Jordan: Urgent Preventive Measures to Protect Inmates

AAWSAT AR
AAWSAT AR
TT

Jordan: Urgent Preventive Measures to Protect Inmates

AAWSAT AR
AAWSAT AR

Jordanian security authorities have been early alerted on the risks of the coronavirus outbreak inside the reform and rehabilitation centers

As soon as coronavirus cases were detected in the Kingdom, the Interior Ministry and the Public Security Directorate began implementing a plan to release about 10,000 inmates, who were incarcerated for financial obligations.

Meanwhile, many prisoners protested the government’s decision to ban visits to prisons for two weeks as a precautionary measure to avoid new coronavirus infections.

Reports indicated that riots have erupted at Irbid Correctional and Rehabilitation Center, about 80km north of the capital, Amman, causing several casualties.

It is noteworthy that there are about 18 rehabilitation centers in Jordan’s different cities.

After the government’s decision to release about 10,000 inmates at the beginning of the health crisis, the number of prisoners remaining still exceeds 12,000, a security source told Asharq Al-Awsat.

The National Center for Human Rights has been monitoring prison conditions and detention procedures since the beginning of the crisis and has called for releasing those jailed for a short-term period.

Regional Director for MENA at Penal Reform International Taghreed Jaber has praised the measures taken by the judicial council to release and suspend penalties on a group of inmates, stressing that these measures aim at ending the over-congestion phenomenon inside prisons.

The Jordanian government also decided to close schools, universities, and tourist sites, suspend all flights to and from Jordan and praying at mosques and churches.



Israel Shoots Down a Drone from Yemen, Military Says

This picture shows a crater left behind in Tel Aviv as a result of a projectile fired from Yemen early on December 21, 2024. (AFP)
This picture shows a crater left behind in Tel Aviv as a result of a projectile fired from Yemen early on December 21, 2024. (AFP)
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Israel Shoots Down a Drone from Yemen, Military Says

This picture shows a crater left behind in Tel Aviv as a result of a projectile fired from Yemen early on December 21, 2024. (AFP)
This picture shows a crater left behind in Tel Aviv as a result of a projectile fired from Yemen early on December 21, 2024. (AFP)

Israel's military said Monday it intercepted a drone launched from Yemen before it entered Israeli territory, days after a long-range rocket attack by Yemen's Houthi militias hit Tel Aviv, injuring 16 people from shattered glass.

The military said no air raid warning sirens were sounded Monday. Israel says the Iran-backed Houthis have fired more than 200 missiles and UAVs, or unmanned aerial vehicles, during the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza.

The Houthis have also been attacking shipping in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden — attacks they say won’t stop until there is a ceasefire in Gaza.

The attacks on shipping and Israel are taking place despite US and European warships patrolling the area.

On Saturday night and early Sunday, the US conducted airstrikes on Yemen. Last week, Israel launched its own airstrikes on Yemen, killing at least nine people, and a Houthi missile damaged a school in Israel.