Merkel promises $100 million loan for troubled Jordan

German Chancellor Angela Merkel says Berlin will provide the loan in addition to $442 million bilateral aid to Amman, after protests forced the Jordanian prime minister to resign earlier this month.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel shakes hands with Jordan's King Abdullah II at the Royal Palace in Amman on June 21, 2018.
Reuters

German Chancellor Angela Merkel shakes hands with Jordan's King Abdullah II at the Royal Palace in Amman on June 21, 2018.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Thursday promised a $100 million loan to troubled Jordan, where mass protests over austerity measures forced the prime minister to resign earlier this month.

Merkel visited the kingdom amid an escalating domestic row over migration. Standing next to Jordan's King Abdullah II, she made no reference to the crisis that could shake up her coalition.

The chancellor said Germany would provide the $100 million loan in addition to bilateral aid which amounts to about $442 million this year. 

She said she hoped the additional funds would help Jordan carry out economic reforms sought by the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

The IMF is seeking such reforms to lower Jordan's public debt-to-GDP ratio, which has risen to about 96 percent, in part because of the continued economic fallout from Syria's civil war and other regional crises.

"We are aware of the challenges you face, both in the realm of security and in civil society development," Merkel said, adding that she wished the government success in implementing "needed reforms."

Refugee flow and Syrian war

Earlier on Thursday, in a question-and-answer session with students at the German Jordanian University, Merkel said the refugee influx in recent years, including from Syria, had stirred debate in Germany over fundamental questions.

"I am on the side of those, and this is fortunately the majority in Germany, who say we need to be an open country," she said, adding that "of course we need to regulate this."

Separately, she expressed concern about a decree being considered by Syrian regime leader Bashar al Assad which would require Syrian residents to register to reclaim properties.

"If this decree is implemented, it's very bad news for all those who are currently outside the country," she said, referring to refugees, among them hundreds of thousands in Germany.

Merkel said she had raised her concerns with Russian President Vladimir Putin, a key Assad ally.

Insufficient support on refugee burden

More than five million Syrians have fled their homeland since the civil war erupted in 2011. Most have settled in regional host countries, including Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey. 

Hundreds of thousands migrated onward to Europe, embarking on dangerous sea routes at the mercy of smugglers.

The regional hosts have said they are not receiving sufficient international support for shouldering a disproportionately heavy refugee burden. 

Jordan is home to some 660,000 registered Syrian refugees, but says the actual number of displaced Syrians in the kingdom is twice as high. 

In Lebanon, an estimated one in four residents is a refugee.

In recent years, international donors have tried to shift from humanitarian to development aid, particularly in Jordan, hoping to encourage refugees to remain in the Middle East. 

The programme, meant to create jobs for 200,000 Syrian refugees, has had partial success.

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