and its holy sites.

Jarwan and an accompanying delegation participated in the international conference on Jerusalem, inaugurated under the patronage of the King on Monday.

The Monarch also renewed Jordan’s support of the peace efforts between the Palestinians and the Israelis that should ultimately lead to the establishment of an independent Palestinian state within the pre-1967 lines, with East Jerusalem as its capital.

The King also reiterated the Kingdom’s “unaltered stance” on Syria which advocates a comprehensive political solution to the ongoing crisis that can end the suffering of the Syrian people and safeguard the territorial unity of their country, the statement said.

For their part, Jarwan and his accompanying delegates expressed their appreciation for Jordan’s role in safeguarding and defending the holy city of Jerusalem, citing the Kingdom’s historic custodianship of Al Aqsa Mosque.  

King Abdullah II Centre for Excellence board convenes

By - Apr 29,2014 - Last updated at Apr 29,2014

AMMAN — HRH Prince Feisal, chairman of the board of trustees of the King Abdullah II Centre for Excellence, on Tuesday chaired a board meeting.

The prince welcomed the new board members, stressing the need to “continue the march of excellence in all sectors”.

The board elected Fayez Tarawneh as vice president, while Alaa Batayneh, Marwan Juma, Amer Hadidi and Shaker Fakhouri were elected as members of the steering committee.

Royal Jordanian CEO resigns; Lozi to take over

By - Apr 29,2014 - Last updated at Apr 29,2014

AMMAN — Royal Jordanian’s (RJ) board of directors on Tuesday accepted the resignation of RJ CEO Amer Hadidi as of April 30.

The board commended Hadidi’s efforts during his tenure, which started in July 2012.

 Also on Tuesday, the board appointed RJ Chairman Nasser Lozi to serve as CEO, according to an RJ statement.

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