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German President Steinmeier praises Jordan as 'anchor of stability' in region

Feb 19, 2026

Berlin [Germany], February 19: German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier on Wednesday praised Jordan's mediating role in the Middle East as he visited Amman for talks with King Abdullah II.The two leaders know each other well, with Steinmeier having last travelled to Jordan almost exactly a year ago, while Abdullah paid a return visit to Berlin a few weeks later. "Jordan has always been a country that has played the role of an anchor of stability in the region," said Steinmeier.Germany also acknowledges Jordan's solidarity with refugees, the German president said, calling the country an "example for the world" as he visited a registration centre for the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) in Amman.According to the UNHCR, Jordan is one of the countries with the largest number of refugees worldwide. Around a third of the population of approximately 11.5 million people are refugees, said Maria Stavropoulou, UNHCR representative in Jordan. She thanked Germany for taking in refugees itself and supporting other host countries.Germany has significantly reduced its financial support for the UNHCR in Jordan, dropping from $50 million in 2022 to $10 million last year.Steinmeier's visit to Amman was the last stop on his three-day visit to the Middle East after two days of talks in Lebanon. In the evening, Steinmeier and his wife Elke Büdenbender were scheduled tofly back to Berlin.Source: Qatar Tribune

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Indigenous CAR-T Therapy Signals New Phase for India's Cancer Care and Biotech Manufacturing

New Delhi [India], February 19: When Ms. Arora's cancer returned, the emotional weight of relapse was immediate. Having already undergone standard lines of treatment for non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) after her diagnosis in 2022, she now faced a narrower set of options--each complex, each uncertain. "I remember feeling that the ground had shifted again," she says. "But my medical team walked me through the available options, and we decided to move forward with an indigenous CAR-T therapy." Today, her story forms part of a broader shift unfolding in India's oncology ecosystem--one marked not just by clinical innovation, but by homegrown scientific capability.

Feb 19, 2026