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American Express Travel Announces 2012 Representative Excellence Award Winners

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

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American Express Travel Announces 2012 Representative Excellence Award Winners

U.S. Representative Agency Winners Honored for Superior Sales and Year-Over-Year Growth

NEW YORK–(BUSINESS WIRE)– American Express Travel has announced that 25 agency members of its U.S. Representative Travel Network have earned the prestigious Representative Excellence Award for 2012.

The Representative Excellence Award honors the achievements of the Representative Travel Network member agencies that have reached superior results for their concentrated effort in selling preferred suppliers and their engagement of American Express products and programs.

“We are excited to recognize these dedicated travel agent partners for their outstanding participation within our network,” said Tony Gonchar, Vice President, U.S. Retail Travel Network, and American Express Travel. “The 25 agencies selected have represented the American Express brand in an exemplary fashion and delivered extraordinary results in 2012, contributing to an exceptional year for American Express Travel and the industry overall.”

This year’s Representative Excellence Award winners are:

All Seasons -Birmingham, AL
Altour -New York City, NY
AMT – West Covina, CA
Andrew Harper – Westmont, IL
Avoya Travel – Miami, FL
Avenue Travel – West Orange, NJ
Azumano Travel – Portland, OR
Boca Express – Boca Raton, FL
Bursch Travel – Alexandria, MN
Canyon Creek – Richardson, TX
Carrousel Travel – Minneapolis, MN
CI Travel – Norfolk, VA
Corporate Travel Center – Moorpark, CA
CruisePlanners – Coral Springs, FL
E Clarke Travel – Fort Lee, NJ
Fairway Travel – Carrollton, TX
Fox World Travel – Oshkosh, WI
Gulliver Travel – Fort Worth, TX
MacNair Travel Management – Alexandria, VA
Milne Travel – Barre, VT
National Travel Systems – Lubbock, TX
Pennsylvania Travel – Paoli, PA
Prestige Travel & Cruises – Las Vegas, NV
Springdale Travel – Mobile, AL
Travelink – Nashville, TN
The Travel Team – Buffalo, NY
Williamsburg Travel – Atlanta, GA


About American Express Travel:

American Express entered the travel agency business in 1915, and today operates one of the world’s largest travel agency networks in more than 140 countries worldwide.

American Express Company (www.americanexpress.com) is a leading global payments, network and travel company founded in 1850.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

UN: No funds yet for Syrian refugees

The U.N. refugee agency says it has not yet received the funds recently pledged for Syrian refugees and is struggling to help rising numbers fleeing the country’s nearly 2-year-old civil war.

Andrew Harper, the agency’s representative to Jordan, told The Associated Press on Sunday that the $1.5 billion pledged last month at an international donor conference in Kuwait “has not come through.”

He says the lack of funds is making it very difficult to provide shelter, food, clothing and blankets to thousands of Syrians who daily cross into Jordan.

Jordan says it hosts more than 368,000 of the 787,000 Syrians displaced in the region.

Speaking by telephone from Geneva, Harper says U.N. agencies in Jordan are spending $1 million a day to help the refugees.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Jordan: Syrians fight over tents in refugee camp

Officials say clashes have erupted over tent distribution in a Jordanian camp for Syrian refugees, highlighting the difficult living conditions there.

Refugee affairs spokesman Anmar Hmud said Syrian refugees fought each other, and one was slightly injured. They also tried to attack Jordanian riot police guarding the Zaatari camp Sunday as tents donated by a Norwegian charity were distributed. He said the police fired teargas to disperse the crowd.

Rioting by refugees has become a recurrent problem, especially as winter storms and icy temperatures have worsened Zaatari’s already harsh living conditions.

Andrew Harper, the U.N. refugee agency representative to Jordan, confirmed that the clash took place but provided no further details.

Jordan hosts about 320,000 Syrian refugees who fled the civil war. About 60,000 are housed in the camp.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Wave of 21,000 Syrian refugees overwhelm camp in Jordan

A wave of 21,000 Syrian refugees in the past week, moving into northern Jordan at about five times the usual daily rate, has overwhelmed this crowded camp already struggling with flooding, short supplies and tent fires.

As newly arrived refugees unpacked on Monday, one family’s tent went up in flames after kerosene spewed onto a nearby heater. Black smoke poured into the sky. The family’s meager possessions were incinerated. In a sign of frustration, some refugees pelted a fire truck with stones, cracking its windshield, saying the firefighters were slow to respond.

“Almost every day, one or two tents catch fire,” said 22-year-old Abu Anis, who like most refugees interviewed at the camp asked to be identified by his nickname because he feared retaliation against relatives still living in Syria. “Thank God, other people haven’t been hurt because the tents are so close together.”

The United Nations says the huge influx of Syrian refugees crossing into neighboring Jordan during the past week was larger than anticipated and left its agencies, already suffering from a funding shortfall, reeling under the influx. U.N. officials are crying out for more funding as they rush to build showers, toilets and a school for the newcomers.

The UNICEF representative to Jordan, Dominque Hyde, said more than 21,000 Syrian refugees arrived at Jordan‘s sole refugee camp just in the past week.

“We were expecting larger numbers in the new year, but not the 3,000 a day that have been coming across to Zaatari camp,” she said.

New arrivals — most of them coming from southern Syria where fighting has been intense — were crossing into Jordan at about five times the rate anticipated, according to Andrew Harper of the U.N. refugee agency in Jordan. Until recently, an average of 700 refugees arrived at the desert facility each day.

International donors have pledged less than 3 percent to a $1 billion U.N. appeal made last month to aid the more than 670,000 Syrian refugees estimated to have fled to surrounding countries during the 22-month uprising to topple President Bashar Assad. The U.N. says it hopes a donor conference for Syrian refugees Wednesday in Kuwait will rectify the dire funding situation.

Harper said the Jordanian government has done what it can to provide protection to the 320,000 Syrian refugees it now hosts, but it cannot continue to bear the strain. The U.N. refugee agency said Syrian refugees in Jordan required about $500,000 in assistance. About one-fifth the refugees live in the camp, while the rest shelter in mainly northern communities.

Crossing into Jordan was frightening for Abu Nidal, a 50-year-old farmer from near the Golan Heights. He and 180 others, including women and children, were forced to row across territory flooded by waters from the Yarmouk River.

“The women and children were so afraid because the small boats were rickety and the water (was) deep,” he said. “It took eight hours, but we finally arrived safely with the help of the young men and the Jordanian army.”

Hyde said the influx to the camp means more showers, toilets, shelters, and schools need to be built. And more refugees also means a rising demand for water in Jordan, already the fourth most water scarce country in the world. She described the sharp increase in refugees as “daunting.”

“You can see that many children at Zaatari — called the `kids’ camp’ because they make up the greatest numbers here — don’t have socks or even shoes in the dead of winter,” she said as children played on swings and slides nearby.

Hyde said 24,000 Syrian refugee children entered Jordan in the past month alone — the highest number ever.

“This means that we need to be building a new school immediately,” she said, expressing hope that a new one could be constructed by mid-February.

Classes are to resume at the existing school on Feb. 5, but desperate refugees moved in earlier this month because howling winter winds blew their tents down and others were flooded. They say they are still awaiting alternative accommodations. Other camp residents have started jokingly describing the school as “occupied territory.”

“We’ve had officials come and visit — even the Bahraini government who built the school — and still no one has responded to our needs for new housing,” said Abu Mohamed, a 35-year-old businessman who is staying in the school where about two dozen people share a single classroom partitioned by rows of desks.

“They haven’t given us heaters, tents or trailers,” said the man who fled fighting in the Syrian capital, Damascus, with his family of four. “Rain is forecast again. Doctors tell us at the camp hospital that our children are sick from the cold.”

Anne Richard, the U.S. assistant secretary of state for population, refugees and migration, says that as more Syrians pour out of their homeland, more countries are needed to contribute assistance.

Last year, the U.S. contributed $220 million to assist Syrian refugees. Speaking Monday in the Jordanian capital, Richard said the U.S. would announce additional funding for Syria at the conference in Kuwait, but declined to provide details.

Another Abu Walid, 46, from the southern Syrian town of Dara’a, said that as much as he and the other refugees need the aid, what they really want is an end to nightmarish killing, rape and shelling back home. His 16-year-old son was killed in Syria by shrapnel from artillery tank fire as he walked home from work.

“We want this awful crisis to end and to return home,” said the slender man, a wool scarf tied around his neck to ward off the cold.

“The world is sleeping. It’s failing us. … How can it continue to turn its back on us every day as more and more are killed inside Syria?”

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

UN: Syrian refugees overwhelm Jordan camp

A wave of 21,000 Syrian refugees in the past week, moving into northern Jordan at about five times the usual daily rate, has overwhelmed this crowded camp that’s already struggling with flooding, short supplies and tent fires.

As newly arrived refugees unpacked on Monday, one family’s tent went up in flames after kerosene spewed onto a nearby heater. Black smoke poured into the sky. The family’s meager possessions were incinerated. In a sign of frustration, some refugees pelted a fire truck with stones, cracking its windshield, saying the firefighters were slow to respond.

“Almost every day, one or two tents catch fire,” said 22-year-old Abu Anis, who like most refugees interviewed at the camp asked to be identified by his nickname because they feared retaliation against relatives still living in Syria. “Thank God, other people haven’t been hurt because the tents are so close together.”

The United Nations says the huge influx of Syrian refugees crossing into neighboring Jordan during the past week was larger than anticipated and left its agencies, already suffering from a funding shortfall, reeling under the influx. U.N. officials are crying out for more funding as they rush to build showers, toilets and a school for the newcomers.

The UNICEF representative to Jordan, Dominque Hyde, said more than 21,000 Syrian refugees arrived at Jordan‘s sole refugee camp just in the past week.

“We were expecting larger numbers in the new year, but not the 3,000 a day that have been coming across to Zaatari camp,” she said.

New arrivals — most of them coming from southern Syria where fighting has been intense — were crossing into Jordan at about five times the rate anticipated, according to Andrew Harper of the U.N. refugee agency in Jordan. Until recently, an average of 700 refugees arrived at the desert facility each day.

International donors have pledged less than 3 percent to a $1 billion U.N. appeal made last month to aid the more than 670,000 Syrian refugees estimated to have fled to surrounding countries during the 22-month uprising to topple President Bashar Assad. The U.N. says it hopes a donor conference for Syrian refugees Wednesday in Kuwait will rectify the dire funding situation.

Harper said the Jordanian government has done what it can to provide protection to the 320,000 Syrian refugees it now hosts, but it cannot continue to bear the strain. The U.N. refugee agency said Syrian refugees in Jordan required about $500,000 in assistance. About one-fifth the refugees live in the camp, while the rest shelter in mainly northern communities.

Crossing into Jordan was frightening for Abu Nidal, a 50-year-old farmer from near the Golan Heights. He and 180 others, including women and children, were forced to row across territory flooded by waters from the Yarmouk River.

“The women and children were so afraid because the small boats were rickety and the water (was) deep,” he said. “It took eight hours, but we finally arrived safely with the help of the young men and the Jordanian army.”

Hyde said the influx to the camp means more showers, toilets, shelters, and schools need to be built. And more refugees also means a rising demand for water in Jordan, already the fourth most water scarce country in the world. She described the sharp increase in refugees as “daunting.”

“You can see that many children at Zaatari — called the ‘kids’ camp’ because they make up the greatest numbers here — don’t have socks or even shoes in the dead of winter,” she said as children played on swings and slides nearby.

Hyde said 24,000 Syrian refugee children entered Jordan in the past month alone — the highest number ever.

“This means that we need to be building a new school immediately,” she said, expressing hope that a new one could be constructed by mid-February.

Classes are to resume at the existing school on Feb. 5, but desperate refugees moved in earlier this month because howling winter winds blew their tents down and others were flooded. They say they are still awaiting alternative accommodations. Other camp residents have started jokingly describing the school as “occupied territory.”

“We’ve had officials come and visit — even the Bahraini government who built the school — and still no one has responded to our needs for new housing,” said Abu Mohamed, a 35-year-old businessman who is staying in the school where about two dozen people share a single classroom partitioned by rows of desks.

“They haven’t given us heaters, tents or trailers,” said the man who fled fighting in the Syrian capital, Damascus, with his family of four. “Rain is forecast again. Doctors tell us at the camp hospital that our children are sick from the cold.”

Anne Richard, the U.S. assistant secretary of state for population, refugees and migration, says that as more Syrians pour out of their homeland, more countries are needed to contribute assistance.

Last year, the U.S. contributed $220 million to assist Syrian refugees. Speaking Monday in the Jordanian capital, Richard said the U.S. would announce additional funding for Syria at the conference in Kuwait, but declined to provide details.

Another Abu Walid, 46, from the southern Syrian town of Dara’a, said that as much as he and the other refugees need the aid, what they really want is an end to nightmarish killing, rape and shelling back home. His 16-year-old son was killed in Syria by shrapnel from artillery tank fire as he walked home from work.

“We want this awful crisis to end and to return home,” said the slender man, a wool scarf tied around his neck to ward off the cold.

“The world is sleeping. It’s failing us. … How can it continue to turn its back on us every day as more and more are killed inside Syria?”

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

UN: Spike in number of Syrians fleeing to Jordan

The U.N. refugee agency in Jordan says there has been a spike in the number of Syrians fleeing the civil war at home and crossing into Jordan.

UNHCR‘s representative Andrew Harper says about 3,000 Syrians have entered Jordan every night for the past 5 days.

Harper said Tuesday the spike is due to intensified shelling, fighting and the “desperate situation” in Syria‘s southern villages.

He says Jordan‘s Zaatari refugee camp is filling up quickly and that the UNHCR is running out of money to expand and set up other camps.

Harper expressed hope the upcoming conference in Kuwait on January 30 will raise funds for Syrian refugees.

Jordan hosts more than 300,000 Syrians. About one-fifth of them are housed in Zaatari while the rest live among the local communities.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News