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Teenager stabbed to death

By - Feb 01,2014 - Last updated at Feb 01,2014

AMMAN — Authorities are investigating a stabbing incident that left one teenager dead in Northern Shuneh on Friday evening, according to official sources.

The 17-year-old boy was allegedly stabbed by his cousin, also 17, in the town of Manshieh, a senior official source told The Jordan Times on Saturday.

The victim was rushed to a nearby hospital where he was pronounced dead on arrival due to a stab wound to the stomach.

“We are still trying to determine the motive behind the stabbing since the suspect and the victim were good friends,” a second source said.

A team of pathologists headed by Ali Shotar of the Irbid National Institute of Forensic Medicine performed an autopsy on the victim and indicated that he died of a fatal stab wound to the stomach.

“The knife penetrated the stomach and the kidney causing internal bleeding,” the pathology report said.

The suspect reportedly fled from the area and turned himself in to the police two hours later, according to the source.

He is being detained at a juvenile correctional centre pending further investigation, the source added.

Jordanians, Palestinians voice rejection of Kerry’s peace plans

By - Feb 01,2014 - Last updated at Feb 01,2014

AMMAN — Jordanians and Palestinians from different walks of life took part in a forum on Saturday to voice their rejection of US Secretary of State John Kerry’s proposed “framework” for a final peace deal between Palestine and Israel.

Several intellectuals and representatives of the Kingdom’s political parties took part in the event, which was held on an empty plot of land near one of the capital’s hotels.

Zaki Bani Rsheid, deputy overall leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, said Kerry did not come to the region for tourism purposes, charging that he has a dangerous political agenda that will harm the Palestinian cause and threaten Jordan. 

“He [Kerry] wants to find what he says is a solution to the Arab-Zionist conflict at the expense of Palestinians’ right of return by resorting to the alternative homeland project,” Bani Rsheid told The Jordan Times during the forum.

He stressed that if past deals like the Wadi Araba Peace Treaty passed unnoticed, no new compromise would be accepted by the public.

Saturday’s meeting might lead to an ongoing programme of events to voice rejection of Kerry’s plans.

Ziad Masri, one of the participants, noted that Palestinians are fully aware of the conspiracy against them.  

“It is pretty obvious that the main aim behind these schemes is to further emphasise the presence of Israelis in Palestine,” he told The Jordan Times. 

Masri said such events are important because they raise public awareness and send a message to the whole world that Jordanians are aware of all these schemes. 

Saeed Jameel, another participant, said there should be no compromises on the right of return.

“If these speculations that media outlets published are true, both Palestinians and Jordanians will lose their rights,” he said.

Dalal Ashour said she will not accept the solution of creating an alternative homeland for the Palestinians in Jordan, stressing the importance of Palestinians’ right to return to their country.     

She noted that people have to learn from the past. 

“Some people say these media leaks are only speculation. In the past, we used to hear the same claims, but then all the reports came true,” Ashour added. 

Two brothers die of suffocation in well

By - Feb 01,2014 - Last updated at Feb 01,2014

AMMAN — Two brothers died of suffocation on Saturday while cleaning a well in the town of Sarih in Irbid Governorate, official sources said.

A third person, who was also in the well helping the brothers, suffered from suffocation and was listed in fair condition, a Civil Defence Department (CDD) official told The Jordan Times.

The three men went down the nine-metre deep well to clean it and took a diesel-operated water pump, the CDD official said.

“It seems that there wasn’t enough oxygen in the well and it caused them to suffocate,” he added.

The family of the 35- and 29-year-old victims were alerted to the incident after noticing that the well-cleaning operation was taking a long time and went to check on them, a second source said.

CDD rescue teams pulled the three men out and provided first aid, the source added.

“They were then rushed to a nearby hospital where one brother was pronounced dead on arrival and the second died an hour later,” he noted.

The source explained that deep water wells usually lack oxygen and need to be opened for a few days before cleaning to allow gases to be released from the closed area and allow oxygen in.

The fact that the men used a water pump that runs on diesel also contributed to decreasing the little oxygen that was in the well, the source pointed out.

Ali Shotar, who heads the Irbid National Institute of Forensic Medicine, told The Jordan Times that autopsies are expected to be performed on the victims on Sunday.

Debate tackles argileh café ban

By - Feb 01,2014 - Last updated at Feb 01,2014

AMMAN — Jordanians participating in an open debate were split over the Greater Amman Municipality’s (GAM) recent decision to stop issuing and renewing licences for cafés serving water pipes (argileh). 

Amman Mayor Aqel Biltaji said the municipality’s decision came in response to a demand by the Ministry of Health, which sees smoking as “a plague”.

“The [Public Health Law] was passed in 2008, and ever since then, GAM has been considerate of the demands of restaurants and café owners to delay its enforcement,” Biltaji said last Thursday at the debate, organised by the Diwanieh initiative. 

The application of the law will go into effect April 1, 2014, since all licences issued to restaurants and cafés that offer argileh expire by March 31, according to the mayor.

Deputy Hind Fayez said she is not against prohibiting smoking in public areas, but she is against the method used to ban it.

“The decision was abrupt and lacked a clear plan,” she said, noting that the application of this law should have started under the Dome of Parliament and in Health Ministry and GAM facilities.

Fayez proposed launching anti-smoking awareness campaigns for children and incorporating related material in school curricula.  

For his part, former health minister Zeid Hamzah said it shocks him that some people are against banning smoking in public areas, despite the well known health risks associated with smoking and passive smoking.

He added that there is a difference between enjoying personal freedom and harming others.

Issam Fakhr Eddin, head of the Jordan Restaurants Association, said the association respects the Kingdom’s commitment to international health agreements that ban smoking in public areas.

“The smoking ban in public areas should be gradual… and it took first world countries a minimum of 10 years to enforce such a law,” he said, calling for a systematic plan with a time frame to enforce the ban.

Fakhr Eddin highlighted the economic repercussions of GAM’s decision.

“Cafés and restaurants that offer argileh contribute about JD40 million annually to the Treasury in taxes and fees and they provide jobs for around 12,000 individuals,” he said, calling for a new definition of “public places”.”Cafés should be listed as private places for smoking argileh,” Fakhr Eddin said, adding that most café goers smoke the water pipe.

The Public Health Law, which prohibits smoking in public places, was enforced in the Kingdom’s shopping malls and Queen Alia International Airport in March 2009, and in fast-food restaurants in June of the same year.

A Cabinet decision prohibiting smoking in ministries and public institutions went into force May 25, 2010.

According to the law, smoking is prohibited in public places, which include hospitals, healthcare centres, schools, cinemas, theatres, libraries, museums, public and non-governmental buildings, public transport vehicles, airports, closed playgrounds, lecture halls and any other location to be determined by the health minister.

Thursday’s debate was followed by a round of questions and comments from the audience.

Maan Awwad, who owns a café that serves argileh, said he renewed his licence two years ago and was not notified about the ban.

“As a café owner I have no problem with choosing another area to invest my money, but I was not told beforehand about the application of this law,” he told The Jordan Times during the debate, which was sponsored by the Young Arab Voices project, the British Council and the Anna Lindh Foundation.

“I am used to a certain lifestyle, which authorities cannot take away from me overnight,” he added, noting that he had the opportunity to open a café in another Arab country.

Biltaji said GAM is willing to facilitate the licensing of other businesses for owners of argileh cafés.

Sami Hourani, the founder of Diwanieh, told The Jordan Times that the issue is important because it tackles social, economic, health and legal aspects, in addition to touching on personal freedoms. 

“We are here to discuss facts and research results on the debate topic,” he said, noting that a Facebook poll shows that around 55 per cent of young Jordanians believe this ban trespasses on their personal freedom.

'Man killed by wife, two daughters'

By - Feb 01,2014 - Last updated at Feb 01,2014

AMMAN — Criminal Court Prosecutor Ramzi Nawayseh on Saturday charged a 44-year-old woman and her two daughters with the murder of their husband/father on Friday in the town of Jiza near Queen Alia International Airport, according to an official source.

The mother and her daughters, aged 17 and 19, allegedly confessed to the murder, a senior official source told The Jordan Times.

“The suspects claimed that the victim returned home drunk and they had a heated argument about the matter,” the source said.

In their initial confession to the police and Nawayseh, the suspects claimed that one of them pushed the victim and he fell and hit a gas heater.

“The three then jumped on him and strangled him to death with their hands,” the source added.

“Family problems could be behind the killing but further investigations will help us learn more about the incident,” he noted.

The victim’s body was sent to the National Institute of Forensic Medicine for an autopsy, and blood and tissue samples were sent to the criminal lab for further analysis, according to the source.

Nawayseh issued orders for the woman and her 19-year-old daughter to be ordered detained at Jweideh Women’s Correctional and Rehabilitation Centre. While the 17-year-old was sent to a juvenile correctional centre pending further investigations.

 

33% of Jordanians are obese — study

By - Feb 01,2014 - Last updated at Feb 01,2014

AMMAN — Jordan ranked among the worst countries of the world in terms of obesity, with 33 per cent of its population being obese, according to a report issued recently.

Oxfam’s World Food Index 2013 showed that the worst on the index in terms of obesity alone is Kuwait, with 42 per cent of the population being obese. 

Saudi Arabia came in second place with the United States and Egypt, where one in every three of their population is obese.

The study ranked Saudi Arabia as the worst in the unhealthy eating index, while other countries in the bottom of the index also include Jordan, Fiji, Kuwait, Mexico and the US.

According to the report, 14.4 per cent of Jordan’s population are diabetic, while 17.9 per cent of the population in Saudi Arabia have diabetes.

According to Oxfam, around the world, one in eight people go to bed hungry every night despite there being enough food for everyone. 

“Over-consumption, misuse of resources and waste are common elements of a system that leaves hundreds of millions without enough to eat,” the organisation said in a statement posted on its website.

To better understand the challenges that people face getting enough of the right food, Oxfam has compiled a global snapshot of 125 countries indicating the best and worst places to eat. 

“It is the first of its kind and reveals the different challenges that people face depending on where they live,” the organisation said.

The index listed the Netherlands as No. 1 in the world “for having the most plentiful, nutritious, healthy and affordable diet, beating France and Switzerland into second place”.

Chad is last in the 125th spot behind Ethiopia and Angola, according to Oxfam.

European countries occupy the entire top 20 bar — Australia ties in eighth place — while the US, Japan, New Zealand, Brazil and Canada all fall outside. African countries occupy the bottom 30 places in the table except for four. Laos, Bangladesh, Pakistan and India are there too.

Agency offers scholarships for students wishing to study in Germany

By - Jan 30,2014 - Last updated at Jan 30,2014

AMMAN — There is a growing interest in Jordan in learning the German language and pursuing higher education at German universities, according to the director of the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) office in Amman.

In an interview with The Jordan Times on Tuesday, Andreas Wutz attributed this growing interest to the establishment of the German-Jordanian University (GJU) and the inauguration of the DAAD office in the capital.

“GJU is a huge success story because it brought Jordan and Germany [closer] together,” Wutz said.

Since its inauguration in September 2012, the DAAD information centre in Amman, which is part of the Global DAAD network, has been promoting the high quality and, more importantly, affordable German universities in Jordan, he added.

“We have a concise webpage, we offer information materials, brochures and pamphlets, and we organise fairs and presentations at Jordan’s universities on the study opportunities and advantages in Germany,” Wutz said.

DAAD’s main mission is to promote German universities abroad and offer advice and consultation to the German government on education policy, he noted.

“DAAD is a public body that is funded by various federal ministries, mainly the German federal foreign office,” he said, adding that its budget stood at 400 million euros “last year, half of which was spent on scholarships”.

Based in Bonn, Germany, DAAD has granted 1.6 million scholarships to German and overseas students since its establishment in 1925, according to Wutz.

In addition to scholarships, a considerable amount of DAAD’s budget goes to improving the curriculum, paying German lecturers teaching worldwide, and covering the costs of the agency’s information centres around the globe, he said.

There are 500 German lecturers funded by DAAD who teach various subjects at international universities in more than 100 countries.

“In Jordan, we have six lecturers teaching German language and other subjects at GJU and the University of Jordan. The number is relatively high taking into consideration the Kingdom’s small population, as in other larger countries we have only one lecturer.”

Wutz explained that obliging each of the 3,000 GJU students to join a one-year internship programme in Germany as a graduation prerequisite is also a major factor behind the spread of German culture in Jordan.

“In Germany, there are more than 200,000 foreign students, making it the world’s third largest student population after the US and the UK,” he said.

Details about the DAAD information centre in Amman can be found on its website: www.daad-jordan.org. For study programmes offered by German universities, visit www.study-in.de.

DAAD scholarship portfolio

for Jordan:

- Full PhD-scholarships for all academic disciplines. Deadline to apply is September 30 every year

- Master’s scholarships for selected courses with a special relevance for developing countries (deadline: July 31 each year)

- Jordanians can also apply for the four German-Arab master’s programmes which include: integrated water resources management, renewable energy and energy efficiency for the MENA region, international education management, and economics of the Middle East

- Master’s scholarships for public policy and good governance, short term grants (1 to 3 months) for academic researchers (deadline: October 31)

- University excursions for student groups and summer schools for advanced learners of German

Source: DAAD

‘Authorities to float oil exploration tender in February’

By - Jan 30,2014 - Last updated at Jan 30,2014

AMMAN — The Natural Resources Authority (NRA) on Thursday said it will soon open the door for local and international companies to explore for oil in the Kingdom’s eastern and northeastern regions.

“We are preparing to float a tender for oil exploration in the Sarhan area and Azraq,” NRA Director General Mousa Zyoud told The Jordan Times over the phone.

“The tender is expected to be announced in mid-February for companies to start submitting bids, and the deadline will be announced at a later stage,” he added.

The tender will be the first of its kind to be floated by the NRA, as it entails oil exploration using unconventional methods, Zyoud said.

“The tender is part of our efforts to promote oil exploration across the country,” he added.

Jordan’s oil needs are estimated at around 100,000 barrels per day.

In March 2013, the Cabinet terminated a production sharing agreement with Sonoran Energy to explore for oil in Azraq as the Indian company did not commit to the agreement’s articles.

The Council of Ministers also cancelled an agreement with Universal Energy Limited Company of India to explore and produce oil in Sarhan as the firm did not commit to the working programme under the deal.

In October last year, the Cabinet approved a co-production agreement with the Korea Global Energy Corporation for oil exploration in the Dead Sea and Wadi Araba regions under which it will carry out its exploration in three phases over a 6,819-square-kilometre area.

Also last year, the Cabinet formed a committee to promote oil exploration in the southern region in cooperation with the NRA. The committee is part of the government’s efforts to open and market areas for potential oil exploration, especially due to the unprecedented hike in oil prices. 

Inspired by Indiana Jones, US archaeologist uses technology as his ‘whip’

By - Jan 30,2014 - Last updated at Jan 30,2014

AMMAN — Much has changed in archaeology since fictional hero Indiana Jones fought the Nazis in Cairo with bullwhip in hand in his quest for the Ark of the Covenant, the chest containing the tablets of stone inscribed with the Ten Commandments.

Technologies such as 3D imaging, geographic information system (GIS) and airborne laser mapping are used alongside trowels and shovels by today's archaeologists who hung up their whips a long time ago.

Combining commercial gadgets like GPS, laptops and smartphones with devices borrowed from biology, chemistry, physics and engineering, scientists today are equipped with a cutting edge toolkit, snatching unprecedented glimpses from lost civilisations.

“Archaeology is a process, but from Indiana Jones movies you would take away that it is just about going somewhere and grabbing artefacts," American scientist Glenn Corbett told The Jordan Times, adding the film franchise starring Harrison Ford got him “hooked on this profession”.

The 36-year-old archaeologist from North Carolina implemented pioneering computer technology to break down some 2,000-year-old epigraphies found in the “towering, wind-swept landscape of southern Jordan”.

Focusing on the archaeological remains of pre-Islamic Arabia, Corbett, together with the American Centre of Oriental Research, has been recording around 1,800 inscriptions on over 1,000 boulders and rock faces along the Wadi Hafir, a very narrow valley within Wadi Rum, some 300km south of Amman, using photographs and GPS coordinates since 2005.

“My approach to these inscriptions and drawings has been something unique since I focused on where the inscriptions were found, differing from the past when people would only know that they found a lot of inscriptions in a certain area but they wouldn’t necessarily map them within their landscape," he said.

Corbett added that mapping an archaeological location helps identify patterns and tells a little bit more about who the residents were, how were they using the landscape and why they may have been carving these particular messages.

He surveyed the valley's different parts using GPS coordinates to locate as many stones and inscriptions as he could.

"I would then take these GPS points and put them into a GIS — a system designed to capture, store, manipulate, analyse and present all types of geographical data — trying to find exactly where they were found," Corbett said.

"By analysing patterns within the GIS, especially the way that the winter rains drained through this long valley, I was able to determine that inscription clusters concentrated in very specific places where the most amount of water would flow during the winter where the nomads could water their herds and hunt animals," he added.

"I became increasingly interested over my career by the impact that the ancient Arabian tribes of the Arabian Peninsula had on the economy, religion, cultures of the broader Near Eastern peoples, of the Biblical people."

These inscriptions are the primary means of understanding and documenting the cultural world of the tribes who traded in incense from south Arabia to the Mediterranean (around 1,600km) for a period of almost 1,500 years.

This incense trade presumably started about 1,000BC to only fade out — as far as archaeologists can determine — in around the 4th century AD.

Incense was sought for religious, medicinal and especially personal use in a time before daily baths.

It was the importance of this trade that gave rise to powerful kingdoms like the Nabataeans between the late 4th century BC and the 1st century AD, according to historians.

Inscriptions

The inscriptions lack enough linguistic information to show precisely what language they belong to. However, based on Corbett’s studies, they were languages and dialects akin to — though not identical to — classical Arabic “as they were written in an alphabetical set ranging between 26 and 28 characters".

"The particular dialect we find in southern Jordan has become known as Hismaic, since the Wadi Ram desert was called the Hisma," Corbett said, adding that the inscriptions may date back to the time of the Nabataeans.

With the vast majority of the inscriptions simply reading names like, "I am Abdullah son of Said" and including names of ancestors, it is possible to trace up to six levels of genealogy, the archaeologist said, adding that so-called love and emotional texts were part of his "loot".

"The most common type seems to express some sense of love and longing for someone who is not there... sometimes they would write the name of the other person or just leave it open-ended."

A big part of the drawings found in Wadi Hafir depict camels — the majority of them females — in almost an iconographic way, either by themselves or with a rider.

A camel is identified in drawings as female if its tail is upturned, according to Corbett.

"Depicting camels might have been a sign of property and wealth;" however, according to Corbett’s studies, there is some evidence that the female camel was seen as a medium, a symbolic vehicle by which people understood the passage between this world and the other, since "camels were also buried along their owners when they passed away."

Photography

George Bevan, a professor of classics at Canada's Queens University Ontario with an interest in computer science and digital photography, approached Corbett two years ago after hearing about his work.

Trying to apply advanced digital photography techniques to better understand ancient inscriptions, Bevan teamed up with Corbett for a 10-day trial season in Wadi Hafir in 2012, using new digital photographic methods for the recording and analysis of the faded inscriptions.

"We reached those areas following my GPS points, and photographed these stones with the technique George developed, and once these images were analysed via computer programmes, we found we had great success in better reading and interpretation," Corbett said.

"It did look like magic."

Employing digital photogrammetry to study the inscriptions, Bevan and Corbett used the geometry of the position of the camera relative to the position of the photographed stone and the angle of the photographs to triangulate a single point of the object in three dimensions, taking up to 2,000 pictures of the same object while making sure the images overlap as much as possible.

"You get sort of [a] 'photo-mosaic' of the entire surface of the stone whose shared points produce dynamic three-dimensional representations of carved surfaces, informative relighting and enhancement of worn carvings, and super high-resolution images once on a computer, all of which open up new vistas for the analysis, interpretation, and presentation of epigraphic and rock art."

Through this method, Corbett said he could see something that he missed in previous observations, like a random figure of a man with a dagger riding a camel — which was there but could not be seen with the naked eye — thus making technology the new and ultimate "archaeologists’ whip".

King, Queen pay surprise visit to children at cancer centre

By - Jan 30,2014 - Last updated at Jan 30,2014

AMMAN — Their Majesties King Abdullah and Queen Rania paid a surprise visit on Thursday to the young patients at the King Hussein Cancer Centre (KHCC) in the capital.

The visit marked the King’s 52nd birthday.

His Majesty spent some time with the children, checking on their situation and issuing directives to provide them with the best services.

Their Majesties also visited the intensive care unit at the KHCC.

King Abdullah hailed the formidable efforts exerted by the employees at the centre, which carries the name of a man who is in the hearts of all Jordanians — King Hussein, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

His Majesty commended the “brave cancer patients”, describing them as models “for us all” and wishing them a speedy recovery.

The King gave the children and other cancer patients tablet computers as gifts.

The playroom at the centre was also provided with computers, pool tables and Lego toys as other presents from the Monarch to cover children’s needs within the KHCC’s Dreams Come True programme, which is implemented regularly to lift the spirits of young cancer patients.

“Just visited the children at the King Hussein Cancer Centre. Am truly humbled and inspired by their courage. May God always be with them,” the King tweeted on the Royal Court’s official account after the visit.

“Want to thank all the staff at the centre for their tireless efforts in caring for the patients and making it a global centre of excellence,” he wrote.

Formerly called “Al Amal Centre” — which means “The centre of hope” — the centre was inaugurated in 1997.

It is a non-governmental, not-for-profit comprehensive centre dedicated entirely to cancer care, according to the KHCC website.

On September 19, 2002, an official ceremony was held to change the name of the centre to honour the late King Hussein, who died of cancer.

“The new centre was thus named King Hussein Cancer Centre. The new name also implied full Royal support for this project.”

Work to build an expansion for the centre is under way, with the project expected to cost $186 million.

The expansion will more than double the centre’s current 170-bed capacity by adding another 200 beds.

Individuals and groups can donate for the expansion project by calling the KHCC at 06/5544960 or visiting www.cancerpledges.com. 

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