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Arrival of DiDi Presses State To Regulate Transport Apps

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DiDi says it already has some 5,000 registered drivers. Facebook

Neither the 4 years that Uber has been operating in Costa Rica, nor its more than 22,000 drivers, nor a clientele that is around 783,000 was enough for the government and legislators to issue a regulation on transport apps.

Newcomer to Costa Rica, DiDi, competes with Uber and taxi drivers

During the Solís Rivera administration (2014-2018), the Executive Power and Legislative Assembly engaged in moving responsibilities from one to another, without the issue being truly placed on the discussion table.

It wasn’t until the beginning of this year, in January, that the current government of Carlos Alvarado (2018-2022) presented a bill that was of little use: the legislators of the Economic Affairs Committee dismissed it for ‘insurmountable’ deficiencies.

The Ministerio de Obras Publicas y Transportes (MOPT) – Ministry of Transport – thus chose to publish a new regulation proposal that is still under discussion.

This week, on Tuesday, a second player, DiDi, began operating. It is a company with similar characteristics to Uber and promises to stir – even more – the raging waters of that market.

What is the status of the latest regulation plans? Roberto Thompson, legislator for the Partido Liberacion Nacional (PLN), believes that in the best of scenarios a possible law could become a reality before the middle of 2020. Of course: in the best of scenarios.

“I am of the opinion that the project should not be filled with hearings. We already had enough hearings with the previous project that deals with the same topic (…) We have 3 or 4 hearings left to refer to the new text. The subcommission is given a maximum period of 60 days for a ruling. The expectation we have is that, in order to move forward with this process, the project must be convened by the Executive Power during (legislative) extraordinary sessions,” said Thompson, who is president of the Committee on Economic Affairs.

”It is a priority issue. With the report, we could issue an opinion immediately to go to the plenary. Everything will depend on the call of the Executive Power,” said the legislator.

According to Thompson, with the arrival of DiDi, it “clouds over” the bill even more.

“Taxi drivers remain dissatisfied and believe that the damage to them has already been done,” said Thompson.

“In this country, everyone has a car. What do they do to pay the credit card bills or the purchases of their financed vehicles? Go to ‘hack’. Meanwhile, the taxi driver has to be subject to the laws of this country and does not earn 5 colones. It is exasperating. There are taxi drivers who don’t earn enough to take home. Neither the government nor the legislators do anything,” said Gilbert Ureña, representative of the Foro Nacional de Taxistas, the national taxi forum.

According to the union leader, apps (such as Uber or DiDi) causes the “cake to become smaller and smaller, but to the detriment of formal taxi drivers.”

“We do not know why there is so much tolerance. Why do the government and the legislators allow transnationals to come here and take money to other countries? (…) There is a desperation among the taxi drivers to do something of that is going on in this country,” said Ureña.

“It was easy”

DiDi says it already has some 5,000 registered drivers. Image from Facebook

Felipe Contreras, director of communications for DiDi for the region, said that the decision to enter Costa Rica was easy. Why? The technology is well received by users and the existing legal framework allows it.

“When we made the decision to internationalize the company and looked towards Latin America, Costa Rica definitely appeared as one of the countries that we had to reach first to stabilize an operation across the continent (…) Beyond launching a business and generating revenues very fast, our intention is to deliver mobility options to all people. Not only those who live in big cities. That is why it is so important to deliver a broad service in the medium term to reach the whole country,” said Contreras.

DiDi operates in five provinces: Alajuela, Cartago, Heredia, San José and Puntarenas.

“We come with better prices than the competition, with lower rates and launch promotions. Not only that. Not everything is about saving. It’s about saving safely. We are working for a secure platform that allows users to reach from point ‘A ’ to point‘ B ’ safely,” the spokesperson said.

DiDi says it already has more than 5,000 registered drivers.

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The question we all ask ourselves: What do the two vice presidents do?

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Did you know Costa Rica has two vice presidents? Yes, there are. And what do they do? Good question.

 

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Costa Rica Exceeds 500 Homicides

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Not to see here. Just another day in Ticolandia

Costa Rica has exceeded 500 homicides for the year. As of Wednesday morning, with the 4 overnight Tuesday murders in Limón, Hatillo, Barranca y Sarapiquí, the number of homicides for the year so far is 502.

Nothing to see here. Just another day in Ticolandia.

Though the humber is high, at the same time last year the number of homicides was 530.

If the current wave of homicides continues, the Organismo de Investigación Judicial (OIJ) expects the year to end with 543, down from last year’s 585 and 603 in 2017.

Recently, Security Minister Michael Soto said: “there are homicides that the police cannot prevent.”

“If you analyze homicide by homicide, they are not focused on a single mode of operation. We have disputes, domestic violence, property crimes and settling of accounts, ”explained the Minister.

“There are homicides that the police definitely cannot prevent. How do police forces prevent a quarrel in a house, or a dispute in a closed environment? ”, he said.

OIJ statistics indicate that 45% of homicides respond to a settling of scores and retaliations linked to drug trafficking.

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Cabletica user? This may interest you

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For the better part of Wednesday, thousands of users of Cabletica internet experienced problems with the service: no Internet connection.

According to the company, during the early hours of Wednesday, they experienced “interruptions in some Internet services due to a failure (…) a problem with the power supply equipment,” as confirmed by the Cabletica Regulación y Comunicación Management.

The service was not restored fully – to 100% of users – until later in the afternoon.

Since, the company has not issued any statement or explanation to its users. Nada. Zilch.

The Q is on the Cabletica network. Problems were experienced first around 1:30 am when the Internet connection was down for about 30 minutes. The big problem began around 9:30 am, at least on the west side of San Jose. By 11 am service had not been restored and was confirmed that it was Cabletica wide, not even the Cabletica.com website was available, Calling in was impossible, the customer service lines saturated.

Cable tv service was not affected.

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Not A Good Time to Standardize Salaries

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Costa Rica’s private sector warns of more unemployment and reduces competitiveness even further, if the government moves forward with its plan to standardize wages in 2020, affect workers with less education

Wage standardization in 2020, will have a strong impact on productive sectors such as agriculture, trade, transport, tourism and construction, explains a statement from the UCCAEP.

From the UCCAEP statement on November 17, 2019: The government’s decision to standardize salaries now will lead to an increase in unemployment, hit workers with less education, generate loss of competitiveness and will be a severe blow to economic activities that are frankly slowing down, warns the Costa Rican Union of Chambers and Associations of Private Enterprise (UCCAEP). The economy will receive a strong impact this Monday at 4 pm with the firm approval of the start of this wage standardization.

“Without business support, but with the votes of trade unions and the government in the Superior Council of Salaries, this homologation was ratified last week, whose entry into force, from July 2020, would be very serious”, warned the interim president of UCCAEP, Álvaro Saenz.

Saenz stressed that the scheme composed of the 2.54% annual increase decreed the previous month, plus the homologation, together with the next increase in the employer’s contribution to the CCSS’s I.V.M. regime, would raise minimum wages well above inflation.

The full statement in Spanish):

La decisión del Gobierno de realizar ahora una homologación de salarios provocará un incremento del desempleo, golpeará a los trabajadores con menos estudios, generará pérdida de competitividad y será un golpe severo a las actividades económicas que están en franca desaceleración, así lo advierte la Unión Costarricense de Cámaras y Asociaciones de la Empresa Privada (UCCAEP).  La economía recibirá un fuerte impacto este lunes a las 4 pm con la aprobación en firme del inicio de esta homologación salarial.

“Sin el apoyo empresarial, pero con los votos sindicales y del Gobierno en el Consejo Superior de Salarios fue ratificada esa homologación la semana pasada, cuya entrada en vigencia, a partir de julio del 2020, sería muy grave”, así lo advirtió el presidente interino de UCCAEP, Álvaro Sáenz.

Sáenz enfatizó en que el esquema compuesto por el aumento anual del 2,54%, decretado el mes anterior, más la homologación, junto con el próximo incremento del aporte patronal al régimen del I.V.M. de la CCSS, elevarían los salarios mínimos muy por encima de la inflación.

Para el sector empresarial es imprudente aprobar y ejecutar la homologación salarial en el 2020, además provocará un fuerte impacto en sectores productivos tales como agricultura, comercio, transporte, turismo y construcción.

“La racionalidad y la experiencia indican que un aumento del 1% o 2% salarial no ayudará a reducir la pobreza; esta bajará solo si se genera un crecimiento económico derivado de mejorar la competitividad y por lo tanto reducir el desempleo”, concluyó Sáenz.

Para la Unión de Cámaras, la decisión que ha tomado el Gobierno junto a representantes sindicales debe revertirse, pues en administraciones pasadas existía la anuencia por parte del Poder Ejecutivo o sus representantes a llamar a los sectores afectados, situación que ahora no ocurrió.

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Latin America Keeps Soviet Comintern Alive

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Lenin at the Second Congress of the Comintern, 1920 (Photo: Flickr).

A study of the long history of revolutionary socialism leads us to discover that for centuries, the quest for power for socialists was rarely anything other than agitation, terrorism, organized crime, conspiracy, and coups.

Lenin at the Second Congress of the Comintern, 1920 (Photo: Flickr).

When it was something different, it was simple tactics, short-term or long-term, disguising the terror and violence that their blind belief ultimately demands of them. When the socialists are in power, nearly everyone suffers its repression, genocide, moral and material destruction, impoverishment and indoctrination, isolation, and dependence.

The high-class nomenclature enjoys limitless luxury and power. It is always the same, from the ephemeral revolutions of 1410 and 1534 to eight decades of Soviet control. And what remained of that after the collapse.

The resentful aristocrat Ulyanov (alias Lenin) did not invent the party cadres or the professional revolutionary, but he brought them to fruition like never before. They emerged from centuries of underground conspiracy and revolutionary agitation by enemies of property and commerce, which Lenin attributed to himself in the best pamphlet ever written.

It was theorized by Philippe Buonarroti, in a socialism in the process of upsetting the heretical Christian millenarianism in atheistic religion, the last survivor of the conspiracy of the equals of Babeuf, the professional revolutionary of the late 18th century and early 19th century, . But Lenin elevated that mafia of fanatics without conscience to the “art stage,” and with them, he took a State that he transformed into a model of modern totalitarianism. To his surprise, his Petrograd soviet was not another ephemeral “commune of Paris” but the seed of the first totalitarian superpower in history, a superpower doomed to collapse because of the unfeasibility of the socialist economy -but after 80 years of death and destruction.

He explains what was left behind the Soviet empire, which was limited to the fragile dominion of Petrograd and was pretending to govern Russia without fully controlling its own city. Soviet power was less concerned with organizing its own army or fighting organized crime – the real government of the cities. It was more concerned with the two commissions -submitted only to Politburo- one in charge of the extermination of enemy classes and the repression of political adversaries, the Cheka, the genesis of the Soviet intelligence apparatus; and another in charge of subduing to Soviet power all the revolutionary socialist parties of the world. He intended to extend agitation and propaganda to his external enemies, which in his fanatically religious understanding of politics, meant: the whole world. That’s where the Comintern came from.

This situation exponentially increased the Marxist influence on the intellectual community, education, and press in the West. It achieved the multiplication of useful fools, eventually causing an unexpected self-sustained intellectual “ecosystem”: the spontaneous order of the destruction of the spontaneous order, paradox of a social evolution marked by radical human subjectivity. Envy is universal – emotionally powerful instinctive atavism – and by making its legitimacy its moral axiom, revolutionary socialism initiated what would spontaneously surpass the objectives and control of its agenda. The beast took on a life of its own, but it followed – and continues to follow – functional centers of socialist power.

The Bolsheviks imposed totalitarianism as they confronted isolation, the advancing forces of Kolchak and Denikin, threatened by workers’ strikes against their dictatorship “of the proletariat,” plundering the peasantry to scarcely supply hungry cities, cling to brutal repression and in the midst of the economic collapse by hyperinflation, nationalization, and socialist planning of production. None of this was accidental. Many years before taking power, Ulyanov refused aid to drought victims because it would delaye the objective conditions of the revolution- vast resources necessary for the population under his government-subject to epidemics and hunger -which mattered nothing to Soviet power- and for the fronts of war against the whites and guerrilla warfare against the greens -which did matter- were decisively diverted to agenda in the West. The Soviets, no matter how desperate their situation – nor the human cost – invested early and massively on the agenda around the world.

They supported the few Soviet satellites that survived the collapse and any anti-western forces they could find. The irrecoverable wept for the fallen empire but went on with business as usual. They do not know, nor do they want to know anything different. If Gramsci had been Soviet, he would have ended up in a gulag. But his ideas would have served the KGB and the Comintern alike. Gramsci gave them what. The sophisticated intellectuals of the radical wing of Scandinavian social democracy, the how, and what by combining them set them in motion survived them. Remarkable irony.

The world is watching how computing, artificial intelligence, and biotechnology (products of capitalism) are the tools of the new totalitarianism. Meanwhile, the capitalist solutions – private corporations, markets, productivity, and competition – are emulated – under the political and ideological control of another nomenclature more astute than the Soviet – to serve a new totalitarian superpower sustained by an economy much larger than the Soviet. In Latin America, we are so far behind that we still have Comintern with a center in Havana, satellites in Venezuela, Nicaragua, and Bolivia, and decades of overwhelming propaganda of old and new kind. Without any response from a timorous right-wing, that lacks ideas of its own -except for Brazil’s still fragile but remarkable response.

There is, moreover, liberalism incapable of deluding disoriented masses. It is a mistake to overestimate the enemy, especially as an excuse for one’s own failures. But it is a worse mistake to ignore what exists only to demoralize and indoctrinate, create or take advantage of crises, seize power, and impose totalitarianism. They think of nothing else. They only live for that. That is why they think and act, kill, and die. That is why their weakness can be their strength. And as poisonous ophidians they are, they change their skin regularly. Recently to Sao Paulo Forum and Grupo de Puebla.

Article by Guillermo Rodríguez Gonzalez first appeared at Panampost.com. Read the original here.

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4 Reasons Why Socialism Is Becoming More Popular

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EUU POLÍTICA. MIA26. NUEVA YORK (NY, EE.UU.), 07/11/2019. The ABCs of AOC», on Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. EFE/Jorge Fuentelsaz

The newfound openness of large numbers of Americans to socialism is, by now, a well-documented phenomenon. According to a Gallup poll from earlier this year, 43% of Americans now believe that some form of socialism would be a good thing, in contrast to 51% who are still against it.

EUU POLÍTICA. MIA26. NUEVA YORK (NY, EE.UU.), 07/11/2019. The ABCs of AOC», on Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. EFE/Jorge Fuentelsaz

Harris poll found that four in ten Americans prefer socialism to capitalism. The trend is particularly apparent in the young: another Gallup poll showed that as recently as 2010, 68% of people between 18 and 29 approved of capitalism, with only 51% approving of socialism, whereas in 2018, while the percentage among this age group favoring socialism was unchanged at 51%, those in favor of capitalism had dropped precipitously to 45%.

The same poll showed that among Democrats, the popularity of socialism now stands at 57%, while capitalism is only at 47%, a marked departure from 2010 when the two were tried at 53%.

YouGov poll from earlier this year showed that unlike older generations, which still preferred capitalist candidates, 70% of millennials and 64% of gen-Zers would vote for a socialist.

The question is why socialism now? At a time when the American economy under Trump seems to be chugging along at a nice clip, why are so many hankering for an alternative? I would suggest four factors contributing to the situation.

Factor #1: Ignorance of History

The first cause of socialism’s popularity, especially among the young, is an obvious one: having grown up at a time after the end of the Cold War, the collapse of Europe’s Eastern Bloc and China’s transition to authoritarian capitalism, “these kids today” — those 18 to 29 year-olds who were born around the last decade of the 20th century — don’t know what socialism is all about. When they think socialism, they don’t think Stalin; they think Scandinavia.

Americans — and especially young Americans — ignorance of history is well-documented and profound. As of 2018, only one in three Americans could pass a basic citizenship test, and of test-takers under the age of 45, that number dropped to 19%. That included such lowlights as having no clue why American colonists fought the British and believing that Dwight Eisenhower led the troops during the Civil War. Speaking of the war during which he led the troops, many millennials don’t know much about that one either.

They don’t know what Auschwitz was (66% of millennials, in particular, could not identify it). Twenty-two percent of them had not heard of the Holocaust itself. The Battle of the Bulge? Forget it. Go back further in time, and the cluelessness just keeps deepening. Only 29% of seniors at U.S. News and World Report’s top 50 colleges in America — the precise demographic that purports to speak with authority about America’s alleged history of white supremacy — have any idea what Reconstruction was all about. Only 23% know who wrote the Constitution. So much for any notion that this is the most educated generation ever.

Closer to the theme — socialism — the same compilation of survey results includes the attribution of The Communist Manifesto’s “from each according to his ability; to each according to his needs” to Thomas Paine, George Washington or Barrack Obama. Moreover, among college-aged Americans, though support for socialism is pretty high, when these same young adults are asked about their support for the actual definition of socialism — a government-managed economy — 72% turn out to be for a free-market economy and only 49% for the government-managed alternative (yes, it looks from those numbers like there are a lot of confused kids who are in favor of both of the mutually exclusive alternatives). As compared to about a third of Americans over 30, only 16% of millennials were able to define socialism, according to a 2010 CBS/New York Times poll.

And though I haven’t seen polling on this, I’d be willing to bet that a good bunch of these same students, if asked to say what the Soviet Union was, would have no clue or peg it as some sort of vanquished competitor of Western Union.

Compounding the problem still further is that the history that students are being taught increasingly falls into the category of “woke” history, America’s history of oppression as imagined by the influential revisionist socialist historian Howard Zinn . When socialists are writing our history books, the result is preordained.

Given such ignorance and systematic distortion of history, is it any surprise that millennials who never lived through very much of the 20 th century don’t think socialism is all that bad?

Factor #2: Government Bungling

When we try to explain the socialist urge, we cannot lose sight of the fact that our government keeps interfering in the economy in ways that give people every reason to think the system is corrupt and needs to be trashed.

Take the skyrocketing cost of college, for instance. On the surface, this looks like greedy capitalist universities just keep on raising tuition, and since most college kids and their parents can’t pay the sticker price, almost 70% take out loans, saddling young people trying to start their careers with a mountain of debt (almost $30,000 on average). This results in all those socialist promises of free college or loan forgiveness sounding dandy. Underneath the surface, however, a huge part of the problem is federal grants and subsidized loans. If the government stopped footing a large part of their bill, more students and parents would be forced to pony up, which would mean, in turn, that colleges would not be able to keep hiking their prices without seeing a precipitous drop in enrollment. They would, instead, be forced to price themselves at some level that applicants could realistically pay, making college more affordable for a large segment of the American middle class.

Another simple example of the problem is Obama’s Emergency Economy Stabilization Act of 2008, colloquially known as the big bank “Bailout.” When kids grow up seeing government tossing out free lifelines to businesses that get themselves in dire straits, cause a massive financial crisis and, in the process, lose ordinary folks lots of jobs and homes, we can’t blame them for concluding that the system is rigged.

There are many more examples where these came from — our government frittering away trillions on foreign wars that increase instability throughout the world and end up costing us even more as we scramble to clean up our messes is one expenditure that comes readily to mind — but the point is this: the more the government interferes in the economy to help out vested interests, the more reason many of us will see to ask government to interfere in the economy to help out the rest of us. The more reason we give anyone to think that capitalism means crony capitalism, the more they’ll clamor for socialism.

Factor #3: Universities’ Ideological Monoculture

The supporters of socialism are not simply the young, but rather, disproportionately those among the young who are college-educated. And the more college they have, the hotter for socialism they get. According to a 2015 poll, support for socialism grows from 48% among those with a high school diploma or less to 62% among college graduates to 78% among those with post-graduate degrees. Those on the left probably stop thinking hard about now and jump immediately to the conclusion that support for socialism is just a natural outgrowth of big brains and elite educations. But there is, in fact, a less obvious but ultimately far more compelling explanation that also manages to account for the general fact that more education correlates with more leftism: something — something bad — is happening at universities themselves to pull students toward the (far) left.

We have already seen above that what’s not happening at universities, even elite universities, today is a whole lot of education in important subjects like history. What we are getting instead is a lot of groupthink and indoctrination. Universities have always skewed a bit left. But beginning in the early to mid-1990s (for reasons I’ve explained in some detail elsewhere ), ideological diversity began to vanish entirely, as the leftward deviation turned tidal. As documented in a 2005 paper from Stanley Rothman et al., as of 1984, 39% of university faculty were left/liberal, and 34% were right/conservative. By 1999, those numbers had undergone a seismic shift: faculty was now 72% left/liberal and 15% right/conservative.

Since 1999, the imbalance has become starker still. A comprehensive National Association of Scholars report from April 2018 from Prof. Mitchell Langbert of Brooklyn College, tracking the political registrations of 8,688 tenure-track, Ph.D.-holding professors from 51 of U.S. News & World Report’s 66 top-ranked liberal arts colleges for 2017, found that “78.2 percent of the academic departments in [his] sample have either zero Republicans, or so few as to make no difference.” Predictably, given the composition of the professoriate, survey data also indicates that students’ political views drift further leftward between freshman and senior year.

In light of this data, it should not be a surprise to us that students who have gone to college in this age of ideological extremism have come out radicalized and … socialized.

Factor #4: Coddled Kids

The young have always been more inclined to embrace pipe dreams — a lack of familiarity with the complicated way in which the world actually works, coupled with the college fix described above, will do that to most anyone — but there is a reason the mindset of today’s young is particularly susceptible to the red menace. In last year’s The Coddling of the American Mind, the prominent social psychologist Jonathan Haidt and FIRE’s Greg Lukianoff describe the species of overprotective parenting and instilling of baseless and uncritical self-esteem by parents and educators alike that came to prevail as kids were growing up in the 90s and 00s. When we are raised in the belief we are wonderful just as we are, we never learn the critical life skills of self-soothing, working through anxiety, facing obstacles and overcoming adversity. The predictable result, as Haidt and Lukianoff observe, is a demand to be safeguarded — safe spaces, free speech crackdowns and so on. The state appears to many as the appropriate institution to provide this sort of “safety.”

If these four are the primary causes of socialism’s rapid surge in our midst, then the next logical question is what to do about it. There is no easy answer, of course, but I would suggest that the radicalization of academia is the lynchpin issue. If we could succeed in reversing that tsunami, many dominoes would fall: we would be addressing the university monoculture that systematically distorts research, sends students veering hard left and graduates generations of left-orthodox clones who find their way into journalism, government, education, entertainment and other influential sectors driving public opinion and shaping the other three downstream issues factoring into socialism’s rise: government policy, educational philosophy and the manner in which history is taught. Many have observed that our universities are in crisis, but that crisis also represents an opportunity to avert the much larger socialist cataclysm that threatens to engulf us all.

Article by Alexander Zubatov, a practicing attorney specializing in general commercial litigation, first appeared at Panampost.com. Read the original here. With editing by the Q.

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San Jose Among the Top 10 ‘Ungraceful’ Destinations That Should be Avoided

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Downtown San Jose

Mastodonistic buildings, chaotic traffic, overpopulation, absence of historical heritage … San Jose, Costa Rica, is among the ten destinations with little (or no) charm that will not trigger travelers’ alarms in search of sublime places.

Downtown San Jose

More than 2 million visit Costa Rica every year, but it is no secret among the tourists that its capital city, San Jose, has little to offer insofar as attractions, preferring the Pacific coastal beaches, the Caribbean, mountain resorts, rain forests, and volcanos. Like San Jose, the cities in Costa Rica overall don’t have much to offer.

According to by ElMundo.es, “The Costa Rican capital does not have it easy: it competes with a spectacular natural environment and that is why the city offers few attractions to travelers, who as they land set course for the country’s beaches and national parks. There are no architectural aberrations but neither does it have the charm of other Central American cities with colonial heritage,” writes Virginia Nesi in her report “Diez destinos poco agraciados (por no decir feos) que deberías evitar” (Ten ungraceful destinations – if not ugly – that you should avoid).

Other than the Teatro Nacional, the Melico Salazar, the Gold and Jade Museums, and the Mercado Central (Central Market), there is not much else for tourists to enjoy in San Jose. And then there is the traffic congestion.

The other nine cities in the ElMundo list are:

  • CHISINÁU (MOLDAVIA)
  • PYONGYANG (NORTH KOREA)
  • TIJUANA (MEXICO)
  • ANKARA (TURKEY)
  • TIRANA (ALBANIA)
  • ULAN BATOR (MONGOLIA)
  • SAO PAULO (BRAZIL)
  • AMMAN (JORDAN)
  • VOLGOGRAD (RUSSIA)
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Bolivia: Thousands March in Response to Cochabamba Massacre

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Bolivian security forces set up roadblocks across Cochabamba on Monday as mass demonstrations are taking place against the brutal attacks carried out against the people last week.

Three marches entered the city of Cochabamba, chanting for justice and the end of this de-facto government that is led by the self-declared president Jeanine Anez.

Last Friday, the Bolivian security forces attacked a crowd of civilians in Cochabamba that were demonstrating in support of the deposed President Evo Morales. The attack would turn into a massacre as nine Indigenous people were killed at the hands of the security forces.

The Indigenous people in Cochabamba were protesting the recent coup that led to the overthrow of the democratically elected President Evo Morales by the right-wing opposition.

In response to this massacre, tens of thousands of Bolivians took to the streets of Cochabamba to denounce the killings and the new government that is led by the self-declared president Jeanine Anez.

According to one protester that was interview by teleSUR, “we want the resignation of the self-proclaimed president. We want justice for all our fallen colleagues. These have been murders. The police and the military are killing us as if we are animals! We want justice!”

The self-declared leader has responded to these demands by stating that “we are doing everything in coordination and in unity with our brothers in the police. That is what the current circumstances call for.”

Anez has faced much criticism since declaring herself president, as many countries have refused to accept the coup that led to the ousting of the democratically elected leader Evo Morales.

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Venezuelan exodus at 4 million since 2015

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The UNHCR refugee agency said since November alone 1 million Venezuelans had fled their country gripped by the standoff between President Nicolas Maduro and his opponent, self-declared interim leader Juan Guaido.

Four million Venezuelans have fled their crisis-torn homeland in little over four years, say UN aid agencies. Colombia is hosting the bulk, followed by Chile, Ecuador, Brazil and Argentina.

Host communities urgently needed support, said Eduardo Stein, the UN’s special representative for Venezuelan refugees and migrants, ahead of a weekend visit by UNHCR envoy Angelina Jolie to Colombia.

“Latin American and Caribbean countries are doing their part to respond to this unprecedented crisis but they cannot be expected to continue doing it without international help,” said Stein, Guatemala’s former vice president.

Spread around the continent

The UNHCR said the 4 million comprised 700,000 who departed Venezuela before the end of 2015 and 3 million since the start of 2016.

Colombia had received 1.3 million, followed by 768,000 in Peru and sizeable numbers in Chile, Ecuador, Brazil and Argentina as well as Caribbean nations, it said.

Jolie’s two-day visit to Colombia’s border with Venezuela starting Friday was expected to include a migrant tent camp and a news conference on Saturday in the Colombian region of La Guajira.

Angelina Jolie at the border camp in Maicao, Colombia

Desperate situation

In a separate statement Friday, the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) said some 3.2 million children inside Venezuela — or one in three — needed humanitarian assistance.

Mortality rates among under-fives had doubled from 2010 until 2017, said UNICEF spokesman Christophe Boulierac, from 14 to 31 deaths per 1,000 live births.

Despite medical deliveries to clinics, UNICEF was “barely scratching the surface,” Boulierac said. “Millions of children need to be immunized, go to school, drink safe water and feel protected.”

Some 50 nations recognize Guaido as interim president, but he has been unable to remove Maduro, who still has the backing of Venezuela’s military, Cuba and Russia and has withstood US-led sanctions.

A mediation effort by Norway is reportedly stalling over Maduro’s refusal to accept fresh presidential elections to resolved the crisis.

Norway has so far hosted two rounds of exploratory talks over the past month, with facilitators also in Caracas for meetings with both sides.

ipj/rt (AP, Reuters, AFP)

Article originally appeared on Today Venezuela and is republished here with permission.

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News Chile’s Pinera vows ‘no impunity’ for police abuses during protests

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Chile's president has acknowledged that "abuses and crimes were committed" by police during weeks of unrest that have left more than 20 dead. Pinera has resisted calls for his resignation, instead promising reform.

Chilean President Sebastian Pinera has said there will be “no impunity” for security forces who violated the rights of protesters.

Chile’s president has acknowledged that “abuses and crimes were committed” by police during weeks of unrest that have left more than 20 dead. Pinera has resisted calls for his resignation, instead promising reform.

Violent riots over inequality and economic policies have gripped the South American country for the past month. At least 22 people have died and hundreds have been injured in the turmoil.

“Despite our firm commitment and precautions … to protect human rights, in some cases protocols were not adhered to,” Pinera said in a televised speech to the nation on Sunday night.

“There was excessive use of force. Abuses and crimes were committed, and the rights of all were not respected.”

Read more: Opinion: Chile’s constitution must come quicker than planned

Public prosecutors in Chile are investigating more than 1,000 cases of alleged abuses by police and the military, including instances of torture and sexual violence. The United Nations and human rights organization Amnesty International have also sent teams to investigate.

New constitution

The protests began last month after the government raised the price of metro fares. The backlash forced Pinera to drop the hikes, but by that point the discontent had ballooned into demands for his resignation and wider social reforms.

In a bid to assuage public anger, Pinera has since announced higher taxes for the rich and increases to the minimum wage and pensions.

On Friday, lawmakers also announced plans to hold a referendum in April 2020 to replace the country’s constitution — one of the protesters’ key demands.

“Our citizens will now have the last word with respect to a new constitution, the first to be drawn up in democracy,” Pinera said in his speech.

The current charter dates back to the 1973-1990 military rule of dictator Augusto Pinochet.

nm/kl (AFP, Reuters)

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Starting This Week DiDi Challenges Uber In Costa Rica

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“When we made the decision to expand to Central America, Costa Rica appeared as the first option to do so, and we hope in six months to have stabilized the operation,” said Felipe Contreras, director of corporate communications for DiDi. La Republica

UPDATE (10:20am). DIDI will start operations in Costa Rica on Tuesday (Nov. 19).

Starting this week, Uber in Costa Rica will have a challenger. DiDi, the transportation app of Chinese origin, starts operating this week with some 5,000 driving partners serving the metropolitan areas of San José, Cartago, Alajuela, and Heredia.

“When we made the decision to expand to Central America, Costa Rica appeared as the first option to do so, and we hope in six months to have stabilized the operation,” said Felipe Contreras, director of corporate communications for DiDi. La Republica

During the launch, users can enter the ‘PURAVIDA’ code to enjoy discounts of up to 50%. In addition, it will offer a referral program, where users who recommend DiDi to friends and family will also receive discounts of up to 50%.

“I can’t tell you which day of the next (this) week we are going to launch the service, but the application will show a countdown before starting to operate. For its part, we come with a very aggressive media plan,” Felipe Contreras, director of corporate communications for DiDi, told La Republica last week.

The “DiDi Rider” application, that is now available for download in the App Store (for iPhone) and Google Play (for Android) digital stores, is equipped with multiple security tools, such as the ability to share your trips in real-time with trusted contacts.

As part of the safety guidelines, DiDi says its driver-partners go through a strict recruitment process; in Costa Rica they will begin to operate with 5,000 drivers.

A team of 35 people will attend the DiDi Costa Rica operation from its corporate offices in Santa Ana; Likewise, the company already has a general manager, Pablo Mondragón, who was the manager of the Mexico operation.

In 2018, DiDi’s platform had 550 million users and tens of millions of drivers. The company provides app-based transportation services, including taxi hailing, private car hailing, social ride-sharing and bike sharing; on-demand delivery services; and automobile services, including sales, leasing, financing, maintenance, fleet operation, electric vehicle charging and co-development of vehicles with automakers.[

The platform, which has 14 different service options such as food delivery or electric scooter rental, is already present in Australia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Japan, Mexico and now in Costa Rica.

DiDi Chuxing Technology Co., was founded in China in 2012, by Cheng Wei. Official website didiglobal.com.

 

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Panama branch of Google mega-project will create digital hub

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Google plans a 1,000 kilometers submarine cable extension called “Curie” to Panama to improve connectivity. Google’s representative for Latin America, Christian Ramos, said on Thursday, that the adaptation of the extensive infrastructure will take about a year.

The first phase of the wiring goes from Los Angeles, in the US to Valparaíso, in Chile. Once installed, it will benefit more than 700 million Internet users, Newsroom Panama reports.

Panama President, Laurentino Cortizo, said that the connection ill brings benefits to citizens, not only in cybernetics but will be a new source of employment generation resulting in the reduction of poverty and inequality gaps.

“ It will help our companies be much more competitive. The more connected our communities are, the more opportunities they have,” said the president.

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Vogue: “Goodbye Costa Rica, Nicaragua is the new great destination”

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San Juan del Sur, Nicaragua

“Goodbye Costa Rica, Nicaragua is the new great destination of Central America”, is the headline in various publications, referring to the article (but not the title as it is inferred) published in Vogue magazine, Mexico and Latin America edition.

San Juan del Sur, Nicaragua

The prestigious magazine dedicated an extensive publication to Nicaragua as the “new great destination” of Central America.

Highlighting the paradisiacal beaches, Lake Nicaragua, the Apoyo lagoon, colonial cities (such as Granada or León), Unesco World Heritage Site, and a lush volcanic island with the status of Unesco Biosphere Reserve called Ometepe, often overlooked in favor of its southern neighboring, Vogue says that it is time to say goodbye to Costa Rica to notice its northern neighbor.

“Oh, and Nicaragua has some of the best surf spots in the world. However, the country remains relatively undiscovered,” according to Vogue editor,  Naomi Smart.

Granada, Nicaragua

“It is not surprising that there are an increasing number of guest houses focused on surfing along the Pacific coast of Nicaragua. After all, the waves on the Costa Esmeralda (Emerald Coast) are some of the best in the world, similar to those of neighboring Costa Rica, but without the crowds…, ” said Vogue, in the November 11 publication.

Vogue adds, “despite the political conflicts it has lived through the years, it in no way has diminished the warm and generous spirit of Nicaraguans, and the presence of fewer visitors in some places allows one to fully enjoy the destinations.”

Little Corn island

Vogue recommends that “with things back on track” the best time to start planning a trip is now, the dry season is between December and April, and the Christmas holidays are the ideal time to justifying traveling to Nicaragua and zigzagging between the Pacific and Caribbean coasts, starting the journey through Nicaragua in the colonial city of Granada, passing through the virgin lagoon of Apoyo, Costa Esmeralda, the bay of San Juan del Sur and culminating, why not?, in Corn Islands (las Islas del Maíz) in the Nicaraguan Caribbean, a natural paradise little exploited by tourists.

Omotepe, Nicaragua. Oliver Gerhard/imageBROKER/Shutterstock

“To enjoy one of the best viewpoints in all of Nicaragua, go up to Catarina, where you can enjoy the views of the Mombacho lagoon and volcano,” says Vogue.

Not everything is positive

Despite this publication, the socio-political crisis that has hit Nicaragua since the beginning of 2018 made a dent in the tourism sector.

The now extinct daily El Nuevo Diario, Nicaragua’s major newspaper, which halted its publications in September, said last February that due to the crisis, the country lost 62,000 jobs in the tourism sector and more than US$440 million dollars in revenue due to the cancellation of some 800.000 trips of foreigners.

Replying to the Vogue Tweet, Oso Arrechado (angry bear) wrote, “Do you love #TurismoDeDesastre? (disaster tourism) Are you fascinated to see armed police with AK-47 in each mall? Does it give you the chills the idea of being confused with someone who does not support the genocidal in power, beat you, rape and disappear you for several days? Visit #Nicaragua today!

Despite the negative, everything indicates that Nicaragua’s attractions flourish again and come alive by 2020.

 

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Expats can now learn how to prepare typical Costa Rican cuisine

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The Traditional Costa Rican Dish

Many expats become enamored with Costa Rican food and want to learn how to prepare it. Fortunately, it is relatively easy to find a cooking class here by checking on the Internet (Facebook) or in the local newspapers and yellow pages.

If you don’t have time to take a formal cooking class, a  Costa Rican recipes can be found online at sites like: www.food.com/recipes/costa-rican or http://recipes.wikia.com/wiki/Category:Costa_Rican_Recipes to name.

In addition, there is a wide choice of cookbooks with the most popular Costa Rican recipes in both Spanish and English.

  • Traditional Costa Rica Cookbook: Quick and Easy Recipes,” by Astrubal Leiva avaialable through amazon.com
  • The Best Recipes of Costa Rica,” published by Jadine Press
  • Cocina Tradicional,” also published by Jadine Press
  • Rice and Beans Comidas Afro-Limonenses,” published by Sandy
  • Comidas Ticas,” by Carmen de Musmani
  • Gallo Pinto, Recetas Tradicionales,” by Andrea Corrales
  • Costa Rica’s Best Dishes,” by Dorotea

Here are some typical Costa Rican foods:

  • Casado consists of rice and beans served side by side instead of mixed. There will usually be some type of meat (carne asada, fish, pork chop, or chicken) and a salad to round out the dish. There may also be some extras like plantains (patacones or maduro), a slice of white cheese, and/or corn tortillas.
  • Ceviche is a popular and consists of fresh raw fish (tilapia or corvina – white sea bass) marinated in lime juice with finely chopped cilantro and spices. Please see the recipe below.
  • Chorreadas are corn pancakes served with natilla (sour cream).
  • Gallo Pinto is usually eaten for breakfast and consists of rice mixed with black beans, served with natilla (sour cream), eggs (scrambled) and fried plantain.
  • Olla de carne which is a soup with chunks of beef, potatoes, carrots, chayote, plantains and yucca.
  • Tamales Every good Tico eats tamales for Christmas (Navidad). A tamal is a seasoned corn meal which is covered in boiled plantains leaves. In the inside, it has rice, beans, vegetables and meat.

These are three  Costa Rican recipes to get you started:

Gallo Pinto (Rice and Beans)

Gallo Pinto – The Traditional Costa Rican Dish

Gallo Pinto is eaten nationwide. Most people eat it for breakfast. Others for lunch or dinner. Makes 3 to 4 servings

Preparation Time: 10 minutes

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups of cooked long grain rice
  • 1 cup of red or black small cooked beans (“frijol criollo”)
  • 1/2 cup of finely diced white onions
  • 3 teaspoons of vegetable oil
  • 2 tablespoons of chopped cilantro (“Culantro de Castilla”)
  • Salt to taste
  • Lizano Sauce (“Salsa Lizano” is a mild sauce used on every day
    cooking in Costa Rica)

Instructions:
Place vegetable oil on a frying pan and heat for approximately 1 minute. Sauté onions until caramelized. Add entire pot of cooked beans and its gravy into the sautéed onions. Stir over low-medium heat for a minute. Combine cooked rice to sautéed bean mix well and simmer for 5 minutes. Add salt to taste. Add cilantro. Cook on high heat and quick. Serve immediately and add the Lizano Sauce to taste.

Ceviche de Corvina

Ceviche de Corvina – Marinated White Seabass
  • 1 lb. corvina (seabass), cut in small pieces
  • 3 tablespoons onion, finely chopped
  • 1 tablespoon celery, finely chopped
  • 2 tablespoons fresh coriander, chopped
  • 2 cups lemon juice
  • Salt, pepper and Tabasco Sauce
  • 1/2 teaspoon Worcester Sauce

Combine all ingredients in a glass bowl. Let it stand for at least four hours in the refrigerator.
Serve chilled in small bowls topped with catsup and soda crackers on the side. Serves 8.

TRES LECHES

Tres Leches – three milk cake

Cake Base

  • 5 eggs
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1/2 teaspoon vanilla
  • 1 1/2 cups of flour

Preheat oven at 350F. Sift baking powder. Set aside. Cream butter and sugar until fluffy. Add eggs and vanilla and beat well. Add flour to the butter mixture 2 tablespoons at a time, until well blended. Pour into greased rectangular Pyrex dish and bake at 350 F for 30 minutes. Let cool. Pierce with a fork and cover. For the filling combine 2 cups of milk, 1 can of condensed milk and one can of evaporated milk. Pour this mixture over the cool cake. To make the topping, mix 1 1/2 cups of half and half, 1 teaspoon vanilla and a cup of sugar. Whip together until thick. Spread over the top of the cake. Keep refrigerated. Serves 12.

About the author
Christopher Howard has been conducting monthly relocation/retirement tours and writing retirement guidebooks for more than 30 years. See www.liveincostarica.com. He has a relocation/retirement blog at: http://www.liveincostarica.com/blog and  is also the author of the one-of-a-kind bestselling e-book, “Guide to Costa Rican Spanish,” that can be purchased through Amazon.)

 

 

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Protesters use laser pens to send police drone crashing to the ground in Chile

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Protesters in Chile have taken down a police drone by aiming dozens of laser pens at the gadget. Video footage shows the dramatic moment the drone plummets after about 50 lasers were jointly pointed into the sky in Santiago.

The laser action in Chile’s capital was taken after a month of protests has created chaos in the South American nation.

The bringing down of the spy drone has sparked a range of suggestions over how the gadgets were used so successfully.

Interesting Engineering said that among the many theories “floating around social media” was that the lasers were powerful enough to melt the plastic on the drone – particularly if it was cheaply made.

But others have suggested that pointing dozens of lasers at the gadget simultaneously blinded the drone’s camera lens.

Or, it could have made it overheat and malfunction.

When the website posted about the unusual event on Facebook, Luis Rodriguez commented: “Consumer grade lasers could hardly do any damage, except perhaps to the camera sensor.”

But a skeptical Joe Jimearson said: “Those lasers aren’t strong enough to do what the article is claiming… I bet someone threw a rock when it actually fell.”

However, Stanley Balfour suggested: “My guess is the drone’s sensors would’ve been completely confused and it’s done an autoland.”

Zeeshan Shabbir said: “Laser can kill the image sensor of the camera that [the] drone is installed with. Of course, you can’t fly the drone without its camera.”

The drone’s downing comes as riots, arson, and looting have killed more than 20 people, caused extensive damage and prompted President Sebastian Pinera to call soldiers on to the streets.

And news agency the Associated Press reported that protesters are being deliberately blinded by cops firing projectiles into their faces.

Chile’s main medical body says that at least 230 people have lost their sight after being shot in an eye in the last month at demonstrations over inequality and better social services.

Referendum Planned

Activists took to the streets from October 18 as students were angry about a rise in subway fares.

But their action took fire and prompted widespread action, with people protesting about the large gap between the haves and have-nots in Chile.

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Evo Morales Says the U.S. Offered Him Plane to Leave Bolivia

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Former Bolivian President Evo Morales gestures during an interview with Reuters, in Mexico City, Mexico November 15, 2019. Photo REUTERS/Edgard GarridoReuters

(Reuters) – Former Bolivian President Evo Morales said in an interview with Reuters in Mexico City on Friday that the United States had offered a plane to get him out of Bolivia.

Former Bolivian President Evo Morales gestures during an interview with Reuters, in Mexico City, Mexico November 15, 2019. Photo Edgard Garrido / Reuters

Morales resigned under pressure earlier this week and fled Bolivia after protests and violence following an Oct. 20 election that was tarnished by widespread allegations of fraud. He has been given asylum in Mexico.

“The United States had called the foreign minister (of Bolivia) to offer to send us a plane to take us where we wanted. I was sure it would be Guantanamo,” said Morales, smiling.

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Costa Rica Wants To End Selfies With Wild Animals

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Despite being banned in the country more than 10 years ago, travelers to Costa Rica continue in large numbers to take selfies with wildlife anyway. For such, the country with more than 5% of the world’s biodiversity and one of the countries with the greatest biological wealth, has launched a campaign asking travelers not to take wildlife selfies.

Image from Twitter

Selfies and photographs in direct contact with wild animals are causing great damage to this biodiversity, and it is aiming to become the first country to regulate the incidence of selfies involving wild animals.

Wildlife in Costa Rica is a public domain property and thus protected. According to Pamela Castillo, vice-minister of environment and energy, direct contact with wild animals represents a risk to people and generates stress and suffering to the fauna.

“Animals can also carry illnesses or get sick by pathogens transmitted by human beings,” she says. “For these reasons, it is necessary to keep a safe distance when they are seen in their natural habitat or sanctuaries and respect their natural behavior.”

Image from Twitter

The #stopanimalselfies initiative is asking visitors to refrain from offering food to wild animals and trying to capture them.

Andrea Smith, writes on the Lonely Planet,  “They should not make loud noises or throw objects to animals in sanctuaries or rescue centers to try to get their attention, and should also never touch, grab or hold an animal. The campaign wants to raise awareness about the negative impacts of selfies and photographs that show direct contact with wild animals, and it seeks to reduce these cruel behaviors and warn of the possible risks involved.”

The Humane Society International said, “We applaud Costa Rica’s efforts to ensure the protection, ethical management and welfare of wild animals by avoiding promoting practices that are cruel to animals, since they do not respect their natural behaviors and promote a mercantilist and utilitarian vision.”

World Animal Protection

A better practice, under the Wildlife Selfie Code, is to keep a safe distance from all wildlife. Permit the animals to remain untouched in their natural habitat. Avoid making loud noises. Especially avoid throwing objects at them to get their attention, and never touch, grab or hold an animal for a selfie.

Maria Revelo, Costa Rica’s Minister of Tourism, further explained, “The campaign has the objective of generating conscience about the adequate treatment that a sustainable tourism destination must guarantee to its wild animals and to those that get close to them as tourists. #StopAnimalSelfies has the support of the Costa Rican Tourism Board (ICT) due to its contribution it makes to the country’s model of sustainable tourism development.”

To spotlight animal rights, promote wildlife safety and minimize animal selfies, Costa Rican authorities instead recommend taking photos with a stuffed toy.

The DO:

  • Stay at a safe distance from the animal.
  • Carry out a silent, respectful observation.
  • Respect the animal’s natural behaviors.
  • Refrain from entering cages or enclosures, as these provide a barrier that protects me from direct contact with the animal.

The DON’T:

  • Touch, grab or hug the animal.
  • Offer the animal food.
  • Attempt to catch or chase the animal to be closer to it or have direct contact.
  • Make noises, whistle, throw objects or knock on the barrier to have the animal move or wake up.

Join today the #stopanimalselfie campaign, a global action to bring cruel selfies to an end and to support the preservation of wild fauna.

 

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How Costa Rica’s environment minister talks to his daughter about climate change

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Carlos Manuel Rodríguez on the value of nature's carbon-fighting machines - trees.

Do we need new, advanced technology to reduce carbon emissions? Carlos Manuel Rodríguez, Costa Rica’s Minister of Environment and Energy, says we already have the best “machine” for the job.

Carlos Manuel Rodríguez on the value of nature’s carbon-fighting machines – trees.

Speaking at the World Economic Forum’s Annual Meeting of the Global Future Councils in Dubai, Rodríguez described a conversation with his daughter about climate change – and how he told her nature has already given us one of the most important tools to tackle the crisis.

“One day I was having dinner with my kids in my house and my younger daughter said, ‘Dad, don’t worry about climate change. One day, a scientist will design a machine that can absorb all of that carbon that is in the atmosphere and we will be safe from climate change’,” he said in an interview.

“And I said to my daughter, ‘You know what? Nature invented that machine many, many millions of years ago. That machine,” he said, “is called a tree.”

Rodríguez continued, “So, if we stop tropical deforestation, or deforestation at the global level, we will use effectively that machine. That was the sign by nature probably 300 million years ago.”

Around the world, we’re losing 18.7 million acres of forest each year – or 27 soccer fields per minute. Deforestation not only causes a loss of natural habits and biodiversity, but also contributes to emissions as there are fewer trees to suck up the carbon. According to Global Forest Watch, if “tropical deforestation” were a country, it would rank #3 in carbon-equivalent emissions, behind China and the United States.

Image: Seymour & Busch 2016 / Global Forest Watch / World Resources Institute

But Costa Rica shows us it’s possible to undo some of the damage.

In the 1940s, 75% of Costa Rica was covered by forest, primarily tropical rainforest. By 1983, following decades of deforestation, this dropped to 26%.

With major policy changes such as restricting logging permits, paying landowners who conserve their land, and attracting overseas investment in eco-tourism, Costa Rica has reversed the trend. Rodríguez explained that it has now doubled its forest cover, which covers more than half of the country and continues to grow as the government creates more national parks to preserve natural ecosystems, from highlands and cloud cover to mangroves and rainforests.

“Costa Rica has been very successful at understanding how we value nature and how we use nature as a driver for economic growth, particularly with eco-tourism,” he said.

And by tying the need to preserve biodiversity to the economy, Costa Rica has gotten citizens involved: “If nature becomes a driver for growth and the economy, economic development, people won’t want to destroy nature. So, in a matter of a generation – over one generation – we went from people destroying the forest to produce food, particularly livestock, to protecting nature, restoring nature and using it as a way to bring tourists to the farms and the parks. And that has been tremendously successful.”

Costa Rica’s not stopping there. The country has committed to be fully decarbonized by 2050 and will present a national climate action plan to UN Climate Change by 2020. The plan will include measures for transportation, infrastructure, energy, agriculture, waste management and forest management – including increasing forest cover to 60% by 2030.

Rodríguez thinks they can get there.

“I’m a rational optimistic because I know we’ve got the resources. It is not lack of financial resources. And we’ve got the technology. We know what we need to do.”

And what we need to do, as he told his daughter, is protect and grow nature’s most precious carbon-fighting machines: trees.

This article is part of the World Economic Forum <Annual Meeting of the Global Future Councils

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Evo Morales: indigenous leader who changed Bolivia but stayed too long

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The former Bolivian president Evo Morales speaks from exile in Mexico City on Thursday. Photograph: Eduardo Verdugo/AP

The meteoric political journey of Evo Morales came to an end – for now, at least – right where it started: in a steamy, jungle region of central Bolivia.

The former Bolivian president Evo Morales speaks from exile in Mexico City on Thursday. Photograph: Eduardo Verdugo/AP

It was in El Chapare that Morales cut his teeth in the 1980s, helping organize his fellow coca farmers against US-backed efforts to eradicate the raw ingredient of cocaine.

And it was here that he fled to last weekend, after resigning the presidency – at the prompting of Bolivia’s top general – as deadly protests convulsed the country amid allegations of electoral fraud.

Pictured lying atop a blanket on a safehouse floor, Morales fondly recalled his time as a local leader on Twitter. He had often promised to return and retire here.

But late on Monday, Bolivia’s longest-serving president instead boarded a Mexican government jet bound for exile.

The intervening four decades form one of the more remarkable biographies of the modern era. It is a story that is idiosyncratically Bolivian, but reflects very Latin American currents of boom, bust and revolution – and speaks to a universal theme of power and its corrosive effects.

Morales was born to a poor family of llama herders in 1959, at a time when indigenous people were doused with pesticides when entering government buildings.

Twenty years later, he moved to Chapare where his activities as a trade unionist (and keen amateur footballer) saw Morales grow in stature and shrewdness. He overcame beatings, arrests, racist abuse and factional in-fighting to assume the leadership of the Movement for Socialism (Mas) – a broad bloc of miners, farmers and leftwing urbanites – and entered congress.

He soon gained prominence at the head of a popular rebellion against moves to sell Bolivia’s natural gas cheaply via neighboring Chile – a historical enemy – to the United States.

Morales, then president-elect, takes off a garland of coca leaves during a rally in Eterazama, in his home province of Chapare in 2005. Photograph: Aizar Raldes/AFP/Getty Images

The so-called Gas War (2003-5) – in which the armed forces killed more than 60 people – fatally discredited the authorities, drawn from the same European-descended elites that had ruled Bolivia for centuries. Following the flight of one president and the resignation of another, Carlos Mesa, Morales swept to power in 2005 elections with over half of the national vote.

Morales promised nothing less than a cosmic rebalancing. “We will end the colonial state and the neoliberal model,” he vowed. “Five hundred years of resistance by the indigenous peoples of America are over.”

Helped by a global boom in commodity prices, a partial nationalization of oil and gas paid for generous social programs that slashed poverty rates from 59% to 35%. South America’s poorest country became its fastest-growing, averaging a 5% expansion every year for well over a decade.

A reformed constitution made Bolivia a plurinational state, with official status given to 36 indigenous peoples and languages, and an Andean emblem of Technicolor pixels – the Wiphala – flown henceforth alongside the national tricolor. Coca cultivation was legalized and respect for Pachamama – the Andean earth mother – enshrined in the constitution.

Morales “ushered in a new, more modern Bolivia that is more egalitarian, less racist, and more economically vibrant”, said Diego von Vacano, a political scientist, likening the leader’s early achievements to those of Nelson Mandela.

Half of the national assembly were women, many of them indigenous, who wore jaguar skins and flowing pollera skirts with newfound pride.

Morales quelled a separatist revolt by wealthier, lowland provinces. Every year he remained in power – returning with greater majorities in 2009 and 2014 – was an achievement of sorts, in a country famous for putsches, assassinations and revolutions.

Abroad, Morales appeared with fellow “pink tide” leaders like Venezuela’s Hugo Chávez and Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva of Brazil, lambasted North American imperialism and (unsuccessfully) sued Chile for access to the Pacific Ocean.

At home, he incessantly toured in his presidential plane, pressing the flesh and cutting ribbons. His party trick, one Mas legislator recalled, was to identify individual hamlets from the air and recite from memory how his government had helped: a school here, a sports ground there.

But this personalized element was, perhaps, the fatal weakness of his revolution.

Morales disdained to groom a successor. A vast museum dedicated to Morales in his home town, and a towering government skyscraper in Bolivia’s administrative capital of La Paz – complete with helipad and luxury presidential apartment – were criticized as expensive vanity projects.

Evo Morales, in green shirt, plays football at the 6,000m snow-covered Sajama peak, the highest in Bolivia, during a match to protest against Fifa’s ban on international matches at venues over 2,500m, in 2007. Photograph: Reuters

Morales backtracked on promises, seeking to drive a highway through the Tipnis indigenous reserve. He loosened environmental protections, contributing to manmade wildfires that scorched some 4 million hectares(15,500 square miles) in 2019. Government inaction contributed to the disappearance of Lake Poopó, a vast inland sea.

“The government of Evo Morales has been a profoundly rhetorical one, where he says things but doesn’t do them,” said María Galindo, founder of the feminist collective Mujeres Creando, citing a failure to address domestic violence and femicide. “It’s the same story with the rights of indigenous people and Mother Earth.”

A new constitution allowed Morales to run for a third term in 2014. For his fourth attempt, he first sought approval in a 2016 referendum, which was narrowly rejected.

A year later, the constitutional court – its judges elected from a shortlist drawn up by the Mas-dominated legislature – ruled that term limits violated the president’s human rights.

The spark to this deeply combustible scenario came on election day, when a preliminary vote count was abruptly paused after its electricity, internet and phone access were cut.

When the tallying resumed 24 hours later, Morales had surpassed the 10 percentage-point lead needed to defeat his rival, Mesa, in the first round.

Election monitors from the Organization of American States (OAS) cried foul, citing “clear manipulation” of voting data, a hidden server, forged scrutineers’ signatures and phantom votes. Sympathetic observers pointed to traditionally late-returning rural votes to explain the incongruities.

Protests by traditional opponents in the eastern city of Santa Cruz were gradually joined by young, indigenous city-dwellers. Violent clashes claimed at least 10 lives.

Cornered, Morales made the biggest concessions of his career – first accepting a full OAS audit of the vote, then agreeing to fresh elections.

As demonstrations raged, a powerful workers’ union called on him to consider his position. A police mutiny, apparently over pay and leadership gripes, broke out in multiple cities. Guards abandoned the government palace, and Mas leading lights resigned.

And on Sunday, Gen Williams Kalliman – appointed by Morales under a year ago – appeared on television to “suggest” that the president step down.

As Morales flew north, escaping what he branded a “coup”, the country he ruled for nearly 14 years plunged deeper into uncertainty. Police units tore the Wiphala from their uniforms; others burned the Andean flag. Triumphant rightwing leaders entered the deserted legislature holding Bibles aloft. Crowds jogged through the Morales stronghold of El Alto, promising guns, dynamite and civil war.

“This is a perilous moment,” said Susan Ellison, a Bolivia-focused anthropologist. “Revanchist opposition leaders are already moving to dismantle important gains from the Morales years … [but] the changes Morales came to personify are not tied to any one person alone.”

A self-declared interim administration lead by Jeanine Áñez, a minor lowlands politician and evangelical Christian, promised new elections “soon”. Social media posts attributed to Añez branding Aymara beliefs “satanic” surfaced and her cabinet threatened “seditious” journalists. A deal with Mas to restore constitutional order appears elusive.

If his party demands it, Morales told the Mexican newspaper El Universal on Friday, he will “return to be with the people, to fight against the dictatorship and the coup”.

Áñez responded by saying he was free to come home, but that he would have to respond to allegations of electoral fraud and corruption – and would not be immune from prosecution.

From The Guardian. Read the original article here.

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“Super Charlie”

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Costa Rican president Carlos Alvarado I heading to New York on Wednesday amid “secretism”.  In the caricature by Crhoy.com, the prez has a copy of TIME 2019 100 NEXT cover tucked under his arm.

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Volaris CEO Announces Growth Freeze In Costa Rica

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Enrique Beltranena, fundador y CEO de Volaris

Enrique Beltranena, founder and president of the low-cost carrier, Volaris, published on Linkedin announcing the decision to freeze growth in Costa Rica.

This is what he wrote: “In #CostaRica the aeronautical authority lost the country category to the US, tax increases, the highest fuel cost in the region and now the planned increase in Juan Santa airport fees …  making it unfeasible for any airline to develop local aviation. In @viajaVolaris we are evaluating the situation very carefully. Meanwhile, our decision is to freeze the growth of the airline in #CostaRica.”

The Volaris CEO referred to an increase in the rates of the Juan Santamaría airport by 2020, which according to this executive, will represent a 59% increase in the cost of operation in the country.

Enrique Beltranena, founder and CEO of Volaris, the Mexican low-cost airline and it’s subsidiary, Volaris Costa Rica

The director of Volaris Institutional Relations for Central America, Ronny Rodríguez, explained that the airport administrator, Aeris, circulated among the airport users a tariff proposal with strong increases for 2020.

He explained that, for example, it is intended to increase by 454% the cost for the use of the infrastructure in that terminal and by 127% the value of the service of renting a bus for the transfer of passengers between boarding gates.

For its part, the ICT (Costa Rica tourism board) said “it is gathering information to which Volaris refers. Once we know more details and analyze it we can refer to the announcement of this low-cost airline.”

This is not the first time the Mexican businessman has complained of the high operating costs in Costa Rica. During an interview in September 2018, when Volaris Costa Rica was created, Beltranena pointed out the cost of the ‘exit’ (airport) tax of US$29, which was practically equal to the US$32 airfare Volaris charged for travel in the region.

The fares between countries of Central America are above 45% and 48% than in Mexico, where Volaris is based, while the value of fuels in the region is greater between 12% and 15% than in Mexican territory, the executive pointed out one year ago.

Despite the high costs, Beltranena explained that they remained in Central America because the region, with respect to air services, is very attractive.

A year ago, last November, the airline’s commercial director, Manuel Jaquez, spoke about the expansion plans for Costa Rica, the company’s intention to establish the hub for Central America here and that it would open direct flights to South America as well.

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Mishap On The General Cañas: McLaren On Losing End

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It sucks to be the owner of this expensive and exotic vehicle involved in a minor collision on the General Cañas earlier this week.

The mishap occurred in the area of the Hospital Mexico, in the Alajuela – San Jose direction, when the big truck butted against the McLaren owned by a well-known local businessman.

The “chuzo” is valued at more than ¢200,000,000 colones in Costa Rica and is of limited production.

The report on social media did not transcend the causes of the accident or who was at fault, though from the position of the McLaren, many presume the driver of the car was at fault, possibly making an improper lane change. We can also assume that the driver of the big truck had difficulty seeing where the chuzo was for its low profile.

Needless to say, the collision caused chaos on a road, that is referred to as a highway, that is overly congested.

 

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Canadian Involved In Fatal Traffic Accident Can’t Leave Costa Rica

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Vargas Núñez. Photo from social media

A Canadian man suspected of causing a fatal traffic accident in which a young motorcyclist died was ordered not to leave Costa Rica, surrender his passport to authorities, sign in once a month at the Fiscalía (Prosecutor’s Office) and maintain a fixed address.

Vargas Núñez. Photo from social media

According to the police report, Gustavo Cetrola, 49, made an improper turn with his car and hit the motorcyclist. The crash occurred last Tuesday in Quebrada Gabado, on the Costanera Sur (Ruta 34), specifically in front of the La Ostra restaurant, near Tarcoles, north of Playa Jaco, in the province of Puntarenas.

The motorcyclist, surnamed Vargas Núñez and resident of San Ramón, died on-site while two minors who were traveling in the car driven by Cetrola were taken to hospital in delicate condition. One of them remains hospitalized.

Preventive measures are not uncommon in fatal traffic accidents; the surrendering passports and ordered to remain in the country are also a common measure applied to foreigners who are flight risk.

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Pope wants big tech do more to tackle porn

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Pope Francis with Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg

Pope Francis said Thursday that tech companies, such as Facebook and Google, needed to take action over pornography.

Pope Francis with Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg

Primarily, he wants preventative measures to be taken so that children cannot easily access pornography, as well as for social media companies, search engines and IT firms to do all they can to remove child porn from the internet.

“There is a need to ensure that investors and managers remain accountable, so that the good of minors and society is not sacrificed to profit,” the pope told religious leaders and high-level tech delegates at a Vatican seminar.

He indirectly dismissed the notion that Facebook and other social media organizations are merely “platforms” for sharing content.

“It is now clear that they cannot consider themselves completely unaccountable vis-a-vis the services they provide for their customers,” the 82-year-old said. “So I make an urgent appeal to them to assume their responsibility toward minors, their integrity and their future.”

The summit, which is spread over two days, includes guest speakers from Microsoft, Apple, Amazon, Google, Facebook and Paramount Pictures, in addition to officials from the EU and UN. Spiritual leaders of the world’s Orthodox Christians and the grand imam of the Al-Azhar University in Cairo, are also making speeches at the conference.

Safeguarding children

The Catholic Church is trying to increase awareness about protecting children and technology as part of its response to a string of sex abuse scandals involving priests.

The pope has witnessed at close quarters the damage that has been done to the Vatican’s reputation worldwide. Last year, one of his senior diplomats, Carlo Alberto Capella, was sentenced to five years in prison by a Vatican court for viewing child pornography. Furthermore, one of Pope Francis’ own Argentine bishops was placed under investigation by the church after porn was found on his cellphone.

Also on Thursday, Spanish Jesuit Juan Antonio Guerrero was appointed new Vatican economy minister to succeed Cardinal George Pell, who was convicted of child abuse in his native Australia. Pell is currently appealing the conviction.

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Bolivia Interim president bars Morales from new elections

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Jeanine Anez has said that recently ousted president Evo Morales has no right to run in any upcoming national vote. The Latin American nation, however, remains divided over who should run the country.

Bolivia’s interim president said on Thursday the country’s former leader, Evo Morales, cannot run in any prospective elections.

Jeanine Anez has said that recently ousted president Evo Morales has no right to run in any upcoming national vote. The Latin American nation, however, remains divided over who should run the country.

Jeanine Anez, a Senate deputy leader who claimed the presidency earlier this week, told a news conference: “Evo Morales does not qualify to run for a fourth term.”

She also criticized Mexico for allowing the former president to rally support in exile.

“We have to let the Mexican government know that cannot be happening,” said Anez, who says she wants to bring calm to Bolivia but has been accused of unfairly seizing power by Morales supporters.

Anez is striving to restore stability to a deeply-divided nation that has been rocked by protests since an election in October, which was won by Morales but tainted by allegations of fraud.

Support for Morales

Despite the accusations of electoral irregularities, and Anez’s call for calm, Morales still holds strong backing in his homeland.

Demonstrators flooded the streets Thursday, brandishing the national flag and waving the multicolor “Wiphala” flag that represents indigenous peoples, in support of Morales.

Meanwhile, protesters in the central city of Sacaba, were shouting: “Evo: Friend, the people are with you!”

Supporters of ex-President Evo Morales march in La Paz, Bolivia, with multicolored indigenous flags

Morales said he will ask the United Nations and possibly Pope Francis to intervene in a bid to resolve the dispute.

He told the Associated Press he still considers himself president because the Andean nation’s Legislative Assembly has yet to recognize his resignation.

“If they haven’t accepted or rejected it, I can say I am still president,” he said.

jsi/rt (Reuters, AP)

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CAFTA Diet May Be Bad For Health, Say US Experts

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A study on a trade deal between the U.S. and smaller, developing countries in Central America and the Caribbean – the Central America Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA-DR) – highlights how free trade agreements impact diet and health

The study analyzes the availability of non-nutritious food in Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua and the Dominican Republic in the years after the CAFTA-DR was signed between those countries and the U.S., going into effect in 2006.

“Our main finding is that the trade agreement is associated with the importation of much less healthy food. This includes industrial sweeteners, edible oils high in saturated fats, and processed foods,” the University of Buffalo news center reports.

“We’re trying to think about the health effects of trade agreements,” says Marion Werner, associate professor of geography University at Buffalo College of Arts and Sciences. “The U.S. is exporting ever-more processed foods, as well as meat, to the region, while making it harder for farmers there to supply healthy foods for the local market. This situation has an impact on the health of Central Americans, especially low-income folks, as an unhealthy diet can lead to higher rates of obesity and overweight populations.”

Frozen potatoes offer one example of the dynamics at play. As Werner and her co-authors write in the paper, “We take frozen potatoes as a proxy for increasing penetration of processed vegetables in local diets because of the product’s near exclusive use for french fries in the hotel and restaurant sectors, especially fast food chains.”

CAFTA-DR eliminated tariffs on frozen potatoes, and with the agreement in place, the Dominican Republic and Central American signatories saw sharp increases in imports of that food, the study finds. From 2006-16, frozen potato exports to those countries rose by 76%, with U.S. exports growing rapidly, according to the research.

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Costa Rica Rising Interest Rates

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Banco Central de Costa Rica (BCCR) or Central Bank

The Basic Passive Rate (Tasa Básica Pasiva –  TBP) rose from 5.50% to 5.60%, while the Effective Rate in Dollars (Tasa Efectiva Dólares – TED) also rose, in this case from 2.33% to 2.39%.

The Banco Central de Costa Rica (BCCR) –  Central Bank – published on Wednesday afternoon November 13 that after registering a decrease the previous week, the Basic Passive Rate rose by 0.10%, and will remain at 5.60% until next Wednesday, November 20.

The TBPrate is an average of the collection rates in colones of financial institutions with terms of 150 to 210 days.

The Central Bank also reported that after the 0.06% increase in the TED recorded last week, the present rate rose again and will stand at 2.39% over the next 7 days.

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Canadian Deported Back To Costa Rica After Fleeing To Nicaragua

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A Canadian man identified as Jonathan Gallota, 35, who destroyed his ankle monitor and fled to Nicaragua, was deported back to Costa Rica, after being captured while attempting to leave that country on a private flight.

Jonathan Gallota being escorted by an Interpol agent back to the Costa Rica side of the Peñas Blancas land border with Nicaragua. Photo OIJ.

The Canadian had entered Costa Rica through the Juan Santamaría International – San Jose – Airport in July 2018, arriving from Canada. He was apprehended with two other Canadians on August 2, 2018, in Ciudad Colón, when they were traveling aboard a vehicle where police found 1,006 doses of methamphetamines and almost ¢7 million colones in cash.

The detention of Gallota and two other Canadians on August 2, 2018, in Cuidad Colon. Photo from La Nacion

Gallota was imprisoned for 8 months for drug trafficking; however, was granted freedom while wearing an ankle monitoring device after requesting a change in preventive measures

After several months, the accused took off his ankle monitor and escaped to Nicaragua, where, allegedly, using false documents, tried to leave on a private flight to his native country and thus evade Costa Rican justice.

To enter Nicaragua, Gallota used a false passport in the name of Jonathan Tessier, he apparently had bought in Costa Rica.

On October 23, at the Augusto César Sandino airport in Managua, when he intended to leave Nicaragua on a private flight, immigration authorities detected the irregularities in his documentation, discovering the true identity of this man, who was flagged in the International Police (Interpol) system, wanted by the Pavas (San José) criminal court, leading to his apprehension.

Two Mexican nationals; a 59-year-old pilot, and the 38-year-old co-pilot were also detained by Nicaraguan authorities.

Gallota was escorted by Interpol agents back to the Costa Rican side of the Peñas Blancas land border with Nicaragua, where he once again was back in custody.

 

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Punchlines in Paradise – Fundraiser of Coco C.A.R.E.

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Get ready to laugh your tail off at the Punchlines in Paradise – Fundraiser of Coco C.A.R.E., with hilarious comedians from the United States.

Comedians Performing:

Lang Parker with her impressive comedic timing, instant likability on and off camera and impressive writing skills gained her national attention on the Emmy-nominated NBC show Last Comic Standing. She floored judges when she came out in her overhauls and asked, “Have you ever been mistaken for a lesbian?”

Lang regularly tours clubs and cities all over the United States as well as numerous tours overseas to entertain the US Armed Forces.

Maria Walsh, “America’s Naughtiest Mommy” redefines parenting and offers some original tips in her one-woman tour de force. She may appear like a classic SUV-driving, latte-drinking, suburban soccer mom but Walsh says what most people are thinking but are afraid to say. In the era of child worship, Walsh mocks the art of child-rearing in a hilarious fashion that gets mommies and daddies laughing so hard they can’t hear the babysitter calling on their blackberries!

Charlene Mae, a standup Comedian and actress based in Los Angeles. Charlene’s comedy can fit her comedy to any audience. Her material is versatile and her performance flows with non-stop laughter, all while being edgy without being offensive.

Laura Hayden, Comedian/Doctor/shoe fanatic. Laura recently appeared on Stand Up In Stilettos for TV Guide Network. In addition to numerous other radio, TV and podcasts appearances worldwide in August, she returned to Scotland for the 5th year in a row to participate in the Edinburgh Fringe Festival.

Barbara Holliday, owner of Flappers Comedy Club in Burbank and H2F Comedy Productions an LA Based Comedy Management and Development company, Holliday is an unexpectedly funny, blue-eyed, 5-foot-2-inch dynamo. And since 1999, she has been Managing Comedians and Producing live comedy shows, festivals, and television pilots. A few of her shows include Uncle Clyde’s Comedy Contest, sponsored by the Riviera Comedy Club in Las Vegas, Survival of the Funniest and the Hollywood Ha Ha Festival, as well as many projects for film and television. She has also been on 14 Game Shows- Is that legal?

About COCO C.A.R.E.
Eight years ago you could not drive down the main street of Playas del Coco without noticing at least 10 stray, unwanted, sick, and malnourished dogs. Eight years ago you would see another 10 of these dogs on the beach. These poor animals were just the visible portion of a large population of unwanted dogs and cats living in Coco.

Today, you do not see these animals. That is because eight years ago C.A.R.E. was organized by a large number of volunteers and financial supporters. During those eight years, 4,200 dogs and cats have been neutered. Hundreds of animals have been helped back to health with medications donated by C.A.R.E.. The whole town has now come to accept the neutering of pets as a normal, humane thing to do. To this day, 35 to 40 animals are brought to CARE by their owners to be neutered each month.

That is real success! Thanks to all the volunteers and professional veterinarians who worked to make this happen.

It is now time for C.A.R.E. to change tactics. As of November 2016 we are going to turn over the actual neutering to Dra. Jessica, one of the many great veterinarians in Coco. She will be able to schedule the neutering of dogs and cats throughout the week; no longer will the people of Coco have to wait at the big monthly clinics and this way possibly even more than the monthly clinic average can be handled.

CARE will continue to provide fundraising and money to pay for the neutering when people cannot afford to pay. Only $5 Entry for this great event …Bracelets are ready for pick up at Hotel La Puerta Del Sol front office:)

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US Army Helicopters In Pavas (Photos)

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A close view of the two Boeing CH-47 Chinook of the United States Army that arrived at Tobias Bolaños airport in Pavas Wednesday morning.

They look pretty new.

To give an idea of the size of these helicopters, they measure 30 meters long and weigh more than 20 tons.

The CH-47 Chinook is an American twin-engined, tandem rotor, heavy-lift helicopter developed by American rotorcraft company Vertol and manufactured by Boeing Vertol (later known as Boeing Rotorcraft Systems).

The CH-47 is among the heaviest lifting Western helicopters. Its name, Chinook, is from the Native American Chinook people of modern-day Washington state.

The first flight was on September 21, 1961. Currently still in production, over 1,200 have been built as of 2012. Unit cost is US$38.5 million dollars. (Wikipedia)

Photos from https://www.facebook.com/AviacionCR.net

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The Painted Lines Come Later. Maybe Never.

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Rico’s TICO BULL – Take a look at the photos below, we see men and machines working, paving, great promo for the MOPT, you know the people that have given us great roads and great infrastructure over the years.

Now, if you live in Costa Rica you will also know that those newly paved roads don’t get any lines painted on them for months on end. Sometimes never.

A while back President Carlos Alvarado defended the practice (of not painting lines right away) by saying the MOPT technical staff conclude that is best not to paint lines immediately. He really didn’t give any credible reason or stated facts to support his statement and the conclusion of the engineers.

I was recently visiting in Toronto (Canada). There was a road maintenance project underway near where I was staying. Every morning I drove by the area a new section had been newly paved overnight and the work included, you guessed it, painted lines on the fresh asphalt.

I guess nobody there read the MOPT engineer report.

This newly paved road will go for months without painted lines

Paving a road and having no demarcation for months is ridiculous and a dangerous practice, especially at night, in the rain and no illumination.

Imagine yourself driving on this road at night and in the rain?

I had this great experience some months back on the Ruta 32, form the Zurqui tunnel to Guapiles. It was late, dark, a misty rain, no lighting, no lines on the freshly paved asphalt, no signs warning of uneven road surface from the paving sections. An experience I won’t be repeating any time soon.

In my opinion,  it is not a matter that the MOPT doesn’t know, or can’t, or doesn’t have the right people, it’s just that they just don’t care. They simply don’t care.

What do you think?

Post your comments below or to our official Facebook page.

 

 

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27 March 2026 - At The Banks - Source: BCCR