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PM meets Korean power company delegation

By - Oct 14,2019 - Last updated at Oct 14,2019

AMMAM — Prime Minister Omar Razzaz said on Monday that Jordan seeks to utilise international expertise to develop the energy sector to meet the needs of citizens and industries.

The premier's remarks came during a meeting with a delegation from Korea Electric Power Corporation (KEPCO), where he thanked the Korean company for implementing a number of energy projects in Jordan.

KEPCO President Jong Kap-kim expressed his gratitude to the government for the facilities it provided for the company's investment ventures in the Kingdom.

Prince Hassan attends launch of study results identifying low-income areas

By - Oct 14,2019 - Last updated at Oct 14,2019

AMMAN — HRH Prince Hassan, chairman of the Higher Council for Science and Technology, on Sunday attended the launch of the results of the Integrated Context Analysis (ICA) conducted in Jordan. 

The ICA is a research tool implemented by the UN World Food Programme in a number of countries, and used in the Kingdom to identify the poorest areas, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported on Monday. 

Prince Hassan, during the ceremony, said that using the ICA in Jordan is a “qualitative leap”, highlighting the need for developing a common knowledge base that lets administrations share information, which activates good governance and leaves room to shift from a humanitarian to a development role, as well as spreading the culture of "drawing closer to reality".

To enhance human dignity and empowerment, the prince also drew attention to bolstering cooperation between regional and international institutions.

He also called for setting a new global humanitarian system to address the three challenges of man against man, man and nature, as well as man-made disasters.

Road mishap claims life

By - Oct 14,2019 - Last updated at Oct 14,2019

AMMAN — One person was killed and three others sustained injuries when a dump truck and a vehicle collided in Mafraq governorate, the Civil Defence Department (CDD) said on Monday.

CDD personnel rushed to the scene, administered first aid to the injured and evacuated the deceased to the Northern Badia Hospital. The injured were listed in medium and serious conditions, a CDD statement carried by the Jordan News Agency, Petra, added. 

Man dies in hole collapse incident

By - Oct 14,2019 - Last updated at Oct 14,2019

AMMAN — A 27-year-old man has been killed after a hole he was digging around his house collapsed in Aqaba, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported on Monday.

According to the CDD media department, CDD personnel retrieved the body and transferred it to the Islamic Hospital.

Czech Republic, Jordan see medical tourism as promising channel for cooperation

By - Oct 14,2019 - Last updated at Oct 14,2019

Ambassador of the Czech Republic to Jordan Josef Koutský speaks during the inauguration of the Czech Spa and Tourist Agencies Mission Business Forum on medical tourism on Monday (Photo courtesy of Czech embassy)

AMMAN — The ambassador of the Czech Republic to Jordan, Josef Koutský, on Monday highlighted the strong Amman-Prague relations, shedding light on his country’s contributions to the health sector. 

“Every year, several medical teams of different specialisations carry out hundreds of operations in Jordanian hospitals. More than 3,700 patients were operated on by Czech doctors from 2013 till now in Amman,” a Czech embassy statement quoted the ambassador as saying.

The envoy was speaking during the inauguration of the Czech Spa and Tourist Agencies Mission Business Forum on medical tourism.

“The Czech Republic has been supporting Jordan since the beginning of the Syrian refugee crisis in 2011 to overcome the difficulties which it has faced. Our successful governmental humanitarian programme MEDEVAC helps to improve quality of life for Jordanian citizens and Syrian refugee patients,” the ambassador said in his opening remarks, according to the statement. 

“The Czech Republic also helps Jordan by conducting different projects for the Zaatari and Azraq refugee camps,” Koutský said, listing electric wiring, water pipeline works, building community centres and children’s playgrounds as examples of such projects. 

As for the economic field, the ambassador said that the trade turn-over between Jordan and the Czech Republic is expected to increase by approximately 30 per cent this year, compared to 2018, the statement said.  

The ambassador expressed hope that medical tourism will grow and serve both countries, and will be beneficial in the lives of their citizens.

Head of the Medical Tourism Department at the Ministry of Health Suleiman Ammarin and Jordan Europe Business Association President Jamal Badran highlighted the two countries’ similarities as medical destinations, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

They also voiced Jordan’s keen interest in boosting cooperation in the field to benefit the citizens of both countries. 

The event also included B2B discussions among Czech and Jordanian partners as well as a presentation by the Czech delegation members, according to the embassy. 

Amman catches a glimpse of masked performance

By - Oct 14,2019 - Last updated at Oct 14,2019

Since the characters in the play wear masks and do not talk, the actors have to rely on movement and dance to express their characters (Photo courtesy of Familie Flöz )

AMMAN — The Berlin-based mask theatre company Familie Flöz performed three public shows on Friday, Saturday and Sunday and two additional shows for refugees at the American Comunity Theatre in Amman.

The mask theatre company, which originated from Folkwang University of the Arts in Essen, Germany, creates “archetypal characters” for each of its productions “in an interplay of improvisation, masks and writing”, according to the company’s website.

Playing for the first time in Jordan, the company presented “Hotel Paradiso”, a non-verbal piece with music set at a mountain resort, where an elderly lady and her family struggle to stay alive and “strange and magical things” start to happen.

Since the characters in the play wear masks and do not talk, the actors have to rely on movement and dance to express their characters. Their family-friendly mask theatres “often cannot be assigned to any common genre, but are always comprehensible across language boundaries”, the company writes on its website.

Tourism revenues climb by 9 per cent — CBJ

By - Oct 14,2019 - Last updated at Oct 14,2019

The Central Bank of Jordan said that tourism revenues grew due to the increase in the total number of tourists by 7 per cent to 4.107 million visitors, when compared to the same period last year (Photo by Amjad Ghsoun)

AMMAN — The Kingdom’s tourism revenues went up by 9 per cent by the end of September to $4.4 billion, the Central Bank of Jordan (CBJ) announced on Monday.

The CBJ said that tourism revenues grew due to the increase in the total number of tourists by 7 per cent to 4.107 million visitors, when compared to the same period last year, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.

Tourism revenues in the January-September period of 2018 stood at some $4 billion, the CBJ noted.

On a monthly level, tourism revenues in September alone went up by 7.7 per cent to $486.9 million, when compared to the same month in 2018, the bank said, attributing the increase to the rise in the number of tourists by 6.7 per cent.

In 2018, tourism revenues surpassed the $5 billion mark, signifying an 8-per cent increase from 2017’s $4.6 billion.

The Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities in January said that the sector is continuing to achieve more gains, marked by a continuous rise in performance indicators, and that the ministry is moving forward within the Royal directives and with the government’s support towards scaling up tourism in the Kingdom to achieve its developmental goals and economic role.

According to ministry figures in January, the number of travel and tourism offices in the Kingdom stood at 904, and the number of tourist restaurants reached some 990 establishments, while the number of workers in the tourism sector amounted to 88,000.

Sahab holds archaeological treasures — Jordanian scholar

By - Oct 14,2019 - Last updated at Oct 14,2019

An Iron Age carinated incense burner from Sahab, circa 1,000-700 BC  (Photo courtesy of Barakat Gallery)

AMMAN — Sahab represents one of the largest Jordanian archaeological sites in the transitional zone between the highlands and the desert, said a Jordanian archaeologist.

The city, located some 12 kilometres southeast of Amman, is on the modern and ancient road to the desert castles of the Early Islamic period, including Muwaqqer, Kharraneh, Quseir Amrah, Azraq and others, Professor Emeritus Moawiyah Ibrahim told The Jordan Times in a recent interview, adding that Sahab’s location was “evidently a lucrative choice”.

The modern town of Sahab was founded on the ancient tell (mound) and spread to the surrounding area, destroying major parts of the ancient settlement in the process, the archaeologist said. 

He noted that the highest point of the mound is about 22 metres above the western plains. 

“The area around Sahab is well cultivated, with the actual desert about 15 to 20 kilometres to the east,” Ibrahim continued.

According to the archaeologist, the excavations at the site were considered a salvage operation, and continued for a few years. 

“It was probably the largest excavation project to be undertaken and sponsored by the Jordanian Department of Antiquities (DoA). Several members of this department were trained at the site,” Ibrahim stressed, adding that the budget for the excavations and participating members was very limited. 

Sahab was occupied from the Late Neolithic/Chalcolithic period (5th and 4th millennia BC) to the Late Iron Age (6th century BC), Ibrahim said, adding that the site was apparently abandoned until the Medieval Arabic period (11th-13th century AD), as evidenced by Ayyubid/Mamluk pottery shards. 

“Another occupational gap ran from the 13th century to the 19th century, when the present inhabitants moved to the site,” he said.

Sahab was largest in area during its earliest period of habitation, when it supported itself with extensive agriculture and produced “an abundance of food”, said Ibrahim, noting that this agricultural abundance is demonstrated by the large number of storage facilities inside the houses and in courtyards. 

“Some of the courtyard storage structures were huge, measuring around four metres in diameter, and the pit structures suggest that Sahab’s inhabitants anticipated occasional periods of poor agricultural yield that could be offset by a long-term storage strategy,” the expert said.

The way these storage pits are arranged within house units may suggest that large families were living in each quarter of the site, he added.

“Unfortunately the entire archaeological site is located under the modern houses of Sahab. The centre of the site was preserved for future investigations to be carried out by the DoA in collaboration with archaeologists interested in the represented periods and the region,” Ibrahim said.

Regarding the earliest occupation of the site, the professor said that in 1984, survey scholars could not identify any settlements that directly preceded Sahab. 

“It is clear, however, that the inhabitants of early Sahab were experienced farmers and must have had a good knowledge of building techniques, as well as of the manufacturing of pottery, stone vessels, flint implements and other stone tools,” Ibrahim concluded.

Germany offers Jordan additional 1m euros to support water sector

By - Oct 13,2019 - Last updated at Oct 13,2019

AMMAN — Germany on Sunday offered Jordan an additional one million euro grant to improve water sources across the Kingdom.

Water Ministry Secretary General Ali Suboh and German Federal Institute of Geo-Science and Natural Resources (BGR) Vice President Christian Bonnemann signed the additional aid agreement to expand the work of existing water projects valued at 7.5 million euros.

The grant will be divided between two projects, the first of which is a Germany-funded 4-million euro project on assessing the Kingdom's water sources, Suboh said, noting that the aid will be employed to develop water information systems to better the Kingdom's services and environmental conditions.

The grant will also cover a second 3.5 million-euro-supported project, which will continue till 2023 and aims to conduct studies on the costs of water extraction and the quality of water.

Suboh expressed gratitude for the German support to the Kingdom, especially in improving water supply and sanitation services in response to the urgent conditions which emerged from the Syrian influxes to the Kingdom, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported. 

The one-million euro agreement was signed to mark the 60th anniversary of BGR-Water Ministry relations with the aim of improving water resources in refugee-hosting countries, he added.

Bonnemann lauded the water sector's efforts, commending the "fruitful" cooperation between the ministry and the BGR, while expressing the institute's keenness on providing all support to address the Kingdom's water needs.

Jordan business delegation concludes Cyprus visit

By - Oct 13,2019 - Last updated at Oct 13,2019

AMMAN — A Jordanian delegation to the Jordanian-Cypriot business forum has concluded its visit to Cyprus, where the two countries discussed ways to develop economic ties. 

The three-day forum was organised by the Employers and Industrialists Federation (OEB), according to a Jordan Chamber of Commerce (JCC) statement.

The Jordanian delegation, headed by President of the JCC Senator Nael Kabariti, met with OEB Chairman Georgios Petrou, Cyprus Parliament Speaker Demetris Syllouris and the general secretary of the Cyprus Foreign Affairs Ministry, who stressed the two countries’ “deep” economic ties.  

Besides discussing a number of economic issues, Kabariti said the visit was intended to explore future opportunities for entering Arab markets, especially Iraq and Syria, highlighting the importance of increasing exchange, specifically in the fields of digital and technical economy.

The Jordanian Ambassador to Cyprus Mohammed Fayez said that the two countries enjoy diplomatic ties capable of enhancing trade exchange, stressing that the latest meetings would increase trade and tourism movement in the two countries. Fayez also highlighted the investment opportunities available in the Kingdom for Cypriot investors and industrialists. 

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