Schools in Jordan Reopen After a Year of Closure

Kids in Jordan head back to classrooms after almost a year (File photo: Reuters)
Kids in Jordan head back to classrooms after almost a year (File photo: Reuters)
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Schools in Jordan Reopen After a Year of Closure

Kids in Jordan head back to classrooms after almost a year (File photo: Reuters)
Kids in Jordan head back to classrooms after almost a year (File photo: Reuters)

Hundreds of thousands of students in Jordan went back to schools Sunday after almost a year of closure due to the coronavirus pandemic.

The Ministry of Education announced a plan to gradually welcome more than two million students after it reported a decline in coronavirus cases in the country.

Schools and universities in the country have been shut since mid-March due to the pandemic.

Over the past month, the number of cases dropped to a thousand per day after it reached about 8,000 in mid-November, bringing the total number of cases in Jordan to 333,855 and 4,369 deaths.

The spokesperson for the Ministry of Education Abdul Ghafour al-Quraan told the state-owned al-Mamlaka TV that more than 773,000 students were going back to the classroom this week.

He explained that 1.4 million students across the country will return gradually until March 7.

Quraan clarified that parents will decide whether they want their children to attend classes in person or opt for online learning. They will have to inform the school directly and sign a pledge confirming that the student will take the exams in school.

For his part, a member of the National Epidemic Committee, Bassam Hijjawi, said that the stability of the situation in Jordan and the decline in cases contributed to gradually returning school life to normal within a strict health protocol.

He said all students are required to wear masks and observe physical distancing in the classroom, with two square meters provided for each desk.

Hijjawi stressed that the committee will evaluate the situation after two weeks.

In mid-January, a corona vaccination campaign began targeting health personnel who suffer from chronic diseases and those over the age of 60.

A number of hospitals and health centers began inoculating people, after the arrival of the first batch of the Sinopharm and Pfizer - BioNTech vaccines, in a campaign that first targets 20 to 25 percent of the 10.5 million population.

Notably, vaccines are free for Jordanians and residents alike in the Kingdom.



First Eid Adha Prayer Performed in Post-Assad Damascus

Syrian interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa, officials and citizens perform the Eid al-Adha prayer at the presidential palace in Damascus on Friday. (SANA)
Syrian interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa, officials and citizens perform the Eid al-Adha prayer at the presidential palace in Damascus on Friday. (SANA)
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First Eid Adha Prayer Performed in Post-Assad Damascus

Syrian interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa, officials and citizens perform the Eid al-Adha prayer at the presidential palace in Damascus on Friday. (SANA)
Syrian interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa, officials and citizens perform the Eid al-Adha prayer at the presidential palace in Damascus on Friday. (SANA)

Syria celebrated Eid al-Adha on Friday for the first time since the ouster of longtime ruler Bashar al-Assad in December.

Interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa, ministers, military commanders, religious officials and members of the public performed Eid prayers at the presidential palace in Damascus.

In a message to the people on Eid, Sharaa stressed that Syria was recovering after 14 years of war and suffering.

State news agency SANA said tens of thousands of people flocked to Damascus’ squares to perform the prayer.

People from across Syria were eager to perform the Eid prayer at the Umayyad Mosque for the first time since Assad’s ouster.

Damascus Governor Maher Marwan said the country was recovering on several levels “thanks to the unity and patience of its people.”

Sharaa later headed to the southern province of Daraa, his first since assuming his post.

He was warmly welcomed by the locals, who showed up in droves to receive him.

Meanwhile, the country’s Supreme Fatwa Council issued a fatwa, or religious edict, banning extrajudicial acts of revenge.

It stressed that justice can only be achieved through the relevant authorities. This will achieve societal security and justice.

The council made the announcement after it received several complaints about individual acts of vengeance.

US special envoy to Syria Thomas Barrack was quick to hail the fatwa, saying: “Great first steps for a new Syrian government marching toward a new Syria.”

The council also called for speeding up judicial procedures against suspects, the adoption of effective laws and keeping figures connected to the ousted regime away from the judiciary.

Achieving justice and ending oppression are among the foundations of civil peace, it declared.

It warned that individual calls for vengeance are in violation of Sharia law and will only stoke chaos and strife, and threaten social unity.