Source: EURLEX
Language: en
Format: md

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# 52013SC0092

**JOINT STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT Implementation of the European Neighbourhood Policy in Jordan Progress in 2012 and recommendations for action Accompanying the document JOINT COMMUNICATION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT, THE COUNCIL, THE EUROPEAN ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL COMMITTEE AND THE COMMITTEE OF THE REGIONS European Neighbourhood Policy: Working towards a Stronger Partnership /\* SWD/2013/092 final \*/**

  

1.         overall
assessment and recommendations

This document reports on
progress made on the implementation of the EU-Jordan ENP Action Plan between 1
January and 31 December 2012, although developments outside this period are
also taken into consideration where relevant. It is not a general review of the
political and economic situation in Jordan. For information on regional and
multilateral sector processes readers should also refer to the progress report
of the Partnership for Democracy and Shared Prosperity.

In 2012 the political
instability already experienced in 2011 continued, with three successive
cabinets being appointed. This picture was further complicated by a worsening
economic outlook, in an overall context of heightened tension in the region notably
due to the civil unrest in Syria. Jordan has played a vital role in providing
support and hospitality to the ever-growing number of Syrian refugees fleeing
the atrocities. Recognising the burden this places on the country's resources,
the EU provided support through humanitarian assistance and longer terms
measures with overall funding of over EUR 43 million.

Cooperation between the EU
and Jordan improved further in 2012. The political dialogue on foreign and
security matters continued to take place at the most senior level with High
Representative Foreign Affairs and Security Policy/Vice President Ashton visiting Jordan frequently. His Majesty King
Abdullah also visited the European institutions in April and President Barroso
paid an official visit to Jordan in October.

As regards the
implementation of the ENP Action Plan, there were some positive developments as
regards deep and sustainable democracy, in line with the recommendations set
out in the previous Progress Report. Political reforms continued in 2012 in particular with the establishment of an independent
electoral commission, the establishment of the Constitutional Court, the
adoption of a new political parties’ law and a new electoral law. The latter law,
however, has been strongly criticised by most opposition parties
claiming it does not ensure a fair distribution of seats and perpetuates the
previous law based on the “'one person, one-vote”
system (i.e. the single non-transferable vote).

Jordan should step up its fight against corruption, which weakens
citizens’ trust in democratic institutions and undermines the country’s economic
and social development.

In November, the Jordanian
cabinet adopted a number of austerity measures including the abolition of
government subsidies for fuel products, in order to drastically reduce the growing
budget deficit that has threatened to plunge the nation into a fiscal crisis.
These measures caused violent protests and spontaneous demonstrations all over
the country with riots in more than a dozen cities. Over
300 protesters were arrested, although most of them were released within a few
days. In December, King Abdullah instructed the government to release those
still in jail (some 120 people).

In a number of instances in
2012, the General Prosecutor continued referring civilians to the State Security Court with offences involving free speech, contrary to the constitutional
amendments made in 2011.

The amendments to the Press
and Publication Law and the on-line media, adopted in September, stirred a
heated debate in the country. Representatives from
domestic press voiced their concerns about certain controversial provisions in
the law including inter alia a vague definition of electronic
publications, the licensing of online media, media outlets’s liability for
posted comments, and the introduction of an obligation for chief editors to be
members of the Jordan Press Association.

A further example of the
closer EU-Jordan cooperation can be reported in the transport area. In April,
the European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) and Jordan Civil Aviation Regulatory
Commission (CARC) signed a working arrangement on technical cooperation in the
field of civil aviation safety.

In the area of migration,
the EU-Jordan Dialogue on Migration, Mobility and Security mobility was
launched in December.

Moreover, in December, the
EU and Jordan signed a Protocol to the Euro-Mediterranean
Agreement on the general principles for Jordan’s participation in EU
programmes. This represents a further step forward in EU-Jordan partnership, opening
up new opportunities in many sectors.

On the
economic front, Jordan continued to face multiple external shocks. High
prices for imports of oil and food; repeated and extensive periods of
interrupted natural gas flow from Egypt due to the sabotage of energy
infrastructure (gas pipeline), a slowdown in remittance flows, and the
persistent unrest in Syria continued to have a negative impact on Jordan’s
economy.

In
August, Jordan signed an
agreement with the International Monetary Fund on a USD 2 billion stand-by
arrangement to support the country’s economic programme from 2012 to 2015 to address fiscal and external
challenges and foster high and inclusive growth and looks forward to its
implementation. Early December, the Jordanian
government formalised its request for an EU Macro Financial Assistance (MFA)
programme.

In 2012 Jordan addressed a number of the key recommendations contained in the last year's ENP progress
report, notably the establishment of the electoral commission, the Constitutional Court, the adoption of a political parties' law and an electoral law. Most of
the other key recommendations made previously remain valid.  In line with the
commitments agreed in the ENP Action Plan, Jordan should pursue the reform
process, enforce the laws adopted and acts accordingly. Jordan is particularly invited:

·
To build an inclusive, participatory, and open
political system where all Jordanians feel represented. Review the electoral
law framework ensuring the universality of voter participation and equality of
votes.

·
To strengthen the
independence and impartiality of the judiciary and its administrative capacity,
including completely ceasing to use military courts to judge civilians.

·
To enhance the fight against corruption which
undermines the country’s political, economic and social development, also
through the adoption of the new draft National Anti-Corruption Strategy and
related Action Plan.

·
To take concrete steps to eradicate
violence against women and to promote women's integration in politics,
economic life, education and employment.

·
To withdraw its reservations
on Article 15(4) of the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Discrimination against Women (CEDAW), in line with the recommendation of the UN
Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women.

·
To proceed towards a de jure abolition of
the death penalty.

·
To move forward with the ratification of the Optional Protocol to the UN Convention against Torture and
Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment.

·
To ensure freedom of the press and prevent any
kind of interference in mainstream or online news portals. Discontinue the
practice of referring civilians to the State Security Court for free speech
offences.

·
Ratify the regional Convention on
pan-Euro-Mediterranean preferential rules of origin.

·
Pursue regulatory convergence to support efforts
to increase exports and to prepare for an Agreement on Conformity Assessment
and Acceptance of industrial products, and step up efforts towards a Deep and
Comprehensive Free Trade Area (DCFTA).

2.         Political
Dialogue and Reform

Towards deep
and sustainable democracy

In June, Parliament adopted
a new Elections Law that added to the existing single non-transferable vote
at Governorate level, a second, proportional vote at the national level. From
early August until mid-October, the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC)
compiled a new voters' lists, with over 2.3 out of 3.6 million eligible voters
registered. For the first time, voters were assigned to specific polling
stations. However, in July the Islamic Action Front, Jordan's major political
party, and other opposition parties announced their boycott of the electoral
process from registration to voting.

In April, Parliament
adopted a law establishing an Independent Electoral Commission. The IEC, headed
by Abdulilah Al Khatib, started its work in May and is responsible for the
conduct and organisation of parliamentary elections, taking over from the
Ministry of Interior. In August, the IEC invited for the first time the EU to
observe the parliamentary elections that took place on 23 January 2013. The EU
deployed a full electoral observation mission (EU EOM). In its preliminary
statement released on 25 January, the EU EOM reported that the legislative
elections were well organised and administered despite serious inadequacies in
the legal framework affecting the universality of voter participation and
equality of votes.

The EU
made an allocation of EUR 70 million available from the SPRING (Support
for Partnership, Reform and Inclusive Growth) programme, doubling its average
annual bilateral cooperation, to encourage the consolidation of reforms in the
political, social and economic areas. Part of this support targeted the
electoral process in Jordan, including institutional support to the IEC and to
the judiciary. The second part was allocated under the “Good Governance
Development Contract” to support the strengthening of human rights, economic
development and social protection.

With regard to freedom
of association, in July Jordan refused to allow the civil society organisations
'Tamkeen' and 'Acted' to accept foreign funding for projects targeting, the rights
of migrant workers and refugees respectively. These were the first refusals of
European funding since the adoption of the 2008 Law of Societies, as amended in
2009.

In May, Parliament adopted
a Political Parties Law that retained a significant role for the Ministry of
Interior in the registration and oversight of political parties. The law
removed the requirement for founding members to obtain security clearance and
aimed to limit the interference of state entities in party life, but did not prescribe
sanctions for doing so. The required number of founding members (500) remains
unchanged. The law also introduced requirements as to the gender balance (a
minimum quota of 15 seats allocated to women) and geographical representation
from governorates among founders. The law prohibits forming a political party on religious, sectarian, ethnic, or
factional basis, or on the basis of discrimination of gender or origin. In
2012, the number of registered political parties increased from 18 to 23.

With regard to freedom
of assembly, public protests in Jordan continued throughout 2012 with
several thousand demonstrations held, from small protests to larger marches.
Jordanian police handled the protests in a peaceful and professional manner. In
several cases in 2012, however, the government arrested activists and brought
politically motivated charges against them.

Concerning freedom of
expression, in January a demonstrator was sentenced to two years in prison by
the State Security Court to over torching a picture of the King. The
demonstrator was eventually pardoned by the King Abdullah. Several cases of
peaceful speech, some involving journalists, were also prosecuted at State Security Court, despite a 2011 constitutional amendment that limited the court’s jurisdiction.
In March, clashes in Tafileh between Gendarmerie and pro-reform youth led
to violence, arrests and ill-treatment in custody according to local NGOs. A
protest in Amman against the continued detention of activists from Tafileh led
to the arrest of some 30 persons charged with insulting the King. In September,
security forces arrested a number of activists from Tafileh, Karak and Amman and charged them under terrorism provisions. They remain in detention.

As regards media freedom,
in April, a journalist and an editor from a local online news outlet were
arrested when an article implied royal interference in parliamentary corruption
proceedings. In September, the Parliament adopted an amendment to the Press and
Publications Law which the Government claimed would ensure better organisation
and accountability in the sector. The law met with strong public criticism;
with the online media community joining in a civic protest against the law
calling for disobedience. The law empowers a government agency - the Press and
Publications Directorate - to define a website as an "electronic
publication", to make a request for it to register and to punish it with a
fine if it does not. Once a website is registered, the Press and Publications
Law applies to it, including mandatory membership in the Jordan Press
Association. The law also makes website owners liable for comments left by
users on their websites as "press material"making the owner of the
site responsible for them. The law further provides for the establishment of
specialised courts dealing with press offences.

No further progress was
made towards judicial independence. The government did not adopt the long
awaited draft Independence of Judiciary Law which aims to consolidate the
independence of the Higher Judicial Council as the sole body authorised to
appoint judges.

One positive development
was the adoption of the Constitutional Court Law that was approved by Royal Decree
in June and entered into force in October. It provides for the establishment of
an independent and separate judicial body to monitor the constitutionality of
laws and regulations in force and to interpret the provisions of the
Constitution. The Constitutional Court supersedes the Higher Council for the
Interpretation of the Constitution. The constitutionality of laws can be
challenged by bodies including the Senate, House of Representatives and the Council
of Ministers.

In the framework of the
Commission financed programme “Strengthening democratic reform in the southern Mediterranean”, the Council of Europe agreed with the Jordanian authorities to cooperate in
a number of areas, including justice.

Corruption in Jordanian society remains a matter of serious concern. Despite a
stated policy of zero tolerance, progress remained slow in terms of concrete
measures taken. Several high-profile officials were arrested on corruption
charges and the cases are still under investigation. In April, the Parliament
adopted an amendment to the Anti-Corruption Law introducing provisions for the protection
of whistle-blowers and witnesses. The EU supports the strengthening of the
capacity of the Anti-Corruption Commission. A new draft National Anti-Corruption
Strategy and Action Plan were prepared.

Other human rights and governance-related issues

A de facto
moratorium on the application of the death penalty continues to apply.
It is estimated that 95 persons are on death row in Jordan. The EU encouraged Jordan to consider proceeding towards a de jure abolition of the death penalty.

Following the 2011
constitutional amendment outlawing torture, the EU invited Jordan to sign the Optional Protocol to the Convention against torture and other cruel, inhuman
or degrading treatment or punishment, to establish an efficient national preventive
mechanism, instigate an inspection system that allows unannounced visits, and
systematically publish data on torture.

In March, the UN Committee
on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women recommended,
inter alia, that Jordan withdraw its reservations from Article 15(4) of CEDAW
and revise its Nationality Law. In May, the Special Rapporteur on violence
against women presented her report to the 20th session of the Human Rights
Council (HRC) and recommended, inter alia, that Jordan amend Article 6 of its
Constitution and amend its Nationality Act to grant Jordanian women the right
to confer their citizenship on their children. In June, the Jordanian National
Commission for Women launched the third National Strategy for Women for
2012-2015. In September, the Parliament deleted a provision in the
amendment to the Passports Law that stipulated that women needed prior
agreement from their spouses to obtain travel documents.

Cooperation on foreign and security policy, regional and international
issues, conflict prevention and crisis management

Political dialogue between
the EU and Jordan on foreign and security policy developed further, notably at
the most senior level.  With regard to the Middle East Peace Process, Jordan continued to be strong advocate of reviving the negotiations between the
Palestinians and the Israelis. From January to March, Jordan sponsored exploratory talks between Israeli and Palestinian envoys in Amman.

As a custodian of Holy
Sites in Jerusalem under the Jordan-Israel peace treaty, Jordan frequently criticised Israel's attempts to erase the Arab, Muslim, or Christian elements of Jerusalem’s identity and to endanger Al Aqsa Mosque.

Jordan kept an open-door policy towards refugees fleeing Syria. The number of refugees increased dramatically towards the end of the year. By the end of 2012,
Jordan hosted over 173 000 Syrian refugees registered and/or assisted by the
UNHCR. The government of Jordan estimated the number of Syrian refugees,
including those in host communities, at 250.000 overall by end of December. In
July, Jordan opened the Za'atari camp for Syrian refugees near Mafraq in northern
Jordan. In October, Jordan selected Marjeeb Al Fahood near Zarqa as the
second refugee camp.

Jordan became the first country in the Middle East to have removed all
minefields from its territory in accordance with its international obligations
as a State Party to the Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention. The Permanent
Secretariat of CBRN (Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Nuclear) Risk
Mitigation Centres of Excellence in the Middle East opened in Amman in October.

3.         ECONOMIC REFORM, SOCIAL REFORM AND DEVELOPMENT

Macroeconomic framework[1]

Despite the positive economic
spillover from the Gulf countries, Jordan’s fiscal- and balance of payments
position deteriorated in 2012, reflecting higher oil prices, the impact of
regional tensions on inward investment, and the gas supply disruptions from the
Egyptian pipeline that forced the import of more expensive fuels. The
macroeconomic situation improved only in the second half of the year, following
the approval by the IMF of a USD 2 billion adjustment programme, thereby
contributing to the acceleration of the GDP growth from 2.6% in 2011 to an
expected 3% in 2012. Consumer price inflation remained broadly at the 2011
levels as the inflationary impact of the pass-through of international prices
was largely offset by further monetary policy tightening. The central bank raised its policy interest rates by 50 basis points in February and increased by another 75 basis points
the overnight deposit rate in December 2012.

The shocks to the energy
sector had an impact on public finances, including through the losses of the
state-owned electricity company (estimated at USD 2 billion). With the aim to
bring fiscal and energy policies back to a sustainable path and to address
possible shortfalls in external flows, the authorities decided to embark on a
series of fiscal structural reforms. These included the adjustment of energy
prices, the diversification of energy supplies and the submission to the Parliament
of legislative proposals on income taxation and social security reform. The
efforts contributed to a moderate narrowing of the fiscal deficit
(before grants) to 10.1% of GDP from 11.7% a year earlier. The public debt grew
to nearly 80% of GDP at the end of the year from almost 71% at the end of 2011.
The current account deficit (including grants) widened to 17% of GDP from
12% in 2011, as the increased energy import bill was only partially offset by a
rebound in tourism and remittances. This result, together with a significant slowdown
in inward investment, notably in the first half of the year, led to a
deteriorating  balance of payments position and to a sharp decrease (-40%) in
foreign exchange reserves.

Social situation, employment and poverty
reduction

The unemployment rate is expected to stand at 12.2% in 2012, a decrease from
the 2011 levels (12.9%). National figures indicate that the highest rate of
unemployment was recorded in the 15-19 and 20-24 years age groups, while
unemployment was high among university degree holders. Job
creation and employment generation are among the most critical challenges for Jordan and have a direct bearing on internal stability. As of
January, the government increased the minimum wage from JOD 150 to JOD 190 per
month, excluding non-Jordanians from the measure.

In June, the government launched the National Employment
Strategy 2012-2020, aiming to increase the
participation of women in the labour market; increase youth employment; expand
training programmes in the workplace; develop employment services and career
guidance, and improve the terms and conditions of employment to attract more
Jordanians to the labour market. The strategy receives support from the EU
through the ETVET budget support programme (EUR 35 million). A committee, to be
led by the Government and involving all stakeholders, to monitor the
implementation of the strategy's action plan, remains to be set up. A second phase Decent Work Programme (DWP) between
Jordan and the International Labour Organisation was launched in March. The aim
of the DWP is to push the national employment agenda and enhance access to
decent work opportunities. In September, Jordan hosted a regional ministerial-level seminar "New challenges for skills development in
the Arab States of the Southern and Eastern Mediterranean" and a new Young
Mediterranean Leaders initiative was launched.

In the
area of social protection, social-security coverage was extended to
include more enterprises and workers, and health care coverage for vulnerable
groups was expanded. In January, the Social Security Corporation started to
implement its strategic plan 2012-2016 with the support of an EU technical
assistance team.

With regard to labour
standards, Jordan made no progress towards ratifying ILO
Convention No 87 'Freedom of Association and Protection
of the Right to Organise' during the reporting period.

4.         Trade-related issues, market
and regulatory reform

The EU is Jordan's second largest trading partner - just behind Saudi Arabia - accounting for 15.5% of its
trade volume in 2011[2].
Bilateral trade flows slightly increased and during the first eleven
months of 2012 amounted to EUR 3.4 billion. EU exports to Jordan increased and consisted mainly of machinery and transport equipment. EU imports from Jordan increased and consisted mainly of chemicals, machinery and transport equipment.

The negotiating
directives for a Deep and Comprehensive Free Trade Area (DCFTA) with Jordan were adopted in December 2011. The DCFTA aims at progressively integrating Jordan into the EU single market. It should lead to regulatory convergence in areas that
have an impact on trade and investment, but also more generally on economic
governance and on the business climate, such as competition, intellectual
property rights, public procurement and trade facilitation. The DCFTA should
also include provisions on investment protection, further liberalisation in agriculture,
trade in services and establishment. A first meeting marking the start of the
preparatory process took place in Amman in March 2012. As a follow-up, the
Commission sent a set of questions to Jordan on various aspects of policy and
legislation related to the DCFTA and proposed to resume the preparatory work as
soon as possible.

Jordanian customs apply a single
window concept. The number of companies participating in the ‘Golden List’
programme further increased to 39. The implementation of pre-arrival and
pre-departure processing of declarations was still pending as Jordan has not adopted a new Customs Law. The new law, will include provisions to extend the competence
of customs authorities to pursue intellectual property rights infringements.
With regard to its new Strategic Plan for the 2011 to 2013 period, Jordan performed well on each of the four objectives: anti-smuggling and combating of
illicit trade, contributing to the investment environment, supplying the
treasury with financial revenues, and developing performance and institutional
capacity. Jordan is yet to ratify the Regional
Convention on pan-Euro-Mediterranean preferential rules of origin signed in 2011. Jordan regularly participated in the
meetings of the pan-Euro-Med Working Group, which is currently discussing the
revision of the rules of origin in the framework of the regional Convention.

There were no significant developments in
2012 with respect to Jordan’s 2011 request to accede to the Gulf Cooperation
Council (GCC).

In the area of free movement of goods and
technical regulations, Jordan made progress in preparing for negotiations on
the Agreement on Conformity Assessment and Acceptance of industrial products (ACAA)
aimed at facilitating the access of Jordanian industrial products to the EU
internal market (and vice-versa). The Jordanian authorities continued to transpose
sectoral legislation in the three priority sectors —
gas appliances, toys and electrical products. So far, 44 draft
transpositions of EU directives have been submitted
to Commission services for assessment, including a horizontal framework for
industrial products. However, delays in the adoption of the amendments
to the Law on Standards and Metrology providing for the enforcement of most of
the new standards are jeopardising progress at technical level.

The Jordanian Standards and Metrology Organisation became an associate
member of European Cooperation for Accreditation (EA) and an affiliate member
of the European Committee for Electrotechnical Standardisation (CENELEC).

The EU and Jordan
continued, with Twinning and TAIEX support, sanitary and phytosanitary cooperation
particularly on food safety, animal identification and farm registration and on
the accreditation of the Jordanian
Faculty of Veterinary Medicine. Jordan participated in a Commission/European Food Safety Agency/TAIEX
supported Mediterranean seminar on regional coordination of animal identification and disease control measures. Planned reforms
of the food law, which aim to approximate EU standards, are still pending.

The SME policy contributed
positively to the business climate, but in the World Bank Doing Business
report, Jordan fell to 106th place overall, as none of the measures
were deemed to bring substantial improvements.

In the
area of financial services there was only limited progress. The process for the selection of a strategic partner to establish a
Credit Bureau was ongoing.

Other key
areas

With
regard to the reform of the tax system, Jordan prepared a draft Income
Tax Law changing the rate structure to become more progressive. The draft aims
to exempt a larger number of lower income households from income taxes and to
raise corporate taxes from banks, telecom and mining companies. The Income and
Sales Tax Department (ISTD) continued to modernise its tax management systems.
Through new information technology systems and audit techniques, the ISTD
identified about EUR 762 million of tax arrears. The next step should be to
target the arrears through the justice system.

The government took various
measures to facilitate small and medium sized enterprises’ access to
finance, one of the most critical factors for doing business in Jordan. These included a EUR 273 million loan guarantee fund and Jordan becoming an EBRD
country of operation as of September. In July, the government mandated the Jordan
Enterprises Development Corporation to manage the Governorate Fund, which aims
to invest EUR 163 million over a six-year period in productive and income-generating
projects. The first seven projects, for a total amount of EUR 3.8 million, were
selected in September. Jordan continued to participate in Euro-Mediterranean
industrial cooperation and shared knowledge, tools and good practice in areas
covered by the Euro-Mediterranean Charter for Enterprise and in specific
sectors: textiles and clothing, tourism, raw materials and space.

In the
area of statistics, Jordan started preparation of the Jordan-HIMS
project as part of the Mediterranean Household Migration Survey (MED-HIMS) and
continued to improve its national accounts sector, water accounts and water
statistics. Jordan started to prepare the population and housing census due in
2014.

Concerning
the reform of internal financial control and audit, the Ministry of
Finance and the Audit Bureau developed a multi-year training plan to reinforce
internal control units and to complement Audit Bureau’s plan to withdraw from
internal control. This initiative followed the recommendation of the last
year’s progress report and continued to be supported by the EU under the Public
Financial Management Programme launched in 2010. SIGMA[3] missions supported the Audit
Bureau in the implementation of its Strategic Plan 2011-2015.

There were no significant
developments in the fields of competition policy, establishment, company law,
intellectual property rights, consumer protection, movement of capital
and public procurement.

5.         Cooperation on Justice,
Freedom and Secrurity

In the area of migration,
the EU-Jordan Dialogue on Migration, Mobility and Security mobility was
launched on 12 December. In the framework of the implementation of this
dialogue, a first EU mission visited Jordan between 25 and 28 February 2013 to
discuss at technical level, with Jordanian authorities and experts, matters
related to passport and identity documents, management of borders and
migration, as well as asylum and international protection.

Jordan continued to accommodate a large number of Syrian refugees,
in addition to large communities of refugees from the occupied Palestinian
territory and Iraq. Although Jordan is not a signatory of the 1951 Refugee
Convention, by December over 173 000 Syrian refugees registered or were
awaiting registration with the UNHCR.

Jordan remained a destination and transit country for persons subject to
forced labour. Migrant workers continued to be caught between lack of
proper protection against employers' abuse and insufficient enforcement of
legislation in force. Instructions issued by the Ministry of Labour regulating
the entrance, vacation, clearance and final departure of Egyptian workers,
making up a majority of migrant workers in Jordan, made some of them victims of
blackmail by their employers. The EU provided support to civil society
organisations advocating migrants’ rights.

Jordan participated
in the new EuroMed regional projects Migration III, Police III, Justice III and
Statistics III.

The National Committee to
Combat Human Trafficking did not make any significant progress in
implementing the National Strategy 2010-2012. In March, the Government approved
by-laws under which it established shelters for victims of human trafficking.

In
July, Jordan’s Anti Money-Laundering and Financing of Terrorism Unit
joined the Egmont Group as the ninth Arab member.

Jordan participated in the International
Workshop on Drug Prevention and Monitoring: Situation and Perspectives
in the ENP Southern Partnership countries organised by the European Commission
and the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA) under
the auspices of the Cypriot Presidency, which took place in Cyprus in October.

Jordan
and EU Member States further strengthened judicial and police co-operation.
 A preparatory project on justice reform was launched through the SPRING
programme to support the consolidation of the judicial independence strategy.  France provided training to several high-ranking officers of the Derak, the Jordanian
Gendarmerie, on public order operations and helped restructure its
organisational restructuring and human resources management. An EU funded
project assisted Jordan in classifying inmates using internationally recognised
criteria, and in introducing a health file for inmates. Another EU-funded
project helped to draft a criminal justice strategy. A number of international
conventions regarding family law, notably children, remained unsigned.

6.         Transport, energy,
environment, the information society, research and innovation

Regarding transport,
Jordan cooperated with the Mediterranean Aviation Safety Cell (MASC) within
the European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) on regulatory convergence in the
field of safety. Following improvements in compliance with safety standards,
Jordanian aviation was removed from the list of air carriers whose operations
are subject to operational restrictions within the EU. The first Joint Committee
under the EU-Jordan Air Transport Agreement took place in January 2013. In
January, Jordan extended the validity of the National Transport Strategy 2009–2011
to 2014. Regarding maritime transport, Jordan made progress in implementing
standards on training, certification and watch keeping. As a consequence, the
EU recognised the Jordanian system of training and certification of seafarers.
In November, a twinning project that aims to reverse a rising trend in the
number of traffic accidents involving pedestrians was launched with the Jordan
Traffic Institute.

Jordan's dependence on energy imports, the interruption of Egyptian
gas imports and the associated increasing energy bill, continued to pose serious
budgetary challenges in 2012. In May, the government raised electricity tariffs
for several sectors although with limited impact on small households. In
November, Jordan and Egypt reached an agreement to increase gas supplies. Jordan pursued efforts to reduce the energy bill including by diversifying energy supplies
and reducing electricity imports. In September, Jordan agreed with Iraq on additional oil supplies, natural gas imports and the construction of an oil and gas
pipeline. Jordan decided to construct a liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal in
Aqaba. It explored possible sources of LNG imports with countries including Qatar and Russia. It began to exploit domestic oil shale with a view to commencing production by
2016. Preparations for building a first nuclear power plant continued. There
were delays in decisions on its site and the technology supplier. There was civil
society opposition and in May the House of Representatives recommended stopping
the project until all feasibility studies had been finalised. Several new
electricity generation facilities were launched in 2012. In April, Jordan adopted the Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Law and in July the relevant bylaws,
thus improving the investment climate in this area. In September, the
government adopted an energy efficiency by-law aiming to reduce the energy
costs of networks and public and private buildings. The EU renewable energy and
energy efficiency programme (EUR 35 million), launched in December 2011, and
the wind energy and solar concentrated power piloting project (EUR 10 million),
supported reforms in these areas.

In the field of climate
change, the Ministry of Environment conducted risk assessments and identified
adaptation measures in areas such as health and food security. In July, Jordan joined the Climate and Clean Air Coalition to Reduce Short-Lived Climate Pollutants.
Regional cooperation on climate change related water availability continued
with the water authorities of Israel, the PA and Jordan. Jordan is encouraged to build capacity and engage in the new carbon market mechanism to be
developed following the 17th and 18th sessions of the
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change Conference of the
Parties. With the support of the newly launched regional technical assistance
project for climate change and related matters, Jordan is encouraged to devise
a low-carbon development strategy. Additional efforts should be made to fully
implement the Cancun and Durban agreements.

In the
field of the environment, Jordan actively participated in ENPI financed
regional projects namely the Sustainable Water Integrated Management (SWIM)
project and those falling under the Horizon 2020 depollution initiative (the
Mediterranean Environment Programme; and the Shared Environmental Information
System support project led by the European Environment Agency). Under the
pollution reduction project component of Horizon 2020, the integrated solid
waste management project at Al-Ekaider is one of the four leading projects of
the Mediterranean Hot-Spot Identification Programme (MeHSIP) Project
Preparation Implementation Facility (PPIF) financed under FEMIP and managed by
the European Investment Bank (EIB).

Jordan actively participated in the Integrated
Maritime Policy (IMP-MED) technical assistance project under the ENPI South
programme.

In the area of civil
protection, the flagship programme for Prevention of, Preparedness for, and
Response to natural and man-made disasters (PPRD South) contributed to the
establishment of a regional framework of disaster management authorities that
could intervene collectively in the event of disasters overwhelming the
affected country. Indeed, sustainable development requires adequate disaster
risk reduction efforts. Jordan is among the 168 governments that adopted in
2005 the "Hyogo Framework for Action: Building the Resilience of Nations
and Communities to Disasters", which emphasizes the central role of
disaster risk reduction for all development policies. However, work on Disaster
Risk Reduction (DRR) and climate adaptation is only at the beginning and it
will require considerable further support to develop capacities and processes.
DRR policy is fostering dialogue with Civil Society and NGOs, thus contributing
to a more sustainable democracy. Analysis of the regulatory and institutional
frameworks started with the aim of strengthening capabilities and
inter-ministerial coordination in the second phase of the programme.

There were no further developments
with regard to strengthening the independence and administrative capacity of
the Telecommunications Regulatory Commission (TRC). The EU continued to support
the strengthening of the TRC through a twinning project. In November, Jordan adopted a policy on the Communications, Information Technology and Postal Sector. Jordan was preparing a National Information and
Communication Technology Strategy for 2012–2016. The EU supported the
development of this strategy.

With
regard to research and innovation, in February, Jordan established a Competitiveness and Innovation Council under the Prime Minister’s
chairmanship. The EU's EUR 5 million support to the Research and Innovation
Programme (helped to develop Jordan’s applied scientific research and
technological capacity, and to further integrate the country with the European
Research Area (ERA) and the EU’s Seventh Framework
Programme for Research and Technological Development (FP7). Six Jordanian institutions participated in Marie Curie
actions and four Jordanian researchers were subsequently recruited. As regards
participation in the FP7, 24 Jordanian public
and private institutions participate in 30 projects involving an EU
contribution of EUR 55 million of which EUR 4.5 million went to Jordanian
participating entities. Jordan participated actively in ERA WIDE projects, which aim
to integrate neighbours into the ERA. Among the main areas of cooperation were
environment and energy, health and ICT. A new platform to support
bilateral cooperation was selected under the FP7 2012 Work Programme with the
objective of promoting bilateral research and innovation cooperation in the
context of the upcoming EU Horizon 2020 programme.

7.         People-to-people contacts,
education and health

The quality
of education was constrained by changes in leadership, shortage of
classrooms especially in urban areas, large numbers of students transferring from
private to public schools and insufficient emphasis on knowledge-society skills.
There was continued progress in education reform, with improvements in
preschool and special education areas and the roll-out of a school-based
development and improvement programme. The additional EU funding for education reform
in 2012 (EUR 10 million, bringing total support to EUR 33 million) sought to expand
primary education delivery in priority areas. The EU's contribution to UNICEF's
Emergency Education Response for Displaced Syrian Children and Host Community
in Jordan (EUR 10 million) started to provide education to vulnerable Syrian
children along with children in host communities. In December, EUR 10.8 million
was approved to expand access to educational, mentoring and other services for
Syrian children, adolescents and youth; EU support also aimed to alleviate
tensions in the communities and the camp.

Reform of the vocational education and training (VET) sector
was limited, mainly due to funding and human resources constraints and a lack
of coordination among VET providers. Jordan approved strategies on employment
and career guidance. Based on the latter strategy, the Employment-Technical and
Vocational Education Council prepared a VET awareness- raising campaign.

The Centre for Accreditation and Quality Assurance (CAQA) became
fully operational; additional staff and equipment are needed. So far,
occupational standards have been developed in six sectors and have been
introduced in curriculum development. With European Training Foundation
support, the CAQA assessed the state of play and future of vocational
qualifications.

In the field of higher education, Jordan continued to
participate actively in Tempus IV. In 2012, it was involved in 20
projects, which represents 18% of all accepted projects in the Southern Mediterranean region. Five new projects were selected, thanks in part to a
significant increase in budgets for the Southern Mediterranean region. Tempus
contributed towards the reform and development of higher education institutions
and systems especially in the field of curriculum reform. Jordanian
universities developed a number of new master’s degree programmes in nursing,
archaeological science, cultural heritage, water resources management and wireless
telecommunications. Jordan benefitted from eight new scholarships for Erasmus
Mundus Doctoral and Masters Courses and a further 188 mobility grants
allocated within a university consortium. Three projects involving Jordanian
universities were also selected in 2012 under Erasmus Mundus (so-called Action
3). Since 2007, six Jordanian researchers have benefited from a Marie Curie
Action, and six organisations located in Jordan participated.

Jordanian youth and youth
organisations continued to benefit from the Youth in Action programme.
In 2012, 113 young people and youth workers participated in the 39 projects
selected under this Programme. Under the Euromed Youth IV programme, 7 projects
involving 40 young people were selected.

With
regard to cultural co-operation, projects under the Euro-Med Heritage
Programme continued for the management of ancient theatre complexes, youth
outreach and education and the promotion of cultural heritage. Under the Athena
project, the Department of Antiquities successfully reached out to young people
and the wider public to promote of ancient theatres for modern use. The EU, in
partnership with the Jordan Enterprise Development Corporation, promoted Jordan's cultural and creative industries through mapping of the existing industry,
supporting young entrepreneurs through training and providing European
know-how. He Euro-Med Forum on Creative Industries and Society took place on
13-15 May in Jordan with the support of the EU Delegation.  The European Film
Festival and the Europe Day in Motion Dance Festival provided for cultural
exchanges. Supported by the EU, Jordanian young people produced and screened
films captured on mobile phones on the topic of 'Transition'.

Jordan continued implementing its Health Strategic Plan 2008-2012
and is preparing a new strategy. The lack of resources and the need to care for
refugees put a strain on the health sector. To implement the Framework
Convention for Tobacco Control, from January, Jordan began using larger
pictorial warnings on cigarette packages. Jordan continued participation in the
EU supported ‘Episouth Plus’ project aimed at increasing health security in the
Mediterranean region and South East Europe. Jordan participated in a
Commission/ European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control conference and
training course aiming to strengthen capacity building for communicable
diseases prevention and control in the Mediterranean. The aim is to jointly explore
the scope for developing a regional training programme on intervention
epidemiology.

[1] Figures on GDP, inflation, trade and
employment are generally from Eurostat based on data supplied by the
national statistical offices; or IMF or Commission Staff estimates, as indicated in the Statistical Annex.
When other data sources are used these are then indicated.

[2] Data for 2012 was not available at the time of writing.

[3]SIGMA stands for “Support for Improvement in Governance and
Management”, a joint initiative of the OECD and the EU, principally financed by
the EU.

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