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Authorities drilling 15 wells in north to meet summer demand

By - Apr 16,2014 - Last updated at Apr 16,2014

AMMAN — The Ministry of Water and Irrigation is drilling 15 new wells in the north of the Kingdom in anticipation of a rise in demand for water during summer, according to government officials.

The new wells are being drilled in Mafraq, Ramtha, Irbid and the Northern Badia to generate 3.7 million cubic metres of water per year, the ministry’s spokesperson, Omar Salameh, said on Wednesday.

The wells are expected to be completed within nine months after an agreement was signed earlier this week to drill the new wells, Salameh said.

Meanwhile, Water Minister Hazem Nasser said in a statement recently issued that drilling the new wells seeks to alleviate the impact of over-population in the northern governorates, which host hundreds of thousands of Syrian refugees.

Nasser highlighted that the wells are part of the ministry’s “resilience plan”, which seeks to address the exceptional surging demand for water in light of scant rainfall and the influx of more Syrian refugees into the country.

The resilience plan proposes the implementation of new water infrastructure projects in case Syrians continue to take refuge in the Kingdom over the next few years, according to the ministry.

“Despite all the measures taken to improve supply and cope with the increasing pressure on water supply, the ministry is incurring huge burdens in meeting the increase in demand for water,” Nasser noted.

Drilling the new wells will cost 4 million euros, according to the minister, who said the German Development Bank is funding the project.

He said that a local contractor will be in charge of drilling the new wells, noting that wells in Al Dafyaneh and Um Hussain (Al Rfaiyat) areas in Mafraq, some 80km northeast of the capital, are scheduled to be ready before the start of summer to increase water availability.

Jordan has so far given sanctuary to some 600,000 of the 2.5 million Syrians who have fled their country since the onset of the conflict in March 2011, UN figures show, but unofficial figures suggest they could amount to one million.

The Zaatari Refugee Camp, around 90km northeast of Amman, is now home to 100,000 Syrians.

Another 700,000 Syrians who do not hold the refugee status also live in the Kingdom, some of whom came before the crisis erupted in 2011.

Lower House endorses amendments to Rules of Procedure

By - Apr 16,2014 - Last updated at Apr 16,2014

AMMAN — The Lower House on Wednesday endorsed amendments to its Rules of Procedure, with the aim of enhancing the Chamber’s performance and time management during its sessions.

During Wednesday’s session, several MPs said they have wasted their time during previous House sessions, particularly when they engaged in “nonessential” debates and discussions over various draft laws.

Therefore, making certain changes in the House’s rules to regulate deputies’ discussions is crucial to speeding up the work and ensuring a better performance in general, they added.

“We have 100 draft laws in our drawers and we must deal with all of them,” said MP Abdul Munim Odat (Irbid, 1st District), head of the House’s Legal Committee, in his remarks to defend the amendments his committee adopted.

Under the new amendments, the MPs limited the right to discuss draft laws during the sessions to those who submit a written proposal in advance. 

This amendment obliges the Lower House speaker to allow the deputy who presents a proposal, to speak under the Dome.

MPs also agreed to announce the names of the ministers who decline to answer deputies’ questions within the eight-day legal time frame.

This was a new provision added to the Lower House Rules of Procedure, based on a suggestion by MP Kheirallah Abu Saalik (Amman, 4th District), who heads the House’s Investment Committee. 

This provision is aimed at ensuring that ministers respect MPs’ questions and answer them on time. In previous cases, the government provided answers to such questions after eight months from the date of submission. 

Also at Wednesday’s session, deputies rejected a previous suggestion to deduct JD100 from any deputy’s financial benefits if he/she declines to attend a Lower Hose session for no valid reason. 

Instead, deputies decided to strip these MPs of their right to represent the Lower House in trips abroad or take part in conferences.

In other major changes to the Rules of Procedure, MPs decided to limit the number of members in each permanent committee to between seven and 11, and to agree on the members through the executive office in 14 days from the start date of the ordinary session. 

If no agreement is reached through the executive office, MPs will then elect members of the committee during a Lower House session.

Under another amendment, the Lower House budget will be drafted by the executive office from now on without a need to present it under the Dome for endorsement.

Activists call for stricter regulations for child disciplinary measures

By - Apr 16,2014 - Last updated at Apr 16,2014

AMMAN — The difference between child discipline and abuse remains a grey area under the current Penal Code, putting children’s well-being at risk, experts said earlier this week. 

Article 62 of the Penal Code stipulates that parents can punish their children for disciplinary purposes in accordance with “general norms”, a term that leaves the issue open for interpretation, according to experts, activists and pathologists.

In her experience in the field as a pathologist, Rula Afaneh noted that there is a “broad” difference in social concepts when it comes to reasonable chastisement, making the term “general norms” a “shield” of sorts for parents and guardians to hide behind. 

“Some families believe that giving a child a stern look or a shout is a severe form of punishment, while others see all types of corporal punishment as acceptable and lead to correcting the child’s behaviour,” Afaneh said at a workshop held by the National Council for Family Affairs (NCFA) on Monday. 

According to a study released by the NCFA last year, children constituted 30.2 per cent of total abuse victims, while a Social Development Ministry report said it dealt with 30,000 domestic abuse cases over the past 15 years, 75 per cent of which involved children.   

Other studies also indicate that physical abuse is the most common form of domestic abuse in Jordan, standing at 85 per cent. 

Hanan Thaher, head of the NCFA’s legislation department, said annulling the article is not enough as people need to be aware of alternative disciplinary methods. 

Thaher called for revisiting the law while taking into account international family-related studies and research.

“It is a well-known fact that children who grow up with physical and psychological abuse are more likely to exhibit aggressive behaviour,” she noted. 

During Monday’s workshop, attended by a UNICEF delegation, Muslim scholar Ahmad Harasis from the iftaa department highlighted Islam’s perspective on corporal punishment, which he said is prohibited unless in extremely rare situations in which parents believe it is the only way to correct the child’s misbehaviour. 

He added that corporal punishment in Islam is parents’ last resort, noting that there are strict rules limiting its application. 

The World Health Organisation identifies violence as the deliberate use of physical force either by threatening or actual use by one person against himself or another person, group of persons or society, which could lead, or threaten to lead, to death, psychological injury, underdevelopment or deprivation.

Suspects detained in attempt to smuggle 500,000 Captagon pills in flour bottles

By - Apr 16,2014 - Last updated at Apr 16,2014

AMMAN — Anti-Narcotics Department (AND) agents on Wednesday foiled an attempt to smuggle a shipment of half-a-million Captagon pills that was destined for a neighbouring country, official sources said.

Two men, a Jordanian and a Syrian, were arrested in a raid by AND agents on a shop in Irbid, 80km north of Amman, and agents found the pills hidden in flour bottles, a senior AND agent told The Jordan Times.

The official said authorities are searching for more suspects but declined to give the number of individuals involved.

“We received a tip that a group of men had rented a shop claiming to store flour bottles for trade purposes, but in fact we suspected that they were involved in activities related to illegal drugs,” the official added.

AND agents monitored the shop and the suspects for a while and “decided to raid the premises when they learnt that the gang was planning to transport the illegal shipment to Amman in order to smuggle it to a neighbouring country”, according to a statement by the Public Security Department (PSD).

“Dozens of flour bottles were emptied and illegal pills were found carefully wrapped in plastic bags inside them,” the PSD statement added.

The AND official said this is not the first time this method of smuggling has been used.

“We have faced a similar attempt in the past, where a group of individuals used the same exact method to smuggle drugs,” he added.

Captagon (fenethylline) is a synthetic stimulant similar to amphetamine.

Although banned in most countries in the 1980s, illegally produced and smuggled Captagon — sometimes containing amphetamine instead of fenethylline — is a common drug abused in the Middle East, according to web sources.

A total of 8,945 suspects were involved in around 6,504 drug cases last year, according to official figures. The authorities seized over 22 million Captagon pills, 444 kilogrammes of hashish and 5,007 kilos of marijuana in 2013.

Local, int’l companies invited to bid for Risheh gas field exploration

By - Apr 16,2014 - Last updated at Apr 16,2014

AMMAN — The door is open for local and international companies to submit bids to the Energy Ministry to develop the Risheh gas field near the border with Iraq after British Petroleum ended its project there, according to a senior official.

“Any company working in the field of gas exploration can apply to develop the field, especially since BP withdrew from the project and is expected to fully end operations in Jordan in June,” Energy Minister Mohammad Hamed told The Jordan Times at the International Oil Shale Symposium 2014, which concluded Tuesday at the Dead Sea.

BP, which was given an exploration and appraisal period of between three and five years in 2010 after it received a concession that covered an area of around 7,000 square kilometres and included the Risheh gas field, announced earlier this year that it will end its operations as it said “results were not satisfactory” to complete the project.

Jordan, Hamed said, will float a tender this month to invite local and international companies to submit bids to explore for gas, oil and shale gas in three different areas across the Kingdom, mostly in the eastern region.

“We are in the final process of preparing the tender that will be floated this month. After four months, we will announce the winning bidder,” he added.

Hamed said the ministry is awaiting approval by the Cabinet to go ahead and sign a deal with Royal Dutch Shell under which the energy giant will provide 590 million cubic feet of liquefied natural gas (LNG) per day to a floating storage re-gasification unit that the government recently rented, and then gas will flow to the LNG Terminal in Aqaba.

LNG is expected to start flowing to the $65 million terminal by the end of 2014, according to the minister.

On Egyptian gas, Hamed said the natural gas supply from  Egypt is still halted, increasing the burden on the country’s rising energy bill.

“The disruption in Egyptian gas costs Jordan $3 million per day to buy more expensive heavy fuel and diesel for power generation. We hope the Egyptian authorities will fix the pipeline, which was bombed several times over the past three years by saboteurs, very soon,” he said. 

Urban Syrian refugees struggling with high living costs, debts — study

By - Apr 16,2014 - Last updated at Apr 16,2014

AMMAN — Half-a-million Syrian refugees living in urban areas in Jordan are struggling more than ever to cope with inadequate housing, high debts, rising living costs and educational challenges for their children, according to a recent study.

A CARE International household assessment that included more than 2,200 Syrian refugees showed that 90 per cent of the refugees are indebted to relatives, landlords, shopkeepers and neighbours, with rents having increased by almost a third in the past year.

The study, a copy of which was sent to The Jordan Times on Wednesday, said the world’s attention is focused on the enormous refugee camp at Zaatari, but more than 80 per cent of Syrian refugees live in cities, towns and villages. 

“Unable to work legally in the countries where they have sought asylum, they survive off their savings, gifts from family or neighbours, and, worryingly, black-market jobs,” the study said.

According to the international organisation, 36 per cent of the families registered with CARE are headed by women. 

“They have fled without their husbands, who are either still in Syria, injured or have been killed. They have to take care of their young children and older relatives, but have difficulties [in earning] money,” the study said.

These women, it added, worry about how they can cover their monthly expenses and deal with medical emergencies.

CARE’s study also showed that only 52 per cent of Syrian refugee boys are currently attending school (compared with 62 per cent of girls). This is an improvement of CARE’s findings in last year’s urban assessment, where 40 per cent of children were enrolled at school. 

“Three years after the Syria crisis started refugee families are becoming more and more destitute. The longer they live in neighbouring countries, the more financially vulnerable they become,” said Salam Kanaan, CARE Jordan’s country director, in a statement sent to The Jordan Times.

“Families have fled months or years ago, they do not have any savings anymore,” he added. 

The study also showed that the influx of Syrian refugees increasingly impacts Jordanian host communities, who are battling with the same challenges — increased accommodation and living costs, and access to outstretched public services. 

Twenty per cent of the most vulnerable Jordanian families interviewed, said they struggle to meet their food needs. 

“A lot of support has been provided by the international community as well as the host communities. However, with no end to this crisis in sight, Syrian refugees and vulnerable host communities continue to need our support, otherwise millions of people are pushed further into poverty and destitution,” Kanaan noted.

Since the crisis started, CARE has provided nearly 300,000 Syrians and vulnerable host communities in Jordan and Lebanon with humanitarian assistance. 

The organisation says its primary work is providing cash assistance to the poorest.

“It is one of the simplest and most efficient ways to help urban refugees meet their urgent needs, and it supports both the displaced and the economies of the communities that have taken them in. And yet the organisations providing support for Syrian refugees find themselves drastically under-funded.”

The main aim of CARE’s study is to enhance understanding of the needs and capacities of urban Syrian refugees, in particular women and girls, and vulnerable host communities in Jordan. 

It uses two baseline assessments, “Baseline Assessment of Community Identified Vulnerabilities among Syrian Refugees living in Amman” (2012), and “Syrian Refugees in Urban Jordan: A Baseline Assessment of Community-Identified Vulnerabilities among Syrian Refugees Living in Irbid, Madaba, Mafraq, and Zarqa” (2013), to identify trends.

Jordanian air force destroys vehicles trying to cross from Syria –– statement

By - Apr 16,2014 - Last updated at Apr 16,2014

AMMAN –– Fighter jets from the Royal Jordanian Air Force (RJAF) on Wednesday attacked and destroyed several vehicles trying to cross the Jordanian border from Syria, a statement issued by the Jordan Armed Forces (JAF) said.

The incident, which the army said took place at around 10:30am, involved a number of camouflaged vehicles trying to illegally cross the Jordanian border from Syria through rugged terrain, a JAF official said.

The army official said in a statement posted on JAF website that a number of RJAF fighter jets fired warning shots at the vehicles, which ignored them and continued to move towards the border.

In line with the rules of engagement, the jets destroyed the vehicles, the official said.

The army did not say whether the vehicles belonged to the Syrian regime or the rebels.

 

International conference discusses transport, commerce obstacles

By - Apr 15,2014 - Last updated at Apr 15,2014

AMMAN — The third international conference on  transportation and commerce started on Tuesday in Amman, organised by the Transport Ministry and the EU, with Arab and Turkish participation.

Participants at the two-day event are addressing ways to improve regional cooperation in transportation and commerce by overcoming obstacles and challenges that face the sector.

1,992 Syrians cross into Jordan in past 72 hours

By - Apr 15,2014 - Last updated at Apr 15,2014

AMMAN — Border guards have received 1,992 Syrian refugees over the past 72 hours, sources said on Tuesday.

Children, women and the elderly represented the majority of the arrivals, several of whom were injured.

First aid was administered to those who needed immediate assistance, while patients with critical medical conditions were taken to the nearest hospitals.

Arrangements were made to transfer the refugees to the Zaatari Refugee Camp in Mafraq.

Majali discusses ties with Lebanese minister

By - Apr 15,2014 - Last updated at Apr 15,2014

AMMAN — Interior Minister Hussein Majali on Tuesday discussed bilateral relations and the latest regional developments with Lebanese Minister of Social Affairs Rashid Derbas.

Majali presented a briefing on Jordan’s burdens resulting from hosting large numbers of Syrians, explaining that the non-stop influx of refugees has placed unprecedented pressure on the Kingdom’s limited resources and infrastructure.

Derbas called on the international community to assist his country, which is hosting 1 million Syrian refugees, expressing admiration of Jordanian authorities’ security, technical and administrative measures in receiving and hosting Syrians seeking refuge in the country.

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