Tourism Minister Lina Annab said that the government has stopped fining tourist restaurants and cafés that have not obtained legal permits to serve hookah, on the condition that they rectify their status by the end of this year, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.
Annab said that the ministry, the Jordan Restaurant Association, the Greater Amman Municipality (GAM) and the Health Ministry reached a solution for the issue of serving hookah in tourist establishments.
The Ministry of Health had previously decided that places licensed to serve hookahs were exempted from the law prohibiting smoking in public places.
However, GAM decided otherwise and refused to renew their licences, or issue new ones.
The law stipulates that all establishments must obtain licences and follow the regulations, adding that no new licences would be issued or transferred from one location to the other. However, it stated that previous licences could be renewed for the same location regardless of a change in ownership.
Annab stressed that restaurants and cafés must abide by the regulations, which include not allowing people under the age of 18 to smoke hookah, providing a sufficient ventilation system, and separating smokers and non-smokers in a 50-50 per cent ratio of the establishments’ space with clear indication signs.