In boats of up to 50 people, Nicaraguans try to enter Costa Rica, that keeps its borders closed to them and all foreigners that are not residents.
Through the Sarapiquí area in Costa Rica, many Nicaraguans have tried to enter Costa Rica illegally, despite restrictions due to the coronavirus pandemic and the intensified operations of the immigration police and border police of the Fuerza Publica.
Sarapiqui is one of the “blind spots” – points used by illegals to enter and exit Costa Rica undetected by authorities. Sectors near the San Juan River, Trinidad, Las Marías, La Tigra, Fátima and Boca Sarapiquí are some examples.
“From different points, you can see boats with Nicaraguans, who try to dock on the Costa Rican side in an irregular way (illegally), however, in the presence of the police and land custody actions, the boats do not approach the Tica shore to dock, opting for continuing to San Juan del Norte, Nicaragua,” reported Costa Rica’s immigration service on their social networks.
Boats up to 50 passengers
Costa Rica has deployed officers from the different police forces to protect the borders, which will continue closed until April 30 (extended from April 12). There are also mobility restrictions throughout the entire country, and the government announced that legal residents leaving during the emergency period would not be able to re-enter.
During the national emergency, Costa Rica is allowing only the entry of citizens and legal residents, who are then subjected to a 14-day mandatory quarantine.
Although the immigration police control illegal control points across the 309 kilometer long border, migrants find ways of crossing, in either direction.
On a permanent basis, immigration officers are carrying out prevention work, in particular along the San Juan River, during this national emergency, their work is intensified. There is a police presence in different points, improvised berths, moving according to the movements of people, ensuring that no one enters or leaves illegally.
Agentes de migración de Costa Rica ubican embarcaciones con nicaragüenses que intentaban ingresar ilegalmente a este pais.
Según las autoridades, desde el cierre de fronteras se han rechazado más de 5,000 personas extranjeras que han tratado de ingresar de forma irregular al país pic.twitter.com/GWio5p7YQy
— Trinchera de la Noticia (@LaTrincheraNic) April 9, 2020
Since the closure of the borders, immigration authorities report more than 5,000 people have been rejected trying to enter the country, the majority of them Nicaraguans.
A resident of the Delta Costa Rica area told La Teja that “it is not a secret to anyone that they enter here, at different times of the year, one is sad, because they come to work and because they give them medical attention or whatever, but right now nobody knows how things are in Nicaragua and literally as they and we say, we are just crossing the San Juan away, there is a lot of police presence, but we don’t know how long they going to be able to (cross) with so much police”.
No one says anything about the coronavirus
“A lot of Nicaragua is desperate to cross and you constantly see the boats, overloaded with people … We have a family in Guápiles and we are afraid to go there because one is afraid of carrying the virus to them … we will have to see what will happen next week,” a man identified only as Castro told La Prensa in Nicaragua.
A 23-year-old Tico missionary identified by his last names Zúñiga Zamora will have have to pay a ¢450,000 colones fine for disregarding the mandatory quarantine imposed on his arrival from Mexico.
Zúñiga, like all Costa Rican and residents arriving from abroad, had to stay at home, isolated, for 14 days, in the fight against Covid-19, but he did not.
Now, in addition to paying the fine, he must comply with the preventive measure of house arrest until Saturday, April 18.
The Ministerio Publico (prosecutor’s office) indicated in a statement that a criminal case has been opened against the man by the Assistant Prosecutor of Pococí for disobedience to authorities.
The fine follows from the reform of the Ley General de Salud, approved by the Legislative Assembly on Friday, April 3, and in which those who disrespect the quarantine face sanctions ranging from ¢450,000 to ¢2.2 million colones.
The Ministerio Publico said the man arrived in Costa Rica on April 3 and was duly notified to stay at home, however, he was seen out and about on Monday.
“He was located yesterday (Monday) at 1:26 pm, when he was in the center of Guápiles, he was detained by the police and presented to the Public Ministry, where they opened an investigation,” the Prosecutor’s Office reported.
Although there is no suspicion that man has the coronavirus, he has to comply. The law contemplates higher fines: ¢1.3 million colones for having been in direct contact with a positive case, and ¢2.2 million if tests positive for covid-19.
The Minister of Healj, Daniel Salas, said that the idea is that these fines should not be applied, stressing that people obey the stay at home order, but if they need be, they will.
Salas said that in a case like this, Zúñiga will have 22 days to pay; If he does not, it could lead to a judicial collection.
While the majority of restaurants will be re-opening following a temporary closing this week, some will not, like the case of the renowned Italian restaurant located in La Paco commercial center in Escazu, Il Panino.
The owners blame the closure of a direct effect caused by the national pandemic. The covid-19 affected it such that it did not even manage to obtain the 50% allowed capacity to be able to stay open.
“As you all know, the country is going through an economic crisis derived from COVID-19, a situation that has also affected the world economy, further aggravated by the restriction policies imposed by the Government as part of the measures to stop the spread of the disease, such as promoting social distancing, operating restaurants at 50% of their capacity, the total closure of the service in some periods and the prolonged time of this global emergency, Inverkafe SA it has been forced to definitively close Il Panino and therefore, proceed with what corresponds to each case,” said the statement released to the press.
The company did not provide details of how many people will be without work, as well as their obligations to the payment of severance to its now-former employees.
The closure of Il Panino that opened almost 20 years ago (August 2000) is immediate.
Workers economically affected by the national emergency of the new coronavirus will be able to request government subsidies of up to ¢125,000 colones, in case they have lost their job or their employment contract has been suspended.
Workers who have had their workday reduced and now receive 50% of their salary, may request subsidies of up to ¢62,500.
An application can be made on online
To access this bonus, called “Proteger”, affected workers must fill out a form through at www.proteger.go.cr.
“We are going to use all the resources and tools to help families whose incomes have been reduced and whose basic food needs can be met,” said the Minister of Human Development and Social Welfare, Juan Luis Bermúdez.
The requirements to obtain the subsidy are:
Be a Costa Rican or legal resident
Having lost a job or source of income, having a reduced working day or a suspended contract, all as a result of the covid-19 emergency.
To fill out the form, applicants must have handy their cedula (national ID) for Costa Ricans and a valid DIMEX, the immigration document issued to residents, have a bank account in colones and provide their IBAN account number in the application.
The Minister of Labor and Social Security, Geannina Dinarte, insisted that it is an easy, fast and free mechanism designed to guarantee that the affected can receive support from the State but, at the same time, they maintain physical distancing.
The Labor minister did not rule out that malicious sites may arise that want to scam people.
“Know that the service is free and it will always be absolutely virtual, only through this website,” she said.
Bith Dinarte and Bermúdez stressed that the subsidy is not available to public sector workers. Nor can pensioners, nor the families that receive other monetary transfers from the State, nor people who continue to receive 100% of their salary.
To receive the subsidy, the applicant must have proof of being laid off or reduced work hours and salary, providing a letter from the employer or some document that certifies the change in employment.
How a discovery that brought us Viagra could help those battling the coronavirus
Latimes – Nitric oxide is a gas with a pretty enviable medical resume.
How a discovery that brought us Viagra could help those battling the coronavirus
Its discovery gave rise to a treatment that snatches thousands of “blue babies” — newborns starved of oxygen by a heart defect — from the jaws of death every year. Later, research into the gas’s knack for relaxing blood vessels led to the development of the world’s best-known little blue pill — the erectile dysfunction drug Viagra.
In 1992, the journal Science named nitric oxide “molecule of the year.” And in1998, UCLA pharmacologist Louis J. Ignarro shared a Nobel Prize in medicine for uncovering nitric oxide’s role as a “signaling molecule in the cardiovascular system.”
Nitric oxide may not be done yet. The colorless, odorless gas, inhaled through a mask or even from a small “flute,” is now being tested as an experimental treatment for COVID-19. It may also prove helpful in protecting healthcare workers on the front line of the pandemic from getting sick.
At hospitals in Boston, Alabama, Louisiana, Sweden and Austria, researchers have launched a clinical trial to test inhaled nitric oxide in patients with mild to moderate cases of COVID-19. The trial will test whether the gas can drive down the number of patients who end up needing breathing assistance from a mechanical ventilator, a piece of equipment that’s in critically short supply.
For about 30 minutes two or three times a day, study participants assigned to the trial’s active arm will inhale a high dose of nitric oxide through a mask. A control group will go without the gas.
In Italy, where the gas was used under more haphazard conditions, the treatment appeared to dramatically boost oxygen levels in the blood of COVID-19 patients, said Dr. Lorenzo Berra, the critical-care specialist at Massachusetts General Hospital who is leading the new trial. But it’ll take more rigorous testing to clarify how much nitric oxide helps, he said.
A proposed second trial, still under scrutiny by a research panel at Massachusetts General Hospital, would enroll healthcare workers who are routinely exposed to patients with COVID-19 and are themselves at high risk of infection. For 10 to 15 minutes at the start and end of every shift, doctors and nurses would tug on a handheld device and inhale a high dose of nitric oxide.
In humans, nitric oxide is naturally generated by 60 trillion cells that line our blood vessels, and by some brain cells as well. It helps regulate blood pressure, engulfs invading toxins, prevents platelets in the blood from forming clots, and signals that food has arrived and that sex is at hand.
But sometimes, a supplemental supply is needed.
When inflammation, emphysema or a disease like cystic fibrosis attacks the lungs, the large blood vessels and tiny capillaries that deliver oxygen constrict. Inhaled nitric oxide relaxes those vessels, increasing the transfer of oxygen to the blood and easing the heart’s workload.
Since 1993, it’s been used to rescue oxygen-starved newborns with congenital heart defects, as well as infants with persistent pulmonary hypertension. These young patients begin by breathing a high dose of nitric oxide in their tiny neonatal intensive care bubbles. Their bodies usually respond by making the gas on their own, typically in five days or so.
And that’s it, said Dr. Warren Zapol, a pioneer in the medical uses of nitric oxide and director of Mass General’s Anesthesia Center for Clinical Research. “You turn it on,” he said, and the babies go from blue to pink before your eyes.
In adults with pulmonary hypertension, inhaled nitric oxide dilates the blood vessels of the lungs without affecting blood vessels elsewhere, making it a safe way to relieve high blood pressure. The gas is also administered after heart surgery to prevent the lungs from stiffening.
“It’s a pretty remarkable drug,” Berra said, because its effect, when inhaled, is limited to the lungs. “It has a risk profile that is minimal.”
In 2004, researchers at the University of Leuven in Belgium discovered yet another property of nitric oxide: It killed coronaviruses.
More specifically, it killed the coronavirus that leapt from bats to humans and sparked the 2003 epidemic of severe acute respiratory syndrome, the disease better known as SARS.
In African green monkey cells that had been infected with the SARS coronavirus, an organic nitric oxide compound cut the virus’s ability to replicate in half. A year later, Swedish scientists confirmed the finding and found that the higher the dose, the better the gas worked to shut the SARS virus down.
“The story ended there,” Berra said. The SARS epidemic was quashed in eight months, and “nobody tested anymore.”
But Berra didn’t forget that if a new coronavirus ever started targeting people’s lungs, he had a gas on hand that might treat the resulting disease on two fronts — by strengthening the lungs under attack and blocking the virus’ ability to sustain its assault.
This winter, as he watched the new coronavirus known as SARS-CoV-2 spread across the globe, Berra dusted off those studies, talked to the companies that supplied nitric oxide in tanks, and readied his plan.
A total of 240 subjects are expected to enroll in the trial of patients with mild to moderate cases of COVID-19. The follow-on study of healthcare workers aims to include 470 people.
When used at high levels, as is planned in the trials proposed by Berra, the gas will require close monitoring of hemoglobin levels to avert the development of methemoglobinemia, a condition in which red blood cells fail to bond to oxygen. In such cases, Berra said, the dose can be lowered and hemoglobin will quickly revert to normal.
In China, meanwhile, scientists battling the COVID-19 pandemic have focused on a much earlier finding to emerge from Ignarro’s research.
In 1988, researchers found that nitric oxide seemed to play a role in readying the mammalian male for sex. By relaxing the soft tissue of the penis, it allowed blood to flow in and engorge the organ.
Viagra came to the U.S. market eight years later.
Now Viagra is being explored as a treatment for COVID-19. A pilot study in China is testing the drug in COVID-19 patients with breathing troubles who do not yet need mechanical breathing assistance.
Like nitric oxide, Viagra, known generically as sildenafil, dilates blood vessels. The Chinese scientists investigating it believe it may help open the tiny vessels that draw oxygen from the lungs, allowing patients to overcome the respiratory distress that occurs in some cases of COVID-19.
Nitric oxide’s growing list of medical uses continues to delight the pharmacologist who was among the first to explore the gas. Whenever a scientific journal suggests a new beneficial effect, “I’m ecstatic,” Ignarro said. “I go in to my living room — which we call The Nobel Room — and I take out my prize and just appreciate it.”
Then, he added, “I go back to work,” reading and writing manuscripts and updating his textbook, “Nitric Oxide: Biology and Pathobiology,” on the gas’s medical functions.
The number of people infected in Costa Rica with the new coronavirus increased to 539, according to the latest report issued this Thursday by health authorities.
This is an increase of 37 cases – the largest in any single day since the first case – compared to the previous day, when 502 covid-19 patients were reported.
According to the latest data, there are currently 259 infected women and 280 men. Most of the patients are Costa Rican, 505 and the rest foreigners, 34.
The infected are 511 (of which 29 seniors) and 18 are minors, with cases registered in 57 of the 82 cantones, with Siquirres, Limon joining the list.
The number of recovered are now 30, these are people who had been infected.
The active number of cases is 506.
19 people continue in hospital, of which 13 are in intensive care, ages ranging from 35 to 85.
Wednesday afternoon, the country recorded its 3rd death due to covid-19, a 45-year-old man with no risk factors.
Regarding the increase of 37 cases in the last 24 hours, the Minister of Health, Daniel Salas, explained that it takes between 4 and 5 for symptoms to appear, attributed the single high increase to the irresponsible actions of last Friday when many were out shopping, ahead of the stricter stay at home and vehicular restrictions that are in place for this week.
“Just before the vehicle restriction (on Friday) we saw an inappropriate behavior of agglomeration in stores and that causes us to have a significant increase in cases.
“We are entering the final phase of Easter, I know there is tiredness, boredom, but this is a unique time in history.
“We have to be persistent, we have to maintain discipline in handwashing, not kiss each other, disinfect surfaces, avoid public places. Those measures make a world of difference,” stressed the Minister.
On the other hand, Salas was happy to see a drop in the hospitalized.
Today, I thank God for living in an underdeveloped country like Costa Rica, where a week after the first case of the coronavirus and the UCR’s school of mechanical engineering and physics had the prototypes to locally produce respirators.
Atardecer en tiquicia. Photo credit Randall Hernández Mora / Artelista.com
Where the Clodorito Picado Institute tests with the plasma of recovered patients thanks to many years of experience in the production of anti-physic serums.
Where the INA puts its workshops to work producing locally gowns, sheets, towels, and other hospital implements.
Where in a matter of days a hospital is set up to increase the number of specialized beds with state-of-the-art technology.
Where the mind of a Costa Rican based in Germany devices an App to facilitate procedures for seniors from home.
Where a health system with the CCSS at the forefront hires a charter to bring medical supplies from China.
Where only three have died from this pandemic.
Where medical care is not denied to no one without any kind of distinction.
Where the local markets make food available to those most in need.
Where our health and safety workers suspend their vacations.
Where our farmers work tirelessly to fill our pantries because looking at it well, we are self-sufficient: we produce milk, rice, meat, vegetables, beans, fruits, vegetables, in general, most of everything we need for our basic food basket.
Where basic services are generally accessible, medicines are sent to high-risk users by mail.
Where even without an army our Fuerza Publica (national police) and traffic police maintain order.
Where even in the most remote part of our country we find schools and EBAIS (clinics).
Today, in the developed world, the United States exceeded the number of infected people from Italy, Spain and China together and many cannot afford to pay a test to see if they are carriers/
Today I also wonder how underdeveloped our country really is vs. those who say they are developed.
An American who lives in Nicaragua posted on Monday, April 6, on her social networks the difficulty of getting a Covid-19 test in the country, after she presented symptoms and because she lived in a place where mainly foreigners live.
In Nicaragua, it is unknown how many Covid-19 tests have been performed
After several days of trying to get tested, finally, the Ministry of Health (Minsa) did test her and Wednesday they notified her that she was negative.
The woman, who lives in Rancho Santana, in Tola, Rivas, said on her Facebook post that she arrived in Nicaragua from Florida, 26 days before the symptoms began, so “whatever disease I have, I contracted it in the country (Nicaragua),” she said.
The World Health Organization (WHO) has assured that the time in which a person begins to present the symptoms of coronavirus after acquiring it is 14 days.
“I tried to get tested and it really is quite a challenge here. I do not know if I have Covid-19, but I feel it is my responsibility to act as if I have it and isolate myself completely, “said the American. She added that her husband and children did the same despite the fact that they had no symptoms.
The American said that she had symptoms such as headaches and even fever for one night, but her main concern was respiratory distress, so she was forced to take precautions of social distancing from her family and her business clients. She looked for ways to get the test done as soon as possible to rule out the coronavirus but it was difficult.
Test was negative
As an update to her Facebook post, the woman assured that two days ago she was able to access the test and on Wednesday, April 8, she was notified that the result was negative, however, she said that she is still acting “as if she had the virus.”
“I continue the combination of medications (recommended by my U.S. doctor) that I feel have been helpful in alleviating my symptoms. I will follow the reentry guidelines outlined by the CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), which states that Covid patients should stay home until symptoms have improved (at least 7 days from the start of symptoms) ”, she added. “I am committed to recovering at home until I am 100%.”
“It wasn’t fun being the ‘number one patient’ in the area,” she argued. “Although the vast majority of the community has been extremely loving and supportive, there have been some who have spread terrible rumors and have made an unnecessary judgment of me,” she said.
The Minsa in its protocol states that the person will be treated as a suspected case if they present an acute respiratory infection with a history of having been in countries affected by Covid-19, or were in close contact with a confirmed case or another suspect within the previous 14 days.
In Nicaragua, private hospitals have requested that MINSA authorize the importation of rapid test kits for Covid-19 and thus help the health system diagnose cases, but to date, authorities have remained silent and public hospitals are the only authorized to carry out the tests.
Epidemiology specialists have declared that this is a sign that local contagion does exist in the country but that the Ministry has not revealed or identified it, or has not begun the investigation of that contagion focus that Cuba reports.
At the moment, there are four suspected and six confirmed cases in the country: three are in a delicate state of health, two have recovered and one deceased.
The closure of borders is a measure that the government of Daniel Ortega refuses to take, despite the fact that almost all the countries of the region have done so, as a possibility to contain the spread of Covid-19.
The Augusto C. Sandino (Managua) airport is a ghost town these days as airlines have suspended flights to Nicaragua. Aeromexico, the last to do so, will on April 9.
Specialists assure that if the country is truly in the stage of the imported case, it would be even more relevant to implement it because it would mean reducing the risk of contagion.
The six cases confirmed by Covid-19 in the country have come from abroad: three of them from the United States, one from Panama, one from Colombia and one that the Minsa “is treating as imported” but has not said where it came from.
Of the three from the United States, they are said to be: a 52-year-old woman, who has already been discharged; a 70-year-old man who is in poor health but stable; and another of a 76-year-old, with multiple chronic affections, but stable.
The Panama case was the first one reported in the country; the one from Colombia is the only death reported.
All of them had to have entered through the Augusto C. Sandino International Airport (MAG), in Managua, where the authorities only take the data of the people who enter the country and give them telephone number follow-up.
Recently, the president sanctioned by the National Assembly, Gustavo Porras, assured that more than 16,000 people had entered the country who came from countries where there is active transmission, and the Minsa visited them daily.
This was questioned by doctors because in reality there is no quarantine or surveillance control and mobilizing is at the discretion of the person, knowing that they could be an asymptomatic case.
Quarantine, self-isolation, stay at home, social distancing, and border closures are measures that many countries of the world have implemented in order to reduce the contagion curve of Covid-19.
For example, Costa Rica only allows Costa Rican citizens and residents to enter the country and has strengthened its security to avoid irregular (illegal) crossing through “blind spots” and imposed a 14-day mandatory quarantine on them.
Honduras, the neighbor to the north, also has its borders closed.
However, Nicaragua keeps the airport open, despite the last airline, Aeromexico, will suspend operations in the country on April 9.
Specialist in infectious diseases Carlos Quant points out that even if there is community transmission, the measure of stopping transit between one country and another can slow down the progression of Covid-19, which already exceeds 1.5 million people infected worldwide.
Asymptomatic cases
The new coronavirus is more difficult to face because, in a certain way it becomes invisible, it can be in a person’s body and not have any type of symptoms, so Quant explains that someone who comes from abroad the first thing that happens is that they are in the possibility of infecting the family, and then they infect other people with whom they are in contact with, and when the epidemiological link is lost, they are now community transmission.
In the country, laboratory tests are not being carried out on all the people who are entering the country by air, land, and sea.
Public health specialist Alejandro Lagos explains that open borders mean that at any time you can have a virus carrier that infects wherever you go and the most exposed are the same immigration and customs workers.
Likewise, the expert indicates that the policy of refusing to close the border posts, as neighbors Costa Rica and Honduras did, is one of the factors that may move the country from its current phase (imported cases) to that of community.
Watching the television reports, reading the online reports and social network posts, I notice the use of infected and contaminated interchangeably.
I don’t you about you, but the use of the term ‘contaminated’ for a person sick of the coronavirus covid-19 really bothers me.
So much that I am talking back to the television. We all do it, don’t judge. My first response is, “idiot, it’s infected, not contaminated” then realize I am the idiot. But that is another story.
So, what is the difference?
Definition of infected according to Merriam-Webster dictionary: having an infection: contaminated with an infective agent (such as a bacterium or virus); an infected wound //through a number of different means, these viruses persist at very low, hard-to-detect levels in infected cells. — The Journal of the American Medical Association
Definition of contaminated, same dictionary: soiled, stained, corrupted, or infected by contact or association: made unfit for use by the introduction of unwholesome or undesirable elements.
I did a quick search online for some answers, where I found the following that might help.
If you spit in my drink, then I would consider it contaminated. I may or may not be infected after I drink it though, because an infection usually signifies a sickness, though it is used figuratively to describe the same things as contamination.
The sink was contaminated by the raw chicken. Her cut was contaminated by the chicken juice and it got an infection, so she had to take medicine.
Contamination mostly depends on an outside agent taking place. you can have contaminated food, contaminated objects, contaminated spaces. Infection is related to the body. When you have a virus or bacteria, and your body reacts to it you have an infection.
From the above, it contaminates me when contaminated is used instead of an infection.
What bothers me, even more, is the word being spewed by at a couple of health officials when referring to cases of covid-19 in Costa Rica and one news anchor which I will reserve to name. For now.
They are professionals. They should be professionals. The real professionals beside them use the right term, according to me. They should know better.
The Minister of Health, Daniel Salas, disclosed some details related to the abrupt increase in cases of coronavirus covid-19 in the canton of San Carlos, where there are now 22 infections.
Salas explained that 9 of the confirmed cases are members of the same family and another 6 patients were infected by being in contact with a person testing positive for the covid-19.
“In the case of an already infected family; that quickly swells the number of cases. If we subtract those nine, we would already be, for example, at the level of Grecia or Montes de Oca (San Pedro in San Jose) that have a similar number of infected if it were not for this family group. That responds to a sharing, as we have discussed, that family nuclei, when sharing, become a risk factor,” added the Health Minister.
San Carlos is the second canton in Alajuela with the highest incidence, only below Alajuela center with 67 positive cases.
National parks and protected areas will remain closed until April 30, due to the national emergency for the coronavirus COVID-19.
The Ministry of Environment and Energy (Minae) said on Wednesday that the measure is taken with the aim of mitigating the spread of the coronavirus.
“The closure will remain in force due to the expansion by the authorities to avoid crowds. As long as the Minae does not have any instructions to the contrary, the Protected Wild Areas will remain closed for the provision of ecotourism services. It is a measure that we will maintain as long as necessary, taking the health of all citizens as a priority,” explained Pamela Castillo, vice minister of Natural Resources.
For her part, Grettel Vega, executive director of the National System of Conservation Areas (Sinac), indicated that, while Costa Rican citizens comply with the isolation, park rangers continue to guard the 144 Protected Wild Areas.
“There are more than 400 park rangers who strictly comply with the instructions given by the Environmental Administration, to protect our natural heritage, helping the Ministry of Health to prevent tourists from entering our protected areas,” he added.
Those who have paid entry to a national park, purchased tickets or made online reservations, may reschedule their visits to the following emails:
A 5.1-magnitude earthquake shook Costa Rica this morning at 8:33 am and it was felt in much of the country.
The National Seismological Network reported the event with an epicenter located 18 km east of Tortuguero, Pococí.
For its part, the Volcanological and Seismological Observatory of Costa Rica preliminarily records that the earthquake had a magnitude of 4.9 degrees. It also reported a depth of 10 and the epicenter 19 km east of Tortuguero de Pococí de Limón.
While celebrations were all-around at the Hospital San Rafael in Alajuela, for the discharge from hospital of one their own, later in the day, in the Hospital San Juan de Dios, Costa Rica’s death number 3 from the covid-19 was recorded.
At the Alajuela hospital, one of the most affected by the coronavirus, the young woman identified as Magaly had suffered complications but bounced back.
“Her case became complicated from the pulmonary point of view, required intubation and a tracheotomy to be able to breathe … today she is going home, she is going to have to be in recovery for a few days,” explained Health Minister Daniel Salas.
Two hours after the mid-day briefing on the coronavirus, the Ministry of Health reported the death of a 45-year-old man, in the intensive care unit of the Hospital San Juan de Dios.
The man, who had no risk factors, acquired the virus on a trip to the United States. He was hospitalized for 10 days in the Intensive Care Unit of that medical center. No other detials were provided.
Minutes following the announcement, President Carlos Alvarado, posted on Twitter: “Costa Rica records the third death from COVID-19, a 45-year-old man with no risk factors. We regret this death and we show solidarity with his family. No one is exempt from becoming seriously ill or losing their lives. Please, let’s stay home.”
Costa Rica registra la tercera muerte por COVID-19, un hombre de 45 años sin factores de riesgo. Lamentamos este fallecimiento y nos solidarizamos con su familia. Nadie está exento de enfermar gravemente o perder la vida. Por favor, quedémonos en casa.
— Carlos Alvarado Quesada (@CarlosAlvQ) April 8, 2020
The briefing
Minister Salas reported that Costa Rica has recorded 502 confirmed cases of the covid-19, 19 more than the day before; the number of recovered climbed 29 and the number of deaths remained at 2. However, that is now updated to 3.
Of the confirmed cases, 243 are women and 259 men, ranging from the ages of 1 to 87.
The active number of cases is now 470, of which 22 are hospitalized and 14 in intensive care. These numbers are updated from the graphic to reflect the afternoon death.
Minister Salas expressed concern of actions of Costa Ricans this week, many are still not taking the pandemic seriously, not heeding to the stay-at-home request.
He insisted that the way in which cases behave is constantly analyzed.
“There is no way to predict what will happen after Semana Santa or if the trend is going to decrease, we know that the measures we have taken are because there was a lot of risk due to the history of the population at Easter. We are doing this analysis every day, there is still a percentage that has not been exposed to the virus, if we neglect the measures there will always be that explosion of cases and the saturation of services, it is a scenario where we are constantly analyzing,” said Salas.
Violations to the health order and vehicular restrictions
Security Minister Micheal Soto reported 135 people have been sanctioned for violating the health order the traffic police are issuing an average of 600 traffic tickets daily for violation of the vehicular restrictions.
The minister noted that today and through Sunday, the daytime restrictions have intensified, today, Wednesday, only plates 0 & 1 can circulate, Thursday 2 & 3, Friday 4 & 5, Saturday 6 & and Sunday 8 & 9. And only for local grocery shopping and pharmacy.
The nighttime restrictions continue applying to all vehicles.
Migrants seeking a U.S. work visa are pictured after being evicted from their hotel, which local authorities said was crowded, as part of the measures to prevent the spreading of the coronavirus disease in Monterrey, Mexico. Photograph: Daniel Becerril/Reuters
When Angelica turned 30, she realized there was no future for her in Honduras. Although she had a college degree, she was still living paycheck to paycheck and was stuck in a neighborhood of the capital Tegucigalpa ruled by violent gangs.
Migrants seeking a U.S. work visa are pictured after being evicted from their hotel, which local authorities said was crowded, as part of the measures to prevent the spreading of the coronavirus disease in Monterrey, Mexico. Photograph: Daniel Becerril/Reuters
So, after years contemplating migration to the US where she has relatives, she finally made arrangements to depart.
“I didn’t want to stay in a neighborhood where there are massacres or where the people lock themselves in their homes at six at night because the gangs impose a curfew,” she said. “I realized I was more surviving than living.”
But by the time she was due to start her journey north, Honduras had closed its borders and declared a state of emergency. She could no longer leave her city – much less take a bus to northern Guatemala, to meet a coyote who would guide her through Mexico.
“I had thought that only a hurricane could stop me,” she said. “But I hadn’t thought of a pandemic.”
Border closures and strict lockdowns prompted by the Covid-19 crisis have disrupted the migrant trail through Central America and Mexico, forcing some would-be migrants to postpone their journeys – and stopping many others in their tracks.
The result has been a deterrent more effective than any wall Donald Trump could build.
Activists across the region have reported a steep decline in the number of migrants coming from Central America since the restrictions were implemented. One Mexican shelter near the Guatemalan border said it hadn’t received a new arrival in a week.
“The crisis has facilitated Trump’s policies because [Central American] migrants can’t even leave their countries,” said Sister Nyzella Juliana Dondé, coordinator of a Catholic migrant aid organization in Honduras.
El Salvador closed its borders on 11 March, and the governments of Guatemala and Honduras quickly followed suit. All three countries in the so-called northern triangle have since announced internal lockdowns of differing strictness.
The three nations had recently signed “safe third country agreements” with the US government under which they agreed to increase enforcement on their borders, and receive migrants who had transited their country on the way to the US.
Only Guatemala had begun to implement the new measures, but it announced on 17 March that it would suspend the deportations of Hondurans and Salvadorans from the US to its territory.
But Guatemala and Honduras continued to receive deportation flights bringing their own citizens from the US – despite concerns that the practice could accelerate the spread of the virus.
In the past week, a migrant who was deported from the US to Guatemala was diagnosed with Covid-19 and a group of deportees to Honduras escaped from the shelter where they were to be quarantined. Guatemala has now requested that the US suspend deportation flights.
Meanwhile, migrants who were already en route have been left exposed by the closure of shelters and the difficulties facing humanitarian organizations which would normally attend to them.
“They are in a vulnerable situation because the guidance is to stay at home – but the migrants don’t have homes,” said Dondé, who mentioned a case of a large group of Haitian and African migrants who were detained after crossing into Guatemala from Honduras amid the lockdown. “Neither Honduras or Guatemala wanted to offer them a place to stay.”
Migrants who already had arrived to Mexico have been left in limbo by the US government’s decision to immediately return all migrants from Mexico and Central America who cross into the country irregularly along the south-west border.
When restrictions are eventually eased, a fresh surge in migration seems likely: multiple would-be migrants who spoke with the Guardian said it was only a question of when, not if, they would set out for the US.
And the economic impact of the crisis may in turn cause others to migrate.. “Before many people migrated because they lacked work and a dignified life,” said Silva de Souza. “Now there will be many more.”
Migrants who have come from even farther afield, have no choice but to try to push on. Mohamed left Freetown, the capital of Sierra Leone, in 2018, following the well-trodden migrant path via Ecuador, Colombia and the jungles of Panama. He was burning through his savings and racking up debt, but making steady progress north.
But he reached Guatemala just before the government announced a state of emergency which has made moving on impossible.
“Travel has become very difficult,” he said in a brief exchange via Facebook Messenger. But he was still determined to reach the US – even if he now has to move more carefully – traveling at night and avoiding large caravans. “With God’s will, I’ll get there. I will build a life of opportunity.”
Grupo Modelo, which produces and exports several popular Mexican beer brands, including Corona, Pacifico and Modelo, will be temporarily suspending production and sales after its breweries were deemed non-essential by the Mexican government.
Mexico’s Grupo Modelo said last week it will temporarily stop brewing Corona beer and other brands exported to 180 countries after its business activities were declared non-essential under a government order aimed at curbing the spread of the coronavirus.
Grupo Modelo, which produces and exports several popular Mexican beer brands, including Corona and Modelo, will be temporarily suspending production and sales after its breweries were deemed non-essential by the Mexican government.
The Mexican government this week declared a health emergency and ordered the suspension of non-essential activities after the number of coronavirus cases in the country surpassed 1,000. Today, April 8, Mexico reports 2,785 confirmed cases of the covid-19 and 141 deaths.
“If the federal government considers it appropriate to issue some clarification confirming beer as an agro-industrial product, at Grupo Modelo we are ready to execute a plan with more than 75% of our staff working from home and at the same time guaranteeing the supply of beer,” the company said in a statement.
Grupo Modelo, which is part of the brewing group Anheuser-Busch InBev, operates 11 breweries in Mexico.
Panama has ordered the temporary closure of Minera Panama, one of the region’s largest copper producers, after an outbreak of coronavirus among the mine company’s workers, health minister Rosario Turner said on Monday.
Minera Panama, which is majority-owned by Toronto-based First Quantum Minerals, did not immediately respond to a request for comment, reported Reuters.
According to Newsroom Panama, a worker from the Minera Panamá company affected by COVID-19 has died.
Israel Cedeño, deputy director of Planning of the Health Ministry (Minsa), confirmed the death of the worker and said that two weeks ago they sent a group of workers to quarantine. hotels in of Coclé
Cedeño added that others remained working and following up inside the mine by doctors from the mining company’s clinic.
A sanitary fence was installed approximately two weeks ago, the day there was a massive departure of miners fleeing the coronavirus threat.
Colombia did it twenty-five years ago. At that time, one of the world’s most violent countries found a way to reinvent itself. Today, another Latin American country aims to do the same.
El Salvador President Bukele’s success stems in part from his ability to capitalize cannily on El Salvador’s anti-establishment streak.
Can it work?
That’s the question weighing on the shoulders of President Nayib Bukele, the 38-year-old millennial and the youngest head of state in El Salvador’s history. Roughly a year into office, the Twitter-savvy technocratic populist has made good on his promises to tackle corruption and homicide, albeit with a whiff of authoritarianism. In the process, he aims to shift the immigration debate both in El Salvador as well as in the United States.
President Bukele likes to see himself as a controversial “doer” — and there’s no doubting he gets things done. Case in point: On March 11, El Salvador became the first country in the Americas to ban entry to all foreign citizens in a bid to stem the spread of the coronavirus, despite the fact there were as yet no confirmed cases in El Salvador.
But President Bukele is also trying to lift the country up by its economic bootstraps and give Salvadorans a reason to stay. If President Bukele succeeds — while respecting the nation’s democratic institutions (and this last item is not so obvious) — he could provide a new blueprint for migration policy around the world.
Rico’s Covid-19 Digest – There is no doubt that the national emergency due to the coronavirus covid-19 pandemic has affected life in Costa Rica. The government has put in place measure to slow contagion, among them physical distancing, known more widely as social distancing.
But how much as daily life in the land of Pura Vida really changed?
According to Google, considerably.
The search engine (and much more) has published Community Mobility Reports aimed at providing insights into what has changed in response to policies aimed at combating COVID-19.
The reports chart movement trends over time by geography, across different categories of places such as retail and recreation, groceries and pharmacies, parks, transit stations, workplaces, and residential.
Here’s what you need to know as at March 29, 2020, in Costa Rica, compared to baseline*:
68% fewer people are visiting places like restaurants, cafes, shopping centers, theme parks, museums, libraries, and movie theaters.
41% fewer people are visiting places like grocery markets, food warehouses, farmers’ markets, specialty food shops, and pharmacies.
71% fewer people are visiting places like national parks, public beaches, marinas, dog parks, plazas, and public gardens.
68% fewer people are using public transport h such as bus, and train stations.
39% fewer people are visiting places of work.
21% more people are staying at home.
* The baseline is the median value, for the corresponding day of the week, during the 5-week period Jan 3–Feb 6, 2020.
How long will these reports be available? Google says the reports will be available for a limited time, so long as public health officials find them useful in their work to stop the spread of COVID-19.
The U.S. Embassy in Costa Rica announced April 7, 2020, that due to countrywide travel restrictions routine consular services will not be offered on Wednesday, April 8 and the U.S. Embassy will be closed from Thursday, April 9 to Monday, April 13, due to observance of local holidays.
If you have an emergency requiring Consular assistance, please call +506-2519 2000 or visit our embassy website at https://cr.usembassy.gov/.
Current Status of Passport Applications for Overseas Posts
Because of public health measures to prevent the spread of COVID-19, effective March 20, 2020, the U.S Department of State began limiting its passport operations. Effective April 2, we have further limited our ability to offer routine passport and citizenship services overseas.
In an emergency, our embassies/consulates can assist with an emergency passport for an adult or a minor. If you have not received your Consular Report of Birth Abroad (CRBA), an emergency passport may be issued by your nearest embassy/consulate.
If you have previously applied for a passport or citizenship service, you should expect significant delays receiving your passport and your citizenship evidence documents. Contact your nearest embassy or consulate to check on the status of your passport or citizenship document such as a Consular Report of Birth Abroad (CRBA). Please consider waiting to apply until we resume normal operations.
Flights to the U.S.
U.S. citizens in Costa Rica needing a flight back to their home country should contact the Embassy. U.S.-based airlines aren’t expected to resume operations to Costa Rica until at least May.
Housing Minister, Irene Campos, presented to legislators this Monday, a draft bill to establish various moratoriums and payment arrangements in terms of rents, both for housing and commercial, due to the coronavirus crisis.
Campos handed the draft to the work table on renting, in order to lessen the obligations of those who lost or had their income reduced due to the national emergency.
The draft bill states that the lessor and lessee must negotiate a payment arrangement, in case the latter has a significant reduction in income. The arrangement would be valid for six months and have different conditions.
If the tenant lost his job or his employment contract was suspended, both parties would have to sign a contract to establish a total moratorium on payment for a maximum of six months.
On the other hand, if the tenant’s family income was reduced by 50%, the rent payment will have to be reduced by half of the original amount and, if the family’s income was reduced by less than 50%, the amount must be negotiated between the parties.
For commercial leases, the total moratorium on the lease will be authorized if the lessee had to close the premises by a sanitary order, such as the case with bars, discos and casinos and this week includes retail stores, malls, restaurants and more, save for supermarkets and pharmacies.
If there is no sanitary order and the business experiences a reduction in income of 50%, the rent payment will also be cut in half; In the event that income has decreased less than 50%, the rent payment must be agreed between the parties.Reimbursement of money to owners
In the event of a moratorium, the draft proposes that the rent amounts not paid during the six months that the law applies must be paid no later than January 2021.
In the event that only 50% has been paid for six months, the tenants will have to pay no later than October of this year and, if a lower amount was not paid, it would have to be paid in July.
In addition, the proposal orders the suspension of increases in all rental contracts this year, as well as the execution of evictions.
According to the National Institute of Statistics and Censuses (INEC), 18.7% of the population lives in rented homes: 950,000 people out of the five million inhabitants.
The percentage of families living in a rental is much higher in the urban area than in the rural area: 22% compared to 10.6%.
Requirements for payment arrangements
In order for the tenants to negotiate with their landlords, they must present a certificate from the employer regarding the reduction of the working day, the suspension of the contract or layoff.
If they are self-employed, they must provide a declaration of the Value Added Tax (VAT) that demonstrates the reduction in income; and, if they were informal workers, they must submit to their landlords an affidavit authenticated by a notary.
For commercial leases, the lessee (tenant) must deliver the lessor (landlord) the sanitary order to close the property or a comparison between the VAT declarations of February and that of March of this year.
The proposal tabled Monday is a new version of that requires more than “hey, I lost my job” to reach a balance between owners and tenants.
Among them, he stressed that private agreements between the parties be authorized, although he argued that many aspects of form and substance must be refined.
Legislators of the parliamentary working table are expected to meet today, Wednesday, to discuss the proposal with Minister Campos.
Ivonne Acuña, of the Nueva República independent bloc, who objected to the first proposal made last month, assured that she is pleased that the benefit is exclusive for individuals or legal entities affected by the national coronavirus emergency, in addition to the introduction of the payment arrangement between lessor and lessee.
However, the legislator said she will push for consideration of several of her observations of the proposal, such as the requirement for the need of a notary in the case of independent workers because not all families could afford that.
She also said that the moratorium may not need to be for as long as six months, as well as the need to take into account the impact on landlords, who also have commitments to pay for public services, loans, and municipal services.
FILE PHOTO: Masks are seen on a production line manufacturing masks at a factory in Shanghai, China January 31, 2020. REUTERS/Aly Song/File Photo
shipment of 55 tons of disposable gowns, masks, safety glasses, boot covers and gloves will arrive in Costa Rica from China in the coming days. The Caja Costarricense de Seguro Social (CCSS) reported that the charter flight would depart Los Angeles, United States, for China on April 15.
Luis Fernando Porras, Logistics manager of the Caja, estimates that the cost of moving the cargo will be US$1.1 million, said in a statement, a common mechanism that is used to transport merchandise and becomes an option, since it allows a direct route from China to Los Angeles and then from that city to Costa Rica.
“The objective is to bring the supplies donated by the Chinese Government, which will be taken to the port of Shanghai, which has a zero cost for the CCSS,” Porras said in the press release.
The charter will leave with the cargo from the port of Shanghai to Los Angeles, where another cargo plane will fly to Costa Rica, in what is described as “tail-to-tail cargo”.
According to Porras, Costa Rica has made other purchases from China and additional donated equipment will be arriving by sea in about 22 days.
Both, Costa Rica’s Immigration and the Intelligence and Security Directorate (DIS) rule out that Daniel Ortega, president of Nicaragua, has recently entered Costa Rica. According to the General Directorate of Migration and Immigration (DGME), Ortega, 74, does not present records of entry or exit from the country in 2020 or 2019.
Nicaragua’s power couple, Rosario Murillo and Daniel Ortega, who has not been seen in public for almost a month.
In fact, his last visit to Costa Rica was in January 2015, when he participated in the Summit of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (Celac), which took place at the Pedregal events center, in Belén de Heredia.
On that occasion, Ortega generated controversy when he snuck in the summit, the Puerto Rican independentist, Rubén Berríos. In that same event, Ortega tried to lead Berríos to the enclosure in which only rulers and foreign ministers were going to participate, after deceiving the Government of Costa Rica with the accreditation of the Puerto Rican politician.
For his part, at noon Monday, the director of the DIS, Eduardo Trejos, denied that Ortega had recently entered the country.
“No, not at all, he did not enter by any official means (…), ” said Trejo, who asserted that, between June 2016 and July 2018, when he served as Costa Rica’s ambassador to Managua; and during the almost two years that he has led the DIS; the Sandinista leader does not have any record of entry into Costa Rican territory.
He explained that the foreign leaders who arrive in Costa Rica, both officially and unofficially, must carry out all the migratory entry procedures.
He cited the recent examples of Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in December last;and Luis Lacalle, then President-elect of Uruguay, who visited Costa Rica in late 2019 and went through immigration controls.
“So there is no exception.Official or unofficial, no matter the type of visits, all immigration procedures are always followed,” Trejos reiterated.
In recent days, given that Daniel Ortega has been absent from appearing in public for almost a month, despite the fact that Nicaragua faces the challenges of the covid-19, fueling a lot of speculation, suppositions, rumors, and gossip of the Nicaraguan leader’s health, including being infected with the covid-19 and his death.
In her opinion, Nicaraguan journalist Lucia Pinedo of 100% Noticias, who was imprisoned by Ortega in December 2018 at the height of that country’s sociopolitical turmoil, writes that in times of crisis Ortega disappears, later to reappear in a “resurrection show”.
Scene from the precarious Triangle of Solidarity, in Tibás. Extreme poverty in the urban area presented an increase of 0.8 points (now it is 5.6%). It is a significant rise, according to INEC.
The measure issued by the central government that the population” stay at home” to avoid a massive spread of COVID-19 is experienced unevenly by Costa Rican families, according to an article published by the State of the Nation report.
Scene from the Triangle of Solidarity, in Tibás, precario (slum). Extreme poverty in the urban area presented an increase of 0.8 points (now it is 5.6%). It is a significant rise, according to INEC.
The analysis developed by researchers Pamela Jiménez Fontana, Natalia Morales Aguilar and Rafael Segura Carmona shows that the sociodemographic and economic gaps that exist in Costa Rica have a greater impact on the most vulnerable families.
When it comes to physical distancing for long periods, not everyone can face it in the same way, given that of the 1.6 million households in the country, 9% are homes in poor condition and 2% are overcrowded (more than 3 people per bedroom).
“Approximately 15% of the houses are less than 40 square meters (430 square feet), while 27% exceed 100 square meters (1,070 square fee), according to data from the Instituto Nacional de Estadística y Censos (INEC) – National Institute of Statistics and Censuses, in addition, it is estimated that 104,000 homes (7%) do not have access basic services such as water, electricity and solid waste management,” Morales said.
Added to this situation, said Segura, “there are many negative effects related to physical distancing, which can be alleviated by remote connectivity, through digital tools”.
The reality is that in 79% of the country’s highest-income population, there is a computer at home, but it is only possible for 25% of people with fewer resources. And 40% of Costa Rican homes do not have Internet access, either by cable, fiber optics or landline telephone.
Minimum needs
Also, during the stay at home, not all families have the same possibilities of obtaining food or using home delivery services, given that some 225,900 households (21% of the population ) were already in poverty, before the health crisis. Of these, 93,500 did not even have the minimum income to cover their basic food needs.
The situation puts the members of Costa Rican households who have probably had limited possibilities to feed themselves, at a disadvantage.
“It is clear that the sanitary and physical distancing measures that the Government has implemented in recent weeks are aimed at avoiding a collapse of the health system and having the fewest number of deaths, however, the sociodemographic gaps make the way facing it is very different for families”, explained Jiménez.
Precisely, the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLA) issued a special report, in which it analyzes the main economic and social effects of the pandemic in Latin America and the Caribbean.
Alicia Bárcena, director of ECLAC, pointed out that prior to this situation, the region would grow to a maximum of 1.3% during 2020, but with the crisis, the forecast changed and a fall in the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is expected.
“COVID-19 will affect the region due to the decrease in economic activity of its main trading partners; by the fall in prices of primary products; disruption of global value chains; the lower demand for tourism services (one of the most affected sectors) and intensification of risk aversion and worsening global financial conditions,” explained Bárcena.
All these elements will affect each country to a greater or lesser extent, but the truth is that the latent inequalities will be those that mark the development of each population sector.
ECLAC’s analysis coincides with the State of the Nation report in Costa Rica, in which, given the economic and social inequalities in the region, the effects of unemployment will disproportionately affect the poor and the vulnerable strata of the middle income.
“The crisis is likely to increase informal employment as a survival strategy. In 2016, 53.1% of workers in Latin America and the Caribbean worked in the informal sector; poorer families are likely to send their children to the labor market, which will increase child labor rates,” the ECLAC report details.
UNHCR personnel continue to provide humanitarian assistance in Costa Rica under the necessary sanitary measures to reduce the risk of exposure to COVID-19. UNHCR / Erick Gerstner
The number of patients with covid-19 in Costa Rica increased in 16 cases from 467 to 483, according to the latest report released by the Ministry of Health, on April 7, 2020.
UNHCR personnel continue to provide humanitarian assistance in Costa Rica under the necessary sanitary measures to reduce the risk of exposure to COVID-19. UNHCR / Erick Gerstner
Health Minister Daniel Salas explained that 449 are Costa Rican and the other 34 are foreigners, with ages ranging from one year to 87; They are 237 women and 246 men. By age, there are 466 adults (29 of whom are seniors) and 17 minors.
A total of 24 have recovered and 2 deaths, leaving the number of active cases at 457.
The minister explained that 25 patients remain hospitalized. Of these, 14 are in intensive care. The age of these people ranges from 35 to 85.
On the other hand, Salas indicated that the number of cantons registering at least one confirmed case rose from 55 to 56 with the joining of Turrialba, Cartago, to the list.
To date, three patients have arrived at the covid-19 exclusive hospital, the Cenare, located in La Uruca, to care for people in serious condition.
In response to press inquiries, Minister Salas clarified that although this Monday he highlighted the good response of the majority of citizens to measures to prevent the massive spread of covid-19, we cannot “claim victory.”
He insisted on staying alert because there are possibly a “very important” number of patients who have not manifested symptoms (asymptomatic) and that could put their nearby nucleus at risk.
The minister noted, however, that the viral load that people without symptoms have is much lower than that of those who do have them.
“There are countries that have reached the third fortnight and have relaxed their measures entirely or a lot, that the population has trusted and had a significant increase of cases that we do not want to have in our country.
“We have already passed a month but we cannot say that we have already reached the peak and that the maximum point of the curve has already been exceeded,” he warned.
On the other hand, Salas and Román Macaya, executive president of the Costa Rican Social Security Fund (CCSS), took the opportunity to express their gratitude to all the country’s health personnel on World Health Day.
Fines for violating the vehicular restriction
Salas reported that this Monday, during the daytime vehicle restriction (5 am to 5 pm), 291 drivers were fined and 882 tickets were issued for other infractions.
Meanwhile, between Monday 5 pm and Tuesday am, 625 drivers were sanctioned for disrespecting the night restriction.
The daytime restrictions are dependent on the last digit of the vehicle’s license plate, while the nighttime restrictions apply to all plates. See here today’s plate restrictions.
Turbo taxis
An issue raised by Minister Salas based on complaints received by authorities is the unscrupulous practice of some taxi drivers to alter the “marias” (meters), overcharging customers.
These drivers take advantage of the situation and ban on ride app transports at night and limited circulation during the daytime.
Taxis with altered meters this writer often refers to as “turbo taxis”, similar to vehicles with turn engines to boost their power, the turbo taxis run faster, adding up charges faster without the user realizing it.
Violation of quarantine
Minister Salas made a continued appeal to all under a Health order to isolation or quarantine to company or face sanctions that range from ¢450,000 to ¢2.3 million colones.
Health or quarantine orders are issued to those suspected of being infected and infected with the covid-19 to stay at home and maintain social distancing. Also, Costa Ricans and residents returning to the country are issued, on arrival, a mandatory 14-day isolation order.
Facial shields made in Costa Rica
The president of CCSS highlighted on the self-sufficiency efforts that the country is making to manufacture face shields that offer protection to health personnel.
Macaya pointed out that the manufacture of 600,000 protectors has already begun thanks to the coordination between the Logistics Management of the CCSS, the Occupational Health Area, the Chamber of Industries, the Technological Institute of Costa Rica (Tec), and the Incae
He indicated that the CCSS hired the Grupo Vargas company for the production of the equipment. This week, the first 100,000 masks will be delivered. The cost of each one is ¢600 (a little less than a US dollar).
Macaya also highlighted the help of other companies and institutions in dealing with the emergency, for example, in the distribution of medicine. As of April 6, the CCSS had been delivered to 48,746 patients with chronic diseases.
A Honduran military plane delivered the cargo of South Korea test kids donated by the Central American Bank for Economic Integration to its regional partners
Macaya also publicly thanked the Banco Centroamericano de Integración Económica (BCIE) – Central American Bank for Economic Integration – for the donation of 26,000 diagnostic tests for covid-19 and thanked the Honduran government that coordinated delivery by air to the entire region.
According to Macaya, it is intended to carry out samplings throughout the country and that other technologies are being sought, such as portable analytical devices, that allow decentralizing the analysis of samples even more.
Nicaragua continues to ignore guidelines
Health Minister Salas was careful with his words in his reaction to the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) about the inadequate prevention and lack of covid-19 controls in Nicaragua.
He admitted that the PAHO pointed out that in that country there have been actions that are not aligned with the indications given to all nations, adding that he would not refer to the matter, it was in the hands of the diplomats of the Foreign Ministry.
The concern for Costa Rica is the cross border movement of Nicaraguans, in particular during Semana Santa, when tens of thousands of Nicaraguans make an exodus for their home country for the religious period and then back to Costa Rica where the live and work.
This year, the border has been closed to all foreigner arrivals, and as of March 24, all residents of Costa Rica who leave the country will not be able to return during the national emergency is in effect.
The closing of the borders was original until April 12 but is now extended to April 30.
Despite the closing, the reinforcement of police along the 309 kilometer border with Nicaragua and the presence of the Nicaragua Army on their side of the border, many continue to make crossings through “blind spots”.
“We know that governments are sovereign and an appeal is being made,” said Minister Daniel Salas. “We have said that surveillance at both borders has been strengthening.”
Both Macaya and Salas stressed that medical attention is provided to everyone, regardless of their nationality and migratory status in the country, suspected or infected with covid-19.
100% Noticias journalist Lucía Pineda tweeted Monday morning that President Daniel Ortega will be released from his eternal quarantine at any time, after the president’s 24-day absence from public amid the covid-19 pandemic.
Pineda assures that Ortega has the habit of “disappearing” in what she calls a “show”. For now, who has stood up to the people is his wife and vice president, Rosario Murillo.
According to Murillo, “Our commander Daniel guides us, instructs us and he himself is in communication and coordination with all of our authorities.”
For her part, Pineda published the following tweet:
Para quienes preguntan. #DanielOrtega está en su eterna cuarentena. Ortega es el último en todo. Si el acto era a las 2pm, llegaba a las 5pm. Como candidato era el último en inscribirse. En estos días saldrá y hará el show del “resucitado”. Esa película ya la hemos visto.
“For those who ask. #DanielOrtega is in his eternal quarantine. Ortega is the last in everything. If the function was at 2pm, he would arrive at 5pm. As a candidate, he was the last to register. These days he will come out and do the ‘resurrected’ show. We have already seen that movie.”
For Pineda, Ortega will come out and “will do the resurrection” in the coming days.
The media in that country and in Latin America have questioned the whereabouts of the Nicaraguan president and hypotheses have been generated in the networks that range from Ortega’s death to his contagion by the coronavirus.
The only thing that the Ortega administration has reported is the contagion of at least 6 people, and the death one person, who was infected after returning from Colombia.
The uncertainty increased last Thursday and Friday after Ortega did not attend the funeral honors of the Sandinista legislator Jacinto Suárez, one of the historical militants of Sandinismo and who was also Ortega’s cellmate when they were held during the Anastasio Somoza dictatorship.
March 12 is the last time Daniel Ortega was seen publicly when he participated digitally with the Central American leaders, at a meeting called by the Central American Integration System (SICA) to address the crisis by COVID-19.
According to analyst and political scientist Óscar René Vargas, of La Prensa, “the mismanagement that Ortega is having in the face of the pandemic”, would end up burying the Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN).
Pineda, an antagonist to the Sandinista dictatorship, was censured in previous months due to the crisis that her country was going through.
Pineda, along with Miguel Mora, owner of 100% Noticias, were arrested in December 2018 for inciting hatred with messages and “fake news” and conspiring to commit acts of terrorism.
The case of the Carla Stefaniak, who murdered in Costa Rica on her last of vacation in the country, will have a new episode, after her family appealed the sentence of the Pavas Criminal Court and reproached the judges for saying that “it was not possible to establish that they were acts especially macabre as in other cases”.
The appeal was raised by the family’s lawyer, Joseph Rivera, who requested all evidence be reassessed and a higher prison sentence is imposed on Bismarck Espinoza Martínez, who currently waiting for the sentence to be firmed up.
On February 17, the Pavas Criminal Court found Martínez guilty of the murder of the tourist and sentenced to 16 years in prison.
“It must be said that it is not true – as the judges affirm – that the facts proven in the judgment do not constitute ‘especially macabre’ facts. It was a person who took advantage of the ease of his job to enter Carla’s private space, stab her at least 7 times,” the document cites.
“In addition, it was shown that the accused, in order to seek impunity, cleaned the scene of the crime, moved the lifeless body and placed it in a cold and calculating way among the undergrowth, at a distance of approximately 100 meters (from the property),” adds the document.
Carla Stefaniak’s murder occurred in November 2018, when she was celebrating her birthday in the country. Martínez, a security guard at the hotel located in San Antonio de Escazú where she was staying before leaving the country the next morning, was charged with murder. At trial, evidence showed he lied to police, telling investigators he saw the victim get in a car early in the morning. The body of the Carla Stefaniak was found buried days later a near the hotel.
The appeal
The appeal questions what is not to be considered macabre, despite the fact that the suspect wrapped the victim’s body in plastic, and buried in a shallow grave.
“It is not really understood what else the judges would have expected to have happened so that in their opinion it was ‘macabre’ enough,” says the appeal document.
The appeal also narrates that at the trial, the use of a weapon during the attack was omitted and that there was a physical disproportion between the victim and the accused.
It also states that the emotional part of the victim being in the country celebrating her 36th birthday and the psychological impact that marked the family was not taken into account.
The Fuerza Publica police vehicles are white and for the most part SUVs
If you believe that the controls of the last few days – countrywide vehicular restrictions with daytime and nighttime spotchecks, and the closing of all retail business save for supermarkets, pharmacies, banks and home food delivery and the daytime – things are going to get even tougher, assures Daniel Calderón, the director of the Fuerza Publica (national police).
The director of the Fuerza Publica (national police) Daniel Calderón
“The Fuerza Publica will be making an additional effort to continue strict compliance with the sanitary measures issued by the Ministry of Health in the face of the national emergency following the global pandemic due to the COVID-19 coronavirus,” said Calderón.
The objective of the hardening of these actions during Semana Santa, seek to ensure effective compliance with the new restrictions issued by the Government, in effect to Sunday, April 12.
In coordination with all the police forces in the country, significant efforts are being made to comply with border surveillance, supervision in commercial premises and vehicle restriction, without neglecting citizen security.
“We have had important responsibilities to ensure compliance with the guidelines that have to do mainly with the closure of premises, in the first instance bars and restaurants, but now the control extends to all the premises that have attention to the public,” added Calderón.
To date, the authorities have closed a total of 5,214 premises for non-compliance with the regulations issued by the Ministry of Health since March 17 and 62 people charged with contempt.
More than 3,000 drivers have been fined since the stricter vehicular restrictions went into force in mid-march, more than 1,000 issued the stiffer ¢110,400 fine, six points on the driver’s license and confiscation of license plates and/or vehicle since the early hours of Saturday (April 4) morning.
Police operation at the entrance to Paseo Colon in San Jose
For example, starting tomorrow, Wednesday, April 8, daytime, from 5 am to 5pm, vehicles with the corresponding license plate can drive locally to get to and from the supermarket or pharmacy (0 & 1 on Wednesday; 2 & 3 on Thursday; 4 & 5 on Friday, 6 & 7 on Saturday and 8 & 9 on Sunday). Nighttime, everyone off the roads.
“Follow the recommendations, stay home. Continue to collaborate with the police and health authorities, we hope that this Semana Santa, the population is aware of and attends to health measures for the good of the entire population,” assured Calderón.
Costa Rica Security Minister, Michale Soto, announced the closure of the border will be extended to April 30, 18 more days than the April 12 date set last month.
Archive photo of the Peñas Blancas border between Costa Rica and Nicaragua
Soto reported that the decision to extend measure is part of the contingency plan established by the government and health authorities.
On March 16, it was decreed that effective at 11:59 pm March 18, all borders would be closed until April 12. This restriction applies to land, sea, and air arrivals. Costa Rican citizens, legal residents, those whose residency is in process, minor children of Costa Rican citizens, foreign diplomats and air crews will be able to enter Costa Rica.
The extension means that ALL foreigners will not be permitted entry until April 30 and Costa Rican citizens and residents will be subject to a 14-day isolation order.
The minister re-iterated that legal residents who leave the country (as those who left after March 23 will be prohibited from re-entry during the national emergency.
The minister on Monday used the term “prohibited re-entry” along with the loss of residency status. In the past, President Carlos Alvarado has used the term “suspended”. There has been great confusion on this subject, and no clear answers by the government or the country’s immigration officials.
On its advisory bulletin, the U.S. Embassy in Costa Rica notes that legal residents who lose their residency status “will not have to begin the residency process again”.
The best advice, is the emphatic message of minister Soto, “stay at home, now is not the time to be traveling”.
Illegal crossings
The Ministry of Security, through the police units such as the Fuerza Publica (national police), Policia de Fronteras (border police), and others, along with the Policia de Migracion (immigration police) are keeping vigilance of the 309 kilometer wide northern border with Nicaragua, both of attempts to leave or enter the country through the “blind spots”.
“We have received a series of complaints from residents living near the borders of people who are trying to leave the country illegally, that is why we have increased control measures through the national police and the immigration police in these places,” he detailed.
Costa Rican journalist Glenda Umaña revealed on her official Facebook page details of the stealthy visit of Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega to Costa Rica’s private hospital CIMA Hospital CIMA for treatment of an illness.
Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega has been absent from public for the past 24 days and rumors abound of his infection of covid-19 and death
Umaña pointed out in the post, “There is no immigration record of Daniel Ortega entering Costa Rica this year,” and the reply by Alejandro Ayón, medical director of the CIMA Hospital, “As you know, due to confidentiality and ethics, we cannot give any name or information about patients, confirming or not their stay”.
According to Umaña, the Nicaraguan president visited the CIMA a few weeks ago for a gastroscopy and then returned without leaving behind any record of his entry and departure from Costa Rica or leaks to the press. Until the Umaña post on Facebook.
The Nicaraguan president has been absent from public life in his country for the last 24 days, causing rumors, great speculation of failing health, even infected with covid-19 and unconfirmed headlines that he has died, on social networks, messaging groups and gossip in every corner of the country.
“What is most worrying is the Nicaraguan population is unprotected and the authorities have not taken any provision for covid-19,” said Umaña.
The journalist ended her report by saying she is expecting more details on the subject from the Foreign Ministry.
Currently, Nicaragua officially reports only 6 cases and one death of the coronavirus covid-19 in a population of over 6.2 million, who for the most part has taken to self-protect itself in the absence of government action, that so far has refused to close its borders and continues with calls for massive activities, including the latest, the “Carazo Summer Carnival” this past weekend.
The coronavirus pandemic has created challenges for Costa Rican authorities in controlling the 309 kilometer long north border, as undocumented Nicaraguans continue to seek out blind spots in security.
Security Minister Michael Soto confirmed that extraordinary efforts are being made to comply with the measures to prevent the entry of any foreigner to the country, legally or illegally.
“We must remember that there are 309 kilometers of the entire border, which is quite a lot and has involved an effort even superhuman, however, in effect we are detecting the entry of people from Nicaragua, we have had the collaboration of residents of the border areas informing us,” said Soto.
On March 18, Costa Rica closed its land, sea and air borders to all foreigners. From that date, only Costa Rican nationals and legal residents are allowed entry.
The measure was originally set to expire on April 12, however, on Monday, the closure was extended to April 30.
To contain the traditional Semana Santa exodus of Nicaraguans to their homeland and return, on March 23 the government decreed that any legal resident leaving during the national emergency would not be able to return.