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Local
- Centrist Islamists approach Brotherhood for power-sharing deal
- Bid to rescue Jordanian journalist leaves 21 dead in Philippines –– police
- No permits issued to export produce via Israel — ministry source
- 99% of candidate posters removed from capital’s streets — municipality
- Police nab wanted suspects in dawn raid
Over 6,000 domestic helpers rectify legal status
The labour ministry on Monday said only 6,500 domestic helpers rectified their legal status during a two-month grace period that started in early December.
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Region
Syrian opposition chief ‘ready to talk to Assad deputy’
Syrian opposition leader Mouaz Al Khatib urged President Bashar Assad on Monday to respond to his initiative for dialogue, saying it was aimed at ending the bloodshed and helping “the regime leave peacefully”.
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World
Kerry says he has ‘big heels to fill’ as top US diplomat
John Kerry took up the reins of US diplomacy from Hillary Clinton on Monday, winning a warm welcome from State Department staff as he joked he has big heels to fill as the new secretary of state.
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Business
Development and free zones house JD3.3b of investments
Total investments at the development and free zones amounted to JD3.3 billion at the end of 2012, according to Amer Majali who heads the Development and Free Zones Commission (DFZC).
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Sports
U-22 team host Cyprus tonight
The U-22 football team host their Cypriot counterpart on Tuesday in a friendly which comes as part of preparations for the inaugural Asian Football Confederation (AFC) U-22 Asian Championship set for January 11-26, 2014, in Oman.
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Features
‘Education for what?’
Questions about the purpose and anticipated results of getting an education are just some of the many issues addressed by Fida J. Adely, a Jordanian-American professor at Georgetown University, in this new book. The title comes from a 2005 World Bank report which asserts that Jordan’s development presents a “gender paradox”: Despite equal access to education, women still have high fertility rates and low participation in the labour force. Challenging the assumptions behind this assessment, Adely writes: “The representation of women’s educational attainment as a development paradox in Jordan, and the Middle East more broadly, is in keeping with a larger industry of defining Arab Muslim women in terms of development problems to be addressed through the expertise of development institutions.” (p. 12)
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Letters
Basic cleanliness above all
The “US to provide $31 million to refurbish over 60 schools” (The Jordan Times, February 1-2, 2013), is commendable, but before spending $31 million to refurbish and build new schools, something should be done to clean up the interior of those that already exist.
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