Culture minister, British envoy discuss ties

Minister of Culture, Haifa Najjar, on Tuesday met with UK Ambassador to Jordan, Brigitte Brind, for a discussion on ways to develop cultural relations between the two countries.

In the meeting, attended by Head of Development at the UK Embassy, Angela Spilsbury, and Director General of the British Council in Jordan Summer Xia, Najjar highlighted the Kingdom’s achievements as it is celebrating the centennial of the foundation of the Jordanian state.

Najjar pointed out to examples of features of the cultural strategy for the coming years, which includes supporting and introducing creators and intellectuals, and building effective partnerships with civil society institutions and other government institutions.

For her part, Ambassador Brind expressed hope to build new partnerships with the ministry to strengthen relations and consolidate 100 years of partnership and cooperation, and to increase opportunities for cultural exchange, expertise, ideas and skills on the future between Jordanian and British youth by leveraging modern technology.

Source: Jordan News Agency

Crown Prince witnesses signing of two MoU, executive programme between Jordan, Egypt

His Royal Highness Crown Prince Al Hussein bin Abdullah II on Tuesday witnessed the signing of two memorandums of understanding and an executive programme between the Jordanian and Egyptian governments.

The two governments signed an MoU to support micro, small, and medium enterprises and entrepreneurship, in order to promote trade and exchange of expertise.

The executive programme signed covers tourism cooperation; including holding conferences and exhibitions; coordinating on promotional campaigns; organising joint tourism weeks; exchanging expertise on investments in the sector; and promoting medical, religious, and cultural tourism, as well as ecotourism.

Another MoU was signed for the twinning of Petra and Luxor cities.

The signing ceremony was held on the sidelines of Crown Prince Al Hussein’s meetings with economic officials and specialists in the tourism sector from the two countries.

Source: Jordan News Agency

Crown Prince visits Egyptian civilisation museum

His Royal Highness Crown Prince Al Hussein bin Abdullah II on Tuesday visited the National Museum of Egyptian Civilisation in Cairo.

Crown Prince Al Hussein toured the museum, whose main hall showcases over 1,600 artefacts, and which also includes the Royal Mummies Hall, where 22 mummies are displayed.

Source: Jordan News Agency

AU Envoy: Time Running Out to Find Political Solution to North Ethiopia Conflict

UNITED NATIONS — The African Union envoy for the Horn of Africa warned Monday that the window of opportunity is closing for a political resolution of the crisis in northern Ethiopia, as the country tips further toward all-out conflict.

“The time is now for collective actions in finding lasting solution to avoid further escalation of the situation, which may have direct effect on the strategic Horn of Africa region as a whole,” said former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo, who is the AU’s special representative for the Horn of Africa.

Briefing the U.N. Security Council from Ethiopia’s capital, Addis Ababa, where he arrived Thursday, Obasanjo said he has met separately with Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed and leaders of the Tigrayan People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), as well as some allied groups, in order to de-escalate tensions and seek the start of talks.

“All the leaders here in Addis Ababa and in the north agree individually that the differences between them are political and require political solutions through dialogue,” he said. “This, therefore, constitutes a window of opportunity that we can collectively tap into to assist the people of Ethiopia to find a lasting solution to the ongoing crisis.”

Obasanjo said he will visit the northern regions of Amhara and Afar on Tuesday, where the TPLF has expanded fighting, displacing thousands of people.

Fighting has escalated in the lead-up last week to the one-year anniversary of the start of the conflict.

Tigrayan forces said earlier this week they were advancing on Addis Ababa and that it could fall within months or even weeks.

The Ethiopian government declared a six-month state of emergency Tuesday and called on residents to defend their neighborhoods if rebels arrived in the capital.

Jaal Marroo, commander of the Oromo Liberation Army (OLA), an ally of the TPLF, told Agence France-Presse that the OLA posed “no threat” to ordinary civilians but that Abiy and his ruling Prosperity Party have to be “completely removed and cleared” for reconciliation to begin.

“We will make Ethiopia – not just Ethiopia, the Horn of Africa – a peaceful, very stable place to live in. I am very confident there is not going to be conflict after Abiy Ahmed’s regime,” he said.

Ethiopia’s U.N. ambassador blamed some countries and Western media for encouraging the TPLF.

“It is emboldened to a level that it threatens to unseat a popularly elected federal government and destabilize a nation of 112 million people,” Ambassador Taye Atske-Selassie said of the rebels. “We again reiterate our plea for the support of this group that have been providing it with communications equipment, satellite information, weapons and even fighters to desist from this.”

Civil war concerns growing

The United Nation’s political chief warned that the conflict has “reached disastrous proportions” and if not immediately halted could see Africa’s second-most-populous country engulfed in all-out civil war.

“What is certain is that the risk of Ethiopia descending into widening civil war is only too real,” Rosemary DiCarlo told the Security Council. “That would bring about a humanitarian catastrophe and consume the future of such an important country.”

DiCarlo said the fighting already threatens regional stability in the Horn of Africa.

“The political repercussions of intensifying violence in the wider region would be immense, compounding the many crises besetting the Horn of Africa,” she added.

“The longer this conflict goes on, the harder the road to peace becomes and the more people will die,” U.S. envoy Linda Thomas-Greenfield said. “And as you heard from High Representative Obasanjo, the window of opportunity is limited, and time is running out. I urge all parties — all parties — in the strongest possible terms to back away from the brink and lead their people toward peace.”

She added that accusations that the United States is biased toward one side are false.

“Let me be crystal clear: We condemn violence on all sides. We condemn any and all human rights violations and abuses committed by all sides.”

Alice Wairimu Nderitu, U.N. special adviser on the prevention of genocide, expressed concern in a statement Monday at the increase of ethnically and religiously motivated hate speech, ethnic profiling and incitement to violence.

“These all constitute risk factors for atrocity crimes,” she warned.

Intensive diplomacy

In addition to Obasanjo, U.N. humanitarian chief Martin Griffiths wrapped up a four-day visit to Ethiopia on Monday.

During his mission, he traveled to Mekelle, the capital of Tigray, where the government maintains a de facto blockade on the delivery of humanitarian assistance. The U.N. said no aid has gotten in since October 18, and more than 5 million people are in dire need.

Griffiths also met with Abiy on Friday and with other senior federal government officials.

U.S. Horn of Africa envoy Jeffrey Feltman has also been in the region since Thursday. State Department spokesperson Ned Price said Feltman is currently in Addis Ababa.

 

Source: Voice of America

School Fire Kills at Least 25 Children in Niger

NIAMEY, NIGER — At least 25 primary school children were killed when their thatched-roof classrooms caught fire in southern Niger on Monday, the council of ministers said in a statement.

Fourteen more children were injured, including five in critical condition, the statement said. The school is in the town of Maradi, more than 600 kilometers (370 miles) east of the capital Niamey.

“For the moment we cannot state the origin of the fire,” regional director of education Maman Hdi said.

Classes have been suspended and three days of mourning declared in Maradi, he said.

It was the second time this year that a fire has killed pupils in their classrooms in the West African country. Twenty preschool children were killed in April in Niamey.

The council of ministers said on Monday that following the two incidents, preschool classes must not be held in straw-roof huts.

 

Source: Voice of America

Pandemic Surveys Offer Grim Analyses

WASHINGTON — Two different surveys of the COVID-19 pandemic offer grim and sobering analyses.

One says the widely accepted COVID-19 global death toll of 5 million is likely underestimated and was probably reached much earlier than November 1 when the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center announced the figure. The other offers up a harsh statistical analysis of the pandemic, including the fact that 50 million people are being infected with the virus every 90 days.

Reuters puts its analysis into perspective with the reminder that it took almost a year to record the first 50 million COVID-19 cases. The current high rate is due to the highly transmissible delta variant, Reuters reports.

The number of cases in Russia, Ukraine and Greece is “at or near record levels of reported cases since the pandemic started two years ago,” according to Reuters, with new infections continuing to rise in 55 of 240 countries.

On Monday, Germany reported its highest daily number of cases since the pandemic began. The Robert Koch Institute reported 201.1 new cases per 100,000 people over the past seven days, breaking the previous record of 197.6 per 100,000. The French news agency AFP reports that the COVID rate in the eastern German state of Saxony is more than double the national rate at 491.3.

Reuters’ investigation also revealed the statistics of vaccine inequity, including that more than half of the world’s population has not received a single shot of a COVID-19 vaccine and less than 5% of the population in low-income countries has received a single COVID-19 vaccine dose.

The death tolls of some countries may be many times higher than official government reports, according to the Economist magazine. The publication says there are several reasons for the underestimates. Some locations do not include people in COVID-19 death tolls who did not test positive for COVID-19 before dying. Also, hospitals and local governments do not always process death certificates promptly. In addition, people who die at home may not be included in the COVID-19 tally.

A northern California town’s city council has declared itself a “constitutional republic” as a way to express its displeasure with what it considers state and federal overreach in the issuing of mandates, such as for mask wearing, designed to combat the COVID-19 pandemic.

Legal experts say Oroville’s city council’s move, however, does not allow Oroville to opt out of the mandates.

The fully vaccinated in Australia’s New South Wales state are enjoying the lifting of a number of COVID restrictions Monday, including elimination of limits on the number of home visitors.

Health professionals in India are bracing for a surge in coronavirus cases following Diwali, the annual festival of lights, that began Thursday.

Dr. Prakash Singh, a virologist, told The New York Times, “For this Diwali, people almost forgot the virus is still here and killing people.”

Source: Voice of America

Young Compete Against Old in Hottest US Rental Market in a Decade

Renting an apartment can be a challenge for new college graduates who are facing the hottest U.S. rental market in a decade, along with some unexpected competition from millennials — people aged 24 to 40 — and even baby boomers — the over-57 club.

“You have aging millennials who are creating families who should be moving from rental situations into ownership but, because of the lack of housing supply, that has been stopped in a lot of instances. And so, what you see is the aging millennial population continues to rent,” says Doug Ressler, manager of business intelligence at Yardi-Matrix, a commercial real estate data and research firm.

“It’s not just about millennials, it’s not just about [Gen] Z [people under 24], we also see that boomers are making a transition, he added. “Their percentage of moving into rental properties is growing in the last five years.”

There are a variety of reasons older people are opting for rentals, according to Ressler.

“They’ve lived in a home for so long and they want to be able to reduce their expenses on a fixed income,” he says. “They want to live in a social cohort, like a retirement community, and things like that where it’s much more socially amenable to them.”

The asking price of apartment rentals was up 10.7% in September 2021 compared to last year at the same time, according to the National Association of Realtors (NAR).

“It’s a hot market. We have never seen this market so hot in the last decade,” says Gay Cororaton, NAR’s senior economist and director of housing and commercial research. “The average rent growth, year-over-year, is about 3-to-5%. We’re seeing 11% rent growth now, so, clearly, way above trends we’ve had in the past.”

Renters are feeling the squeeze because the COVID-19 pandemic caused supply chain issues, slowing down home building in the United States. Instead of the usual 5-to-6 month supply of available single-family homes, supply dropped below two months in January 2021. The lack of housing supply means millennials are having a harder time buying a single-family home, which has been the traditional trajectory in the past.

“The whole building industry was beset by supply chain issues,” Cororaton says. “Shipments couldn’t come in, the price of lumber was rising, manufacturing slowed, workers could not come in [to work], so you have shortages of frames, appliances. So, essentially, just a short supply.”

The housing supply got even tighter during the pandemic as more investors put their money into housing, according to Cororaton, while existing homeowners looked for second homes.

“With the pandemic, there was also a big demand for second homes, for vacation homes. Typically, vacation homes accounted for just about 5% [of the market],” she says. “Early this summer they rose to about 8%. So again, strong demand and strong imbalance of demand and supply caused home prices to rise, made them less affordable.”

The hottest rental markets right now are in the West and South. More renters are moving to Dallas and Houston in Texas, followed by Atlanta, Georgia; New York; Los Angeles; Austin, Texas; Phoenix, Arizona; and Washington, D.C., according to NAR.

Cororaton expects the coming year to be a little better but says the housing shortage is likely to continue for the next few years.

“You know, the old adage of moving from rentals into homeownership, that whole polemic may be changing,” says Ressler. “The sweet spot was always the millennials, and now the millennials are being replaced by the [Gen] Z’s, but the millennials are staying longer and the Z’s are coming on board, and now you’ve got the demographic of the boomers … What it means is a very profitable and dynamic [rental] market that’s going to continue to grow.”

 

Source: Voice of America

White House ‘Confident’ Its Vaccination Mandate Will Be Upheld

WASHINGTON — The White House said Sunday it is confident that the courts will eventually approve President Joe Biden’s mandate that U.S. businesses with 100 workers or more insist their workers either be vaccinated against the coronavirus or be frequently tested despite an initial court ruling halting the vaccination requirement.

White House chief of staff Ron Klain told NBC’s “Meet the Press” show, “I’m quite confident that when this finally gets fully adjudicated, not just a temporary order, the validity of this requirement will be upheld.”

Klain characterized the Biden vaccination order, which affects 84 million private sector workers and is set to take effect January 4, as “common sense” to help end the pandemic in the United States.

He said if the government’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) “can tell people to wear a hard hat on the job, to be careful on chemicals, it can … put in place these simple measures to keep our workers safe.”

The U.S. Supreme Court last month approved a vaccination mandate covering health care workers in the northeastern state of Maine but has yet to consider a broad national mandate such as Biden’s order affecting private businesses or his order requiring 4 million federal employees and contractors working for the federal government to get vaccinated by November 22.

Numerous Republican state governors opposed to the Democratic president’s national mandate, along with some government employee unions and individual workers, have filed lawsuits in an effort to block Biden’s orders, all claiming they are an overreach of his authority.

In filing a lawsuit against the Biden order affecting workers at private businesses, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton called the vaccine mandate “a breathtaking abuse of federal power” that is “flatly unconstitutional.” He contended that the mandate goes beyond OSHA’s “limited power and specific responsibilities.”

On Saturday, the conservative-dominated 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which hears cases in the adjoining Southern states of Texas, Louisiana and Mississippi, temporarily blocked the Biden mandate for private businesses, saying there were “grave statutory and constitutional” issues concerning the rule. It ordered Biden administration lawyers to voice their opposition to a permanent injunction by late Monday, pending further court action. It is unclear if the appeals court’s decision applies outside those states.

White House aide Cedric Richmond defended the use of the OSHA authority to mandate the vaccinations, telling the “Fox News Sunday” show, “OSHA’s job is to protect workers. If it means doing something tough, that’s what this president does.”

“We think we’re on solid ground,” Richmond said.

It appears that hundreds of thousands of federal workers have been vaccinated ahead of the deadline in two weeks, but opposition to the shots has emerged at some agencies, especially those related to law enforcement and intelligence. Other lawsuits filed by workers unions and individuals that contest Biden’s mandate remain to be adjudicated. There is no testing option available for government employees as there would be for workers in the private sector.

The number of new coronavirus cases has been diminishing for several weeks in the U.S., but even so about 70,000 additional cases are being recorded every day.

More than 193 million people in the U.S. out of its population of 333 million have been fully vaccinated. But millions of adults have for various reasons refused inoculations, curbing Biden’s effort to fully control the pandemic.

More than 750,000 people in the U.S. have died from COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus, more than in any other country, according to the government’s U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Source: Voice of America

Jordanian trade delegation partakes in Gulfood exhibition

A Jordanian trade delegation on Sunday participated in the Dubai-based Gulfood Manufacturing exhibition, which is being held from 7-9 of November.

In a press statement, Representative of the Foodstuffs Sector at the Jordan Chamber of Commerce (JCC) and head of the delegation Raed Hamadeh said that the exhibition is an opportunity to promote trade opportunities in the Kingdom and build global partnerships.

Hamadeh stressed that the chamber has always been committed to participating in the well-known and vital exhibition, more so now after the repercussions of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Jordan’s participation in the exhibition, he indicated, is necessary to enhance communication and increase trade exchange between the Kingdom and other countries, noting that the delegation includes companies working in the fields of food trade, restaurants and equipment supply.

He said that Gulfood is an annual trade event for foodstuffs and food processing, that brings together visitors from various countries, adding that the exhibition is an important opportunity to enhance cooperation and develop economic relations between the Kingdom and participating countries through bilateral meetings and trade deals.

“Gulfood Manufacturing aims at bringing the leading food authorities, manufacturing companies, supply chain entities, distributors, retailers and the most influential industry names in-person to address the now and next,” according to the event’s website. “The world’s biggest food manufacturers take over the show floor to unveil their advanced technologies – from production to processing to packaging,” the website stated.

SOURCE: JORDAN NEWS AGENCY

14 Covid-19 deaths, 2,097 infections recorded Sunday

The Ministry of Health said Sunday that Jordan recorded 14 coronavirus deaths and 2,097 infections across the Kingdom, bringing the death toll from the pandemic to 11,128 and the caseload to 875,804.

According to the ministry’s daily brief, the number of currently active cases reached 24,394 with 71 admitted to hospitals today, adding that 61 cases have been discharged. It said that the total number of confirmed cases that are now hospitalized reached 639.

According to the daily report, the occupancy rate of isolation beds in the northern region was 18 per cent, intensive care beds was 41 per cent and ventilators 21 per cent.

The occupancy rate of isolation beds in the central region was at 15 percent, intensive care beds 31 per cent and ventilators 11 per cent, it said.

In the southern region, the occupancy rate of isolation beds was at 11 per cent, intensive care beds 21 per cent and ventilators 21 per cent, it said.

The ministry said that 1,602 Covid-19 patients have recovered, bringing the total number of expected recoveries by the end of the 14-day isolation period to 840,282.

It also said that 31,420 PCR tests were conducted today, bringing the total number of swab tests that had been collected since the beginning of the pandemic to 11,199,602, pointing out that the positivity rate for the day was about 6.67 per cent.

Some 4,004,226 received the first COVID-19 jab, while 3,570,387 received the two jabs, the brief added.

SOURCE: JORDAN NEWS AGENCY