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Costa Rica is “officially amazing” thanks to its Guinness World Records™

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Inés Sánchez de Revuelta

Costa Rica is “officially amazing” according to Guinness World Records™. And Inés Sánchez de Revuelta tops with two: that of the longest educational program in history (worldwide) and that of the host of the longest running TV educational show TeleClub (Costa Rica) first broadcast on February 8, 1963.

Inés Sánchez de Revuelta

TeleClub is a unique educational program that promotes family values and the prevention of drugs and violence.

The program is aimed at a female audience, more precisely at housewives. TeleClub started on Channel 4, then moved three channels up: to Teletica Channel 7, then went to Repretel Channel 6, then to Channel 2 and until 2002 its home was Channel 4, then moving to Channel 13 until 2015  it is currently broadcast on Teletica Channel 33.

Sanchez, 87 (born in La Habana, Cuba, June 11, 1931) and a nationalized Costa Rican, has never been off TV for more than 3.5 months, according to Guinness World Records™.

But, Sanchez, who year after year beats his own record (the show turns 59 this year), is not the only Guinness World Records™ record holder in our country.

At the moment there are eight Guinness World Records™ of Costa Rica or of Costa Ricans that are valid in the world list.

The most recent was the dairy company Lala. They managed to serve 5,926 glasses of milk in one hour during an activity that took place on January 27 in the La Sabana Park in San Jose.

On December 7, the Ecolones program, designed and led by Próxima Comunicación, managed to collect 30,162 kg (66,495.83 lb) of plastic bottles in a span of eight hours to break the record that had been established in India. The plastic collection was carried out in the Pedregal facilities, in Belén. More than 28 companies donated plastic bottles during the record attempt.

To achieve both recognitions, the two companies had to carry out a whole logistics program prior to the achievement of the records. In the case of Ecolones, the organization collected the evidence (weights, forms, photographs, videos) and sent it to the authorities of the Guinness World Records™ to be validated. On Monday of last week, they received the good news that they had won the record.

In La Sabana, an official representative of the Guinness World Records™ made the respective reviews to certify the Lala.

Other Guinness World Records™ achieved in Costa Rica include the largest car logo formed by 1,600 Toyota cars and achieved by Purdy Motor S.A. (Costa Rica), at the parking lot of the Centro de Eventos Pedregal, in Heredia, Costa Rica, on October 1, 2017.

Purdy Motor S.A. decided to attempt this record in order to celebrate their 60th anniversary. Most of the participants were owners of Toyota cars, who arrived on the record attempt area in the morning of that Saturday.

The car logo was completed after 9 hours of work, in an area of 31,888.56 m² (343,245.6 ft²).

“We wanted to carry out an activity where ‘toyoteros’ will participate, those who have been so loyal to the brand for so many years. It was crazy, we had to wait for Pedregal to remove the grandstand to make the logo because we could not find adequate space and with the right infrastructure to do it,” recalled Maria Elena Molina, marketing manager of Purdy Motor.

In 1998, Costa Rican musician Geovanny Escalante blew a note uninterrupted on his saxophone for one hour, 45 minutes and 30 seconds; it surpassed well the 45 minutes by Kenny G. Although it is not an official record of Guinness because there is no category for it, Geovanny’s was a note that resonated outside of our borders.

Geovanny Escalante

If we talk about Guinness curiosities, in our country we managed to cook the largest fried rice in the world, in 2013. It was made to celebrate the arrival of the Chinese New Year, the plate weighed a total of 1,345 kilograms (the previous record to this era of 500 kilos).

This time, the record was confirmed by a representative of the international organization who arrived in Chinatown in San Jose to attest to the record that was imposed thanks to the collaboration of the Municipality of San José and Asociación Colonia China in Costa Rica

They had the support of 50 chefs who mixed the ingredients in a 2.5-meter pot, out of which 7,000 servings were produced. The title of the largest fried rice in the world was taken from Costa Rica by Turkey in 2014, where one was prepared that weighed 3,150 kilos.

The biggest ancient stone balls“, the title registered in the Guinness World Records™ for the Diquis stones.

There are more than 1,000 perfectly spherical granitic globes scattered over the Diquis Delta of Costa Rica. Known locally as “Las Bolas Grandes” (The Giant Balls). They were carved from naturally spherical masses of granite by an as-yet-unidentified rave of pre-Columbian people. The largest reach 2.5 meters (8 ft 2 in) in diameter and weighs more than 16 tonnes (35,270 lb).

Last but not least, in Costa Rica, there is the worm most heat-tolerant on Earth and that is also recognized by Guinness World Records™.

It is the Pompeii worm (Alvinella pompejana) that lives in on deep-sea hydrothermal ventsdepths of the Pacific Ocean and can withstand temperatures as high as 80° Celsius (176 Fahrenheit).

Awesome, right?

Well, that’s how Costa Rica is officially awesome, thanks to its historical and curious brands in the Guinness World Records™.

 

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Costa Rica: 1.7% Inflation up to January 2019

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The consumer price index did not show any major changes in January 2019, as it barely varied by 0.05% with respect to December 2018, mainly because of the Transport and Education prices.

Of the 315 goods and services included in the ‘canasta basica’ (basic consumption basket), 57% increased in price, 36% decreased in price and 7% showed no variation, informed the Instituto Nacional de Estadistica y Censos (INEC) – National Statistics and Census Institute.

The report states that “… During January the goods and services that showed a greater positive effect are: water service, university education and automobile. On the other hand, gasoline, electricity and diesel were the most negatively affected.

In January of the last ten years, the highest year-on-year change was 5.74% in 2013, while the only negative year-on-year change was recorded in 2016 (-0.17%).”

See full report.

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Santa Cruz strengthens recycling efforts

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Tamarindo News – The Santa Cruz Environmental Commission reports that, during 2018, recycling projects gained traction throughout the canton. The commission is the leader of this process and has involved various community stakeholders.

According to Katy Madrigal Morales, President of the 2018 Commission, the Clean and Healthy Community group in Barrio Lajas of Santa Cruz was established made up by several families who are willing to clean up that community.

Subsequently, the families are eager to sell the classified waste to collection centers and use the funds raised for other environmentally friendly initiatives.

In addition, the President of the Commission indicated that, this year, the community projects became stronger.

Among these is the EcoVidas Recycling Association, made up by approximately 12 families from different communities of the Santa Cruz canton operating out of their collection center located in Barrio Limon. Operational and outcome reports of the Environmental Commission for 2018 were presented at Reserva Conchal in mid-December.

“Year 2018 showed our group’s hard work, especially in the framework of waste treatment, which is very important for us since we live in an area where tourism is very important as it generates employment and wealth in this community,” said Madrigal.

As part of this waste recovery work, three other events took place. The first one was in June as part of the commemoration of the International Environment, Recycling and Tree Day. The second event occurred in November, a Great Recycling Campaign.

The last and third activity was also in November with the closure of the Environmental Education Program 2018. The Environmental Commission of Santa Cruz is comprised of the Chamber of Commerce and Tourism of Tamarindo (CCTT), the National Institute of Learning (INA), the Institute of Rural Development (INDER), FundeCongo, the University of Costa Rica (UCR) , the State Distance University (UNED), the Red Cross, the Fire Department, the National Insurance Institute (INS), the Free University of Costa Rica (ULICORI), the Costa Rican Electricity Institute (ICE), the Public Police Force, the Tourist Police as well as Reserva Conchal.

Other bodies that take part in recycling activities are the Sub-regional Office of Santa Cruz and Carrillo of the Ministry of Environment and Energy (SINAC-MINAE), the Diria National Park, the Administrative Association of the Aqueducts of Lorraine and Arado, the Commission of Brigades, the Municipality of Santa Cruz and the Municipal Council, the Ministry of Public Education, the Ministry of Health, the Institute of Aqueducts and Sewers, Friends of the Diria, Monkey Park as well as the Cantonal Union of Associations.

Plans for 2019 Hernán Imhoff, President of the Chamber of Commerce and Tourism of Tamarin-do (CCTT), said that in 2018 in Playa Tamarindo a group of approximately 100 volunteers carried out a three-day cleaning activity along the coastal area to collect “microplastics.”

“The contributions developed by residents turned out to be very significant during the last months, resulting in Tamarindo obtaining achievements in 2018.

For example, the Ecological Blue Flag. We have taken significant steps in terms of environmental sustainability,” the President of the CCTT explained.

For her part, Madrigal stressed that in 2019 one of the priority goals is the establishment of Student Ecological Brigades (BEE) in schools and high schools of Santa Cruz.

“The Brigades are one of the main projects goals we have developed. We are eager to incorporate children and youth into environmental initiatives on a permanent basis, as well as to increase the civic awareness in favor of a rational use of natural resources,” she said.

In 2019, the Commission plans to organize eight BEE groups, for a total of approximately 80 students.

Source: Tamarindo News

 

 

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Young Nicaraguan Refugees Face Hardships in Costa Rica

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Young Nicaraguans exiled in Costa Rica

The Nicaraguan refugee community that grew in Costa Rica in recent months, following the socio-political outbreak of April 18, 2018, have had to face many economic and emotional difficulties to survive in the different refuges that Costa Rica offers them.

Young Nicaraguans exiled in Costa Rica

Many of these refugees are Nicaraguan students, who have had to escape from their country because they participated in one way or another in the protests against President Daniel Ortega.

According to these young people, the only crime they committed was to think differently and participate in peaceful marches against the Government.

Gabriel, not his real name and whom his refuge friends nickname him “La Cobra M19A”, is a Systems Engineer, graduated from the Universidad de Occidente (UDO) and on July 26 Last year entered Costa Rica illegally, has had to endure hunger and cold ever since.

Speaking to Nicaragua’s El Nuevo Diario, Gabriel says that since he fled from Nicaragua, his life has been a “calvario” (ordeal) in Costa Rica.

Thanks to the Catholic Church of Liberia, he was able to transfer to Cartago, where he took shelter along with a hundred Nicaraguans who were in the same situation.

When he got his refugee card, he managed to get a job in a shoe store in San Jose, but his salary was only spent on transportation, so he decided to move to the capital.

He managed to get together with other Nicaraguans and they are all paying US$200 a month rent for a small house. Although he still lives uncomfortably, his luck has changed a bit, unlike thousands of his colleagues who still have nowhere to live.

Gabriel or La Cobra M19A in a small patio in the house where he takes refuge. Photo Carlos Solís / END

“My life has been very tragic because I have lost everything: my family, my work, my friends. The only thing I could get when I came fleeing from Nicaragua was a little bag with the necessary things to survive,” he said.

According to Gabriel, the Nicaraguan government is accusing him of murder, terrorism, vandalism and taking part in a coup d’état.

“The government has invented all these accusations, never in my life have I done anyone any harm. They have invented all those accusations for thinking differently from them,” he explained.

Celeste López is another young Nicaraguan refugee. She was in her fourth year of journalism at the University of Managua. Her crime was to help her fellow university students in a church in Managua, who were shot and wounded by police.

He said he had to escape through the back of the church when the police came to take them by force.

Hope of returning

“The government is accusing me of being a terrorist when I have never touched a weapon in my life. A friend was detained by the police when they found out that she was helping the muchachos (boys). They beat her and raped her, I did not want the same thing to happen to me and that’s why I had to flee,” said the young student.

Nicarguans crossing into Costa Rica through a blind spot in the border

Her new life in Costa Rica has made her overcome all adversities. It hurts her to have put a lot of effort and invest a lot of money to study a career in journalism because now she is running away and her future is in limbo.

Celest, like many of the other young refugees, has faith that she will soon be able to return to Nicaragua to continue her studies. She asks the Government of Nicaragua to stop the repression against its people.

Santos is another who managed to get his refugee card in Costa Rica. He has lived in Costa Rica for five months now and works in construction as a carpenter. He fractured a foot while fleeing the police, in Nagarote.

This young man has also been hit hard by life, living in Costa Rica. He wandered for several weeks in the streets of San Jose until he was able to connect with other Nicaraguans who offered him a hand.

 

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Steep pension cuts, tax increases could plunge Nicaragua into recession

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In April last, the Ortega regiem announced it was raising payroll taxes and cutting pension benefits to bolster a hemorrhaing social security program.

In this Feb. 8, 2019 photo, a Sandinist ruling party banner and a national flag fly outside the Instituto Nicaraguense de Seguro Social (INSS), in Managua, Nicaragua.

Nicaraguans revolted.

The unrest led President Daniel Ortega to reverse the announced changes. But the protests continued and Nicaraguans demanded that Ortega and his wife and vice-president, Rosario Murillo, step down.

A harsh crackdown ensued that resulted in the death of mre than 300 people, thousands detained and more than 50,000 fled into exile, of which 40,000 in neighouring Costa Rica alone.

Economists and businesspeople warn that it threatens to have even more severe effects for Nicaraguans and plunge the country into deeper recession and unemployment

Now, with the dissident movement disheartened, a new plan to cut pension payments by 30% to 40% and a raise in payroll taxes is taking effect.

And economists and businesspeople are warning that it threatens to have even more severe effects for Nicaraguans and could plunge the country into deeper recession and unemployment.

“This measure is absolutely much more drastic since it’s not gradual but instead immediate, and it will affect the nearly 800,000 insured in the country,” said Mario Arana, who was minister for development, head of the Treasury and president of Nicaragua’s Central Bank during the 2001-2006.

“All sectors of the economy will be damaged,” Arana said.

The social security package was approved in January by the Ortega dominated legislature and took effect Feb. 1.

Businesses with over 50 employees will see their social security tax payments rise from 19% percent to 22.5 %t of pay while the tax on a worker’s wages will go from 6.25% to 7%.

The tax on independent workers increases from 18.25% to 22.25% of income.

The tax that funds disability, age and death insurance programs is rising from 10% to 14%.

Enrique Saenz, an economist and former lawmaker who left Nicaragua months ago due to his opposition to Ortega, characterizes the crisis at the institute as a problem of Ortega’s own creation, blaming “fiscal mismanagement, professional incompetence and irresponsible populism.”

Saenz assures the Instituto Nicaraguense de Seguro Social (INSS) – Nicaragua’s social security – was operating with a US$60 million surplus when Ortega returned to power more than a decade ago (in 2007), but its administrative costs more than doubled and its payroll more than tripled.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has been warning since 2017 that the social security’s troubled finances threatened what had been relative stability in Nicaragua before the socio-political crisis. The economy had been averaging annual GDP growth of about 4.5% since 2014.

Despite the new tax increases, the country has not seen a repeat of last year’s mass protests. And it seems unlikely to, since Ortega has forcefully quashed the challenge to his power, including effectively outlawing opposition demonstrations since September.

According to the Central Bank of Nicaragua, more than half (about 58%) of the workers who receive social security payments get less than US$307 a month. The cost of the basic monthly food basket stood at US$415 as of December 2018.

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

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Brazilian Senator Mulls Court Action Over Rape Comment for Showing Deep Cleavage

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A Brazilian senator has faced backlash on social media for wearing a revealing outfit at her inauguration ceremony. She insists that the way she dresses has nothing to do with her job and now wants to bring her cyber bullies to justice.

Ana Paula da Silva, known locally as “Paulinha”, wants to prosecute those who targeted her with hateful comments, and pundits say she could have the law on her side.

The freshman senator entered the international spotlight earlier this week after photos emerged of her attending a swearing-in ceremony at the Legislative Assembly of the southern Brazilian state of Santa Catarina.

Paulinha, who served two terms as mayor of the city of Bombinhas prior to her election to the state legislature, was pictured donning a revealing red jumpsuit with a matching top, which she later took off.

While her first-day outfit choice was widely acclaimed on social media both in Brazil and overseas, some commenters described it as “shocking” and “vulgar”, and branded Paulinha a “representative of prostitutes”.

According to Brazil’s G1.com news portal, one of the attackers identified himself as a military police officer.

 

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Primeira sessão legislativa do ano! Agora é arregaçar as mangas e trabalhar!!! ❤????

A post shared by Ana Paula da Silva ???????? (@deputadapaulinha) on

The 44-year-old senator says the comments have hit her very hard. “Being criticised in public life is something normal and expected. But I felt psychologically violated,” she told the Extra newspaper. “An internet user said that if I get raped I cannot complain. One woman commented that I could not speak of God, for God would not bless a woman like me.”

“I also have my side empowered and that makes me get up every day and say: this is me and I fight to break paradigms and patterns that do not fit with what I think and think many women who are represented by me.”

Criminal lawyer Leonardo Costella was quoted as saying that in the lawmaker’s case, the offensive comments can qualify as libel or slander, and da Silva can claim compensation for moral damages.

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Insight: How Venezuela turns its useless banknotes into gold

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(Reuters) With the country’s economy in meltdown, an estimated 300,000 fortune hunters have descended on this mineral-rich jungle area to earn a living pulling gold-flecked earth from makeshift mines.

Their picks and shovels are helping to prop up the leftist government of President Nicolas Maduro. Since 2016, his administration has purchased 17 tonnes of the metal worth around $650 million from so-called artisan miners, according to the most recent data from the nation’s central bank.

Paid with the country’s near-worthless bank notes, these amateurs in turn supply the government with hard currency to purchase badly needed imports of food and hygiene products. This gold trade is a blip on international markets. Still, the United States is using sanctions and intimidation in an effort to stop Maduro from using his nation’s gold to stay afloat.

The Trump administration is pressuring the United Kingdom not to release $1.2 billion in gold reserves Venezuela has stored in the Bank of England. U.S. officials recently castigated an Abu Dhabi-based investment firm for its Venezuela gold purchases, and have warned other potential foreign buyers to back off.

The existence of Maduro’s gold program is well-known. How it functions is not.

To get a glimpse inside, Reuters tracked Venezuela’s gold from steamy jungle mines, through the central bank in the capital of Caracas to gold refineries and food exporters abroad, speaking with more than 30 people with knowledge of the trade. They included miners, intermediaries, merchants, academic researchers, diplomats and government officials. Almost all requested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly, or because they feared retribution from Venezuelan or U.S. authorities.

What emerges is the portrait of a desperate experiment in laissez-faire industrial policy by Venezuela’s socialist leaders. U.S. sanctions have hammered the nation’s oil industry and crippled its ability to borrow. The formal mining sector has been decimated by nationalization. So Maduro has unleashed freelance prospectors to extract the nation’s mineral wealth with virtually no regulation or state investment.

One Million Bolivars is today is exchanged at about US$15 dollars

The Bolivarian Revolution now leans heavily on ragtag laborers such as Jose Aular, a teenager who says he has contracted malaria five times at a wildcat mine near Venezuela’s border with Brazil. Aular works 12 hours daily lugging sacks of earth to a small mill that uses toxic mercury to extract flecks of precious metal. Mining accidents are common in these ramshackle operations, workers said. So are shootings and robberies.

“The government knows what happens in these mines and it benefits from it,” said Aular, 18. “Our gold goes into their hands.”

Maduro has also received a crucial assist from Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan, a fellow strongman who has likewise sparred with the Trump administration.

Venezuela sells most of its gold to Turkish refineries, then uses some of the proceeds to buy that nation’s consumer goods, according to people with direct knowledge of the trade. Turkish pasta and powdered milk are now staples in Maduro’s subsidized food program. Trade between the two nations grew eightfold last year.

But scrutiny is intensifying as Venezuela’s politics reach the boiling point. In recent days, many Western countries have recognized Venezuela’s opposition leader Juan Guaido as the South American nation’s rightful president.

Maduro’s adversaries have called on foreign buyers of Venezuela’s precious metal to stop doing business with what they say is an illegitimate regime.

“We are going to protect our gold,” opposition legislator Carlos Paparoni told Reuters in an interview.

GOLD FEVER

The gold road begins in places like La Culebra, an isolated jungle area in southern Venezuela. Here, hundreds of men labor in crude mining operations that would be at home in the 19th century. They excavate mineral-laden dirt with picks in hand-dug tunnels, hauling it out with pulleys and winches.

Their activity is laying waste to fragile forest ecosystems and spreading mosquito-borne diseases. Miners complain of shakedowns by military forces sent to guard the region, whose homicide rate is seven times the national average. Venezuela’s ministries of defense and information did not respond to requests for comment.

Miner Jose Rondon is used to hardship. Now 47, he arrived in 2016 from northeast Venezuela with his two adult sons. His bus driver’s salary could not keep pace with Venezuela’s hyperinflation, which the International Monetary Fund projects will hit 10 million percent this year.

The three men net roughly 10 grams of gold monthly from backbreaking work. Still it is roughly 20 times what they could earn back home.

“Here I do much better,” said Rondon, resting in a crude bunkhouse strung with hammocks.

Gold in hand, miners head to the town of El Callao to sell their nuggets. Most buyers are unlicensed, small-scale traders working in cramped shops fitted with alarms and steel doors.

“The state is buying gold, everyone is buying gold, because it’s what is doing well,” said Jhony Diaz, a licensed wholesaler in Puerto Ordaz, 171 kilometers (106 miles) north of El Callao. Diaz says he buys gold from traders and resells every three days to the central bank.

Because Venezuela’s currency, the bolivar, is worth less every hour someone holds it, the state pays a premium over international prices to make it worthwhile for those who could smuggle gold out of the country to exchange for dollars.

Traders who sell to Diaz end up with bricks of cash to carry back to El Callao and other gold-rush towns to pay miners, who use it to buy food, supplies and send whatever is left to their families.

Gold purchased by the government is smelted in the nearby furnaces of Minerven, the state-run mining company, according to a high-ranking employee. It is then transported to the vaults of the central bank in the capital Caracas, 843 kilometers (524 miles) away.

The gold does not stay there long. The central bank’s gold reserves have plummeted to their lowest levels in 75 years. Venezuela is selling the artisan metal as well as existing reserves to pay its bills, according to two high-ranking government officials.

The main buyer these days is Turkey, the officials said.

TURKISH ALLIANCE

Maduro’s gold program has developed in tandem with his deepening relationship with Turkey’s Erdogan. Both leaders have been criticized internationally for cracking down on political dissent and undermining democratic norms to concentrate power.

A Nov. 1 executive order signed by U.S. President Donald Trump bars U.S. persons and entities from buying gold from Venezuela. It does not apply to foreigners. Ankara has assured the U.S. Treasury that all of Turkey’s trade with Venezuela is in accordance with international law.

Venezuela in December 2016 announced a direct flight from Caracas to Istanbul on Turkish Airlines. The development was surprising given low demand for travel between the two nations.

Trade data show those planes are carrying more than passengers. On New Year’s Day, 2018, Venezuela’s central bank began shipping gold to Turkey with a $36 million air shipment of the metal to Istanbul. It came just weeks after a visit by Maduro to Turkey.

Shipments last year reached $900 million, according to Turkish government data and trade reports.

Venezuela’s central bank has been selling its artisan gold directly to Turkish refiners, according to two senior Venezuelan officials. Proceeds go to the Venezuelan state development bank Bandes to purchase Turkish consumer goods, the officials said.

Gold buyers include Istanbul Gold Refinery, or IGR; and Sardes Kiymetli Madenler, a Turkish trading firm, according to a person who works in Turkey’s gold industry as well as a Caracas-based diplomat and the two senior Venezuelan officials.

In an interview with Reuters, IGR CEO Aysen Esen denied the company has been involved in any Venezuelan gold deals. In a written statement, she said she met with Venezuelan and Turkish officials in Istanbul in April to offer her views on compliance with international regulations.

Esen said she advised the Turkish government that working with Venezuela “would not be right for leading institutions or the state.”

As for Sardes Kiymetli Madenler, no one at its Istanbul offices responded to inquiries from Reuters.

Turkish consumer products, meanwhile, are making their way to Venezuelan tables. In early December, 54 containers of Turkish powdered milk arrived at the port of La Guaira near Caracas, according to port records seen by Reuters.

The Istanbul-based shipper, Mulberry Proje Yatirim, shares an address with Marilyns Proje Yatirim, a mining company that signed a joint venture with Venezuela’s state mining firm Minerven last year, according to filings with a Turkish trade registry gazette in September.

The companies did not respond to a request for comment.

Even Maduro’s critics acknowledge he has pulled off a neat trick of alchemy: By compensating hard-pressed citizen miners with inflation-ravaged bolivars and obtaining precious metal in return, he has found a way to spin straw into gold.

Venezuelan economist Angel Alvarado, an opposition lawmaker, said “dark operations and unusual mechanisms of commercial exchange,” are among the few tools Maduro has left.

“There is a desperation to stay in power at all costs,” Alvarado said.

Read the original article here…

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

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Legislative proposal seeks three months paternity leave

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Legislator Enrique Sanchez of the Partido Acción Ciudadana (PAC) is exploring the possibility of presenting a bill so that fathers are entitled to a paid paternity leave for a period of three months.

This would be much more ambitious than bill 20.670 that was discussed during the process of ordinary sessions in the Social Affairs Committee. Currently, the Legislative Assembly is in a period of ‘extraordinary sessions’ that is, the time in which the Executive Branch gives the list of projects for discussion in the Legislative floor.

Critics of the proposal, mainly legislators of the Liberal party (Partido Liberacion Nacional – PLN) question the costs to the social security (the Caja), as well as the absence of studies that determine the benefits to the infant to be with the father during this stage in life.

Paternity leave is now available through collective agreements. For example, employees of the Ministry of Public Education (MEP) have the benefit.

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Poás Volcano had “episodes of incandescence” this morning (Photos & Video)

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The Poás volcano presented episodes of eruptions and incandescence in the early hours of this Monday morning. Experts of the Observatorio Vulcanológico y Sismológico de Costa Rica (Ovsicori) informed through Facebook that this effect was recorded from 1:51 am.

The colossus keeps emanating ash and at this time the incandescence can still be seen through the security cameras of the Ovsicori, located in the vicinity of the crater.

Incandescence occurs when the material released by the volcano is capable of reaching temperatures of up to 700 degrees Celsius.

The Poás Volcano, (Spanish: Volcán Poás), located in the province of Alajuela (a stone’s through from San Jose International airport), is an active 2,708-metre (8,885 ft) stratovolcano. It has erupted 40 times since 1828, including April 2017 when visitors and residents were evacuated, forcing the closure of the national park for nearly 17 months.

As of September 1, 2018 the park has reopened with limited access only to the crater observation area and requires a reservation to visit. Adjacent trails to Lake Botos as well as the museum at the visitor center remained closed.

In it’s report at 9:00 am, the Ovsicori says: “The direction of the wind remains to the southwest, therefore the influence of the gases and ash issued by the #volcánpoás are mainly towards Grecia and surroundings. It is recommended to take the forecasts of the case, especially those who are predisposed to asthma and/or allergies. Don’t leave home or use protection like masks.”

The Poas on February 8

The Ovsicori also published an infograph on ‘What to do in case of ash fall’.

 

 

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Carlos plans to travel through Latin America to advocate for Nicaragua and Venezuela

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President Carlos Alvarado is considering to travel through Latin America to advocate for a solution to the socio-political crisis in Nicaragua and Venezuela.

In the caricature by Crhoy.com, we see the prez with his suitcase packed with “soluciones para las crisis en esas dos naciones” (solutions for the crises in those two countries) while the average Tico looks stumped.

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Manitoba (Canada) premier tweets photos of snow while vacationing in Costa Rica

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From Twitter

Manitoba (Canada) Premier Brian Pallister appeared to marvel on social media in recent days at Winnipeg’s wintry weather, but in reality, he was at his vacation home in tropical Costa Rica, his office has confirmed.

From Twitter

Pallister’s Twitter and Instagram accounts put up a few pictures last Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, as daytime Winnipeg temperatures hovered around -20 Celsius (-3 Fahrenheit).

The messages, it turns out, were posted by one or more of Pallister’s staff. Pallister’s office offered a brief explanation as to why, but would not confirm details as to how long Pallister had been out of the country.

“As a rule, we do not comment on the premier’s schedule due to security considerations,” read a written statement from the premier’s office.

“The premier’s Twitter account is used as a communications tool to maintain a continuous digital conversation with his audience. It can include comments on news events, anniversaries, disasters and emergencies, and significant weather events.”

Pallister has faced repeated criticism over his Costa Rican villa purchased in 2008.

In 2016, he said he planned to spend six to eight weeks a year in Costa Rica during his time as premier. He later revised the number to five weeks.

In 2017 — a little more than a year after his Progressive Conservatives swept to power — government documents revealed Pallister was communicating with staff through his wife’s cellphone and personal email account while down south.

in 2018, Pallister admitted to not having paid a Costa Rican national tax on luxury homes because he had failed to update his property assessment.

Source: CTV News.

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Defendant’s statement stirs more doubts about the murder of Carla Stefaniak

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The expanded preliminary statement of the only accused of the murder the Venezuelan-American tourist, Carla Stefaniak, generates more concerns about the macabre case that occurred December last.

Carla Sefaniak was murdered while visiting Costa Rica in November 2018.

The suspect, a security guard surnamed Espinoza Martínez and of Nicaraguan nationality, provided a series of details that would reinforce the family’s belief that more than one person participated in the murder, pointed out by  David Hernández Suárez, one of the lawyers representing Stefaniak’s family.

The expanded declaratory by the suspect was made at the beginning of last week.

Espinoza Martínez, 32, was arrested on December 4, 2018. He was the security guard at the villas in San Antonio de Escazú where Stefaniak spent her last night alive, on November 27, in the country.

One of the aspects that most captivated the victim’s lawyers is that, according to suspect’s story, the villas were commonly held fo parties and activities with some sexual connotation – including drug use – by guests staying there.

The suspect assured that he was to keep “strict confidentiality” of what he saw inside the property.

Other details revealed in the statement referred to the specific case.

“He (Espinoza) mentions that it is impossible, according to the weight of victim (close to 90 kilos), that he could have moved her from the room where she stayed (an possibly killed) to the where her body was found (some 300 meters from the property). It is interesting, because, he says, that he considers that more people participated, but that he never had anything to do with the attack on the victim,” said Hernández.

The lawyer maintains that these new elements will be analyzed seriously and in a thorough manner and considers the additional statement inevitably causes more doubts.

“Some analysis and data related to the topography of the property and the buildings were added. He (Espinoza) adds that that day almost the majority of rooms were occupied. There were more people staying there. They are things you have to analyze. We have always thought that there were more people involved (…) He (Espinoza) is trying to evade his responsibility in the matter. We will wait for more forensic exam results. I understand that they are ready to release,” the lawyer added.

Currently, Espinoza is being held in preventive detention while the Organismo de Investigacion Judicial and the Fiscalia (Prosector’s Office) continue investigating the case.

Cruel death

Stefaniak was killed between Tuesday 27 and Wednesday 28 November 2018, apparently in an attempted sexual assault.

Possibly, as she tried to defend herself, she was beaten and cut with a knife and attacked with a metal pipe to the head that caused a stroke.

The crime analysis reveals Stefaniak repelled the attack because she had defensive wounds on her arms.

The distance between the rented villa and the place where the body was found – December 3 – is about 300 meters (3 blocks in Costa Rica). The reason Stefaniak’s relatives believe it difficult for a single person to have moved her such a distance.

In addition, the crime scene (the room where Stefaniak had stayed) was cleaned up quickly and the room rented to others.

In the US, Stefaniak’s family filed a complaint against the Airbnb platform – used by the victim to rent the room in the remote hills of Escazu – and against the property owners (a corporation).

In the complaint, they alleged that both companies did not verify the background and conditions of the accused, a man who was allegedly in Costa Rica illegally at the time of the murder.

Stefaniak, a resident Hallandale, a suburb near Miami, where he worked as an insurance agent, arrived in Costa Rica on November 22, in the company of her sister-in-law to celebrate her birthday and planned to return to Florida on Wednesday, November 28.

Her sister-in-law left the country the day before, Stefaniak staying the extra day, the day she would have her death.

During her stay in Costa Rica, prior to the fateful night, Stefaniak and sister-in-law visited the tourist destinations of Manuel Antonio (Quepos) and La Fortuna de San Carlos, among other places.

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Why does INS have a policy for drunk drivers?

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Rico’s TICO BULL – Yes, the State insurer, the Instituto Nacional de Seguros (INS), has an insurance product for its customers (insured) who drive under the influence of alcohol – that is drive drunk.

The produce, called “extra prima del 20%”, is an insurance policy rider for liability coverings of type A (injuries) and C (material damages), the policy rider out for physical and material damages to third parties caused by a drunk driver with the rider.

The rider makes it possible that in the event of an accident caused by a drunk driver of an insured vehicle, the INS covers the damages. It even covers the death of third parties.

The product is not new, it has been around since 2009.

“It is a form of solidarity of the INS to respond to third parties who have been affected by an accident where the driver is an insured person (policyholder) driving under the influence of alcohol,” explained Wilberth Quesada, head of communications at the INS.

The INS spokesman pointed out that the product has as a spirit not to leave defenseless innocent people, who suffer damages or injuries due to negligence or lack of expertise of a driver in those conditions.

How much does it cost?

A little more than ¢58,000 colones (almost US$100 dollars) with a maximum pay out of ¢100 million colones per person and ¢200 million colones per accident for type A coverage and ¢40 million colones per accident for type C.

The “extra prima del 20%” only covers the damages to third parties and does not recognize the losses suffered by the insured.

Of course, for the payment to be issued, the INS carries out an investigation to make it clear that the claim is not a fraud .

Getting tough on drunk drivers

The rider does not guarantee that the drunk driver will not go to jail. Last December, the Fiscalía General and the Policía de Tránsito (General Prosecutor’s Office and the Traffic Police) announced to be more rigorous against drunk drivers.

The new protocol for drunk drivers is now they are arrested and subjected to a legal process like any other alleged criminal.

If a driver is allegedly detained because he or she has ingested liquor (or some type of drug), he ro she will be transferred to the corresponding Prosecutor’s Office according to the location. He or she will be arrested, taken to cells of the Judicial Investigation Organization (OIJ), a criminal file is opened (reseñado in Spanish) and processed immediately when they sober up.

Germán Marín, director of the Traffic Police, explained in December that the institutional criterion is that if a person is behind the wheel of a vehicle their consumption of alcohol must be zero.

“If what we want is to safeguard the physical integrity of ourselves or of third persons, the driver must be in optimal conditions,” he said.

That is all nice.

The realities

But the reality, however, is that the INS is saying to the population, don’t worry about drunk drivers on the road, we will have your back. And to the drunk drivers, “we’ll take care of that (third party liability) for you”.

I was recently at a private party, unlike a public bar, a place where guests pay to enter and can bring in their own alcohol.

What I saw what I had seen years before, people drinking away the night to then get in their cars and drive away. Nothing had changed over my years in the country. The message on drunk driving hasn’t hit home.

I don’t have the figures to back up my claim, based solely on my observations, but I can safely bet that in a majority of the major crashes occurring almost daily, excessive alcohol consumption was mostly likely involved.

Perhaps, in my opinion, the worst time to be on the roads in Costa Rica is just after 2 am, when most the bars around the country close. No bull.

 

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Leonardo Garnier to women who denounced Oscar Arias: “I believe them”

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In cases as serious as these, we are all forced to put the possible victims in the first place said on his personal Facebook page Arias' former Minister of Education

Leonardo Garnier became the second former minister of an Oscar Arias government to publicly refer to the accusations against the former president of alleged sexual attacks against several women.

“In cases as serious as these, we are all forced to put the possible victims in the first place.” Leonardo Garmier (left), Arias’ former Minister of Education said on his personal Facebook page.

Garnier, who was Minister of Education in the Arias administration of 2006-2010 (and in the Laura Chinchilla administration of 2010-2014), published an extensive commentary on his personal Facebook page, which, quickly went viral in social networks.

The former minister said it was “sad to see a person linked to the development of the country and peace in the region linked to such serious accusations.”

He expressed his gratitude to Arias for having trusted him to work in the public service, however, his position is much stronger in favor of the victims.

María Luisa Avila, former Minister of Health in the Arias 2010-2016 administration, since Monday, February 5,  published 2 tweets in which she asked: “not to delegitimize the alleged victims and urged to provide them with all the necessary support.”

Costa Rica President Carlos Alvarado and former president Laura Chinchilla have asked for the respect of the victims and the right of Arias to a defense.

Garnier’s Facebook post:

 

The translated (by Facebook) text:

For those who have worked near Don Oscar Arias, this week’s events are painful. It is sad to see a person who has made such important contributions to national development and regional peace, involved in the acts that are accused. But it is much sadder, for the women affected, to think that the accusations can be real. They are tremendously serious accusations of facts that cannot be foregone or excused in any way.

Of course it will be the courts who dictate justice and Don Oscar, like any person, has the right to his self-defense. But regardless of who the accused is, in cases as serious as these, we are all forced to put the possible victims in the first place. In our society, it is not easy for a woman to dare to raise a complaint for harassment or rape and, much less, when the accused is a powerful man. For that reason, victims must be heard and protected; their accusations must be treated with the greatest seriousness and be addressed and resolved diligently by justice.

This is not a minor theme. Some people minimize these accusations: they say it’s not a big thing, which is like a compliment or a caress, which is normal. And No, it’s not. Said otherwise: that what was normal, it is no longer; and even when it was seen as normal, that doesn’t mean it was okay. Women do not have to live constantly threatened by harassment or sexual assault. Men have to understand, finally, something that should be very simple: No, it’s not. Point.

Personally, this situation faces a moral dilemma. On the one hand, I have a deep thank you with Don Oscar so much for his ability to take and boost decisions that have been crucial to this country, as by the fact much more punctual – but very meaningful to me in the personal – of the opportunities that Provided to occupy important positions in the public function. On the other hand, there are the insults reported by a growing number women – although one would suffice. Gratitude would push me to keep quiet, but I wouldn’t feel good about myself. My wife and my daughters wouldn’t understand that silence either. I wouldn’t feel doing the right thing. That is why, with the difficult and painful that I find, today I have to say to women who have denounced these aggressions, which I believe.

Leonardo Garnier

#NoEsNo
#YoTeCreo

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U.S. Political Scientist Denounces in “New York Times” A New Case of Sexual Harassment of Oscar Arias

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The list of women who claim to have faced cases of sexual harassment by former president and Nobel Laureate, Oscar Arias Sanchez, continues to grow. The latest alleged victim is a US political researcher.

Screen capture from The New York Times

This Sunday, Carina A. Black, 52, a political scientist at the University of Nevada, Reno, told The New York Times that Arias tried to grope and kiss her in 1998 when he visited the university as a speaker.

According to the  NYTimes, as she took Arias around at meetings and events, Ms. Black said, she found herself alone in an elevator with him when he pushed her against the elevator wall, put his hand across her chest and tried to kiss her.

“I pushed him, and I smacked him in the face,” she said.

Because she was not injured, it never occurred to her to file a report, Black told the NYTimes.

Screen capture from The New York Times

She affirmed that he is now doing so to support the version of Alexandra Arce von Herold, a psychiatrist and activist for nuclear disarmament, the first woman who on Monday, February 4, filed a criminal complaint (denuncia) for rape against Arias.

“Arias is so powerful. He has huge land ownership. He is so revered. In Latin America, the power is so tilted on the side of men. This behavior is what most women have grown up with,” said Black.

In addition to the accusation of Arce,  Arias, 78, president from 1986 to 1990 and again from 2006 to 2010, and winner of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1987, faces a second denuncia by Jazmín Morales, the former Miss Costa Rica 1994, who filed on Thursday.

Three other women has also come forward, making public the alleged acts of harassment by the former president, but they have not filed a denuncia.

 

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Donald Trump Employed illegal Tico Workers To Build N.J. Golf Club, Reveals ‘The Washington Post’

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On Friday, the Washington Post published a damning report of the full scope of how the Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster, New Jersey went out of its way to employ undocumented immigrants for years, many of whom were from the town of Santa Teresa de Cajon, Costa Rica.

Screen capture of Washington Post February 8, 2019

“Many of us helped him get where he is today. The golf course was built by illegals,” says Darío Angulo; one of the Costa Ricans interviewed by the Washington Post.

The Post says it interviews 16 Costa Ricans (men and women) and people from other countries (El Salvador, Guatemala and Mexico) who confirmed having worked illegally at the Trump golf club.

All had a similar story, that their superiors knew of their illegal immigration status in the United States.

Among the former workers who still reside in New Jersey, contributed work stubs and photos to confirm their time at the golf club. They even identified relatives and friends who also worked there.

Screen capture of Washington Post February 8, 2019

Many of the Tico workers with the Trump organization are from Pérez Zeledón, south of San Jose.

“Soon after Trump broke ground at Bedminster in 2002 with a golden shovel, this village emerged as a wellspring of low-paid labor for the private club, which charges tens of thousands of dollars to join. Over the years, dozens of workers from Costa Rica went north to fill jobs as groundskeepers, housekeepers and dishwashers at Bedminster, former employees said. The club hired others from El Salvador, Mexico and Guatemala who spoke to The Post. Many ended up in the blue-collar borough of Bound Brook, N.J., piling into vans before dawn to head to the course each morning.

“Their descriptions of Bedminster’s long reliance on illegal workers are bolstered by a newly obtained police report showing that the club’s head of security was told in 2011 about an employee suspected of using false identification papers — the first known documentation of a warning to the Trump Organization about the legal status of a worker. That would be the first known documentation of a warning to the Trump organization about the legal status of a worker,” the Post reports.

Screen capture of Washington Post February 8, 2019

The Trump golf club in Bedminster became a pipeline for Costa Ricans and others from Central America to go to the U.S. and work illegally, reports the Post, as “workers recruited friends and relatives, some flying to the United States on tourist visas and others paying smugglers thousands of dollars to help them cross the U.S.-Mexico border,” and new hires were taken on with just “a crudely printed phony green card and a fake Social Security number to land a job.”

This is not a good look for President Donald Trump, who has made cutting immigration — even legal immigration — a top priority and shut down the government for the longest period in its history over a border wall to keep the “brown menace” out.

In fairness, many businesses in the U.S. like using undocumented – illegal – labor because it is cheaper, legal rights are few, and managers can keep employees in check by using threats to turn over to immigration.

The Costa Rica Connection

Over the years, Costa Rica’s connection to Bedminster expanded as workers recruited friends and family.

Screen capture of Washington Post February 8, 2019

Some, the Post report reveals, traveled to the United States with tourist visas and others paid the smugglers thousands of dollars to help them cross the border between the United States and Mexico, former employees commented.

The new employees said they needed little more than a false residence card and a fake Social Security number to get a job.

Some workers described their time at Bedminster as their launch pad to buy homes and open businesses in the U.S. Others remembered it as an exhausting job in charge of demanding bosses and even intolerant, even bigoted — “and that sometimes they used the illegal status of workers against them.”

Risks

One of the Costa Ricans cited by the Post is Juan Carlos Zúñiga who left Santa Teresa, in Cajón de Pérez Zeledón, to make the trip to the United States in 2002.

Screen capture of Washington Post February 8, 2019

On the border between the United States and Mexico, he claimed to have climbed a three-meter fence to jump into Nogales County in Arizona. The Tico bought his first fake documents in Las Vegas where he adopted the name “Juan Lara”. Then he took a flight to New Jersey.

Some of the first Costa Ricans hired to build the golf club (Zúñiga, Darío Angulo and his neighbor of Santa Teresa, Abel Mora, among others) assured that it was punishing work.

According to their stories to the Post, they worked from dawn to dusk, up to seven days a week, dragging and raking mountains of earth removed with heavy machinery and then transforming it into fields for golf holes.

“It was rake, a rake, a rake, all day,” said Zuñiga.

Other tasks were planting, watering, mowing, building sand traps and driving excavators, mini excavators and loaders, all while earning around US$10 per hour or less.

Around that time, a heavy equipment operator licensed in downtown New Jersey would have received on average five times or more ($51 to $55 per hour) in wages and benefits, according to union officials from the International Union of Operating Engineers Local 825 in the nearby town of Springfield.

Screen capture of Washington Post February 8, 2019

As the golf course took shape, more hands were needed. The bosses informed Zuñiga and his friends to bring workers. The town of Santa Teresa responded.

The Illegality

Mariano Quesada, who rented an apartment in the Bound Brook area to several Costa Ricans, told the Post, hi wife, Angela, got up before dawn to prepare breakfasts and lunches for up to 22 people who were then working at Bedminster.

The workers came not only from Santa Teresa de Cajón, but also from other parts of Costa Rica and Latin America.

In a short time, we read in the text, up to 100 Ticos were working there, to the point that Zúñiga’s cousin began charging workers for trips to Bedminster.

“All my town practically lived there,” according to Quesada.

“For those growing up here, as elsewhere in Central America, the risky trip north to the United States can mean seed money for a decent life,” says the Post.

To get a job there, Costa Ricans, as well as other Latinas who worked at the club, acquired fake US green cards and fake Social Security numbers in Bound Brook and neighboring cities, that were easy to get.

Sandra Díaz, from Poás de Aserrí, even keeps photographs at the Walgreens where she paid a friend of her $50 for the false documents.

Ana Vásquez, an immigrant from El Salvador who was working tables in the club’s restaurant, went to the neighboring town of Plainfield to buy her fake Social Security alias: “Yohana Pineda.”

Before going to her interview, Vásquez asked a friend if the club would hire people with false documents.

“I thought: ‘This is a place with a very famous owner,'” she recalled.

“My friend said there was nothing to worry about”, she said,” They do not care,” according to the Washington Post report.

 

 

 

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Costa Rica Extradites Cuban Drug Dealer

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Cuba’s Minister of the Interior reports the cooperation with Costa Rica authorities in the extradition of Cuban Neftaly Garcia Testa to the island.

The Interpol Office in Havana had issued an arrest warrant for Garcia, identified as an organizer of frustrated drug shipments to Cuba between 2011 and 2016, activities for which 16 people – seven of them Costa Ricans – were sanctioned by the Cuban courts with prison sentences of between 10 and 20 years for International Drug Trafficking.

Cuba says it reaffirms its willingness to continue strengthening international judicial and police cooperation with other countries, in accordance with the multilateral and bilateral agreements adopted.

Likewise, it reiterates that there will be no impunity against those criminals, inside and outside its borders, who try to profit from the lives of people and encourage drug trafficking and consumption.

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What countries can’t you visit with an American passport?

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Yes. Holders of U.S. (American) passports may currently travel to 186 countries without having to obtain a visa in advance of travel. These countries allow either visa-free entry or issue visas on arrival.

But, a U.S. passport does not guarantee entry to any country. Each country’s border control is still free to decide whether or not to allow entry to a particular individual.

Travel to some countries, or regions is also restricted beyond the typical need for a visa. For example:

  • North Korea. To travel to North Korea one must have special validation from the U.S. Department of state- North Korea International Travel.
  • Cuba. Travel to Cuba requires special authorization – Cuba International Travel.
  • Mecca. U.S. citizens who are not Muslim are not allowed to visit Mecca and certain parts of Medina in Saudi Arabia – Hajj and Umrah.

Wikipedia does a great job at listing places that restricted or require special permission. The prudent traveler will inquire before heading out to the airport, better yet, before buying a ticket.

Costa Rica is not one of those countries that require U.S. passport holders have a visa to enter the country.

Typically, to enter Costa Rica trouble free, the individual must not be on the Interpol list of wanted or suspected of having ties to drug trafficking or organized crime, for example.

The passport should have at least six months of life and be in good condition, though the two items are not necessarily strictly enforced and all depends on the immigration official.

An example of that is an article by Claus, posted in June 2017, where he was denied entry into Costa Rica and had to buy a ticket to Guatemala, in order to continue my trip in Central America.

Though Claus is not an American, he was born and raised in a small village in southern Denmark, another country that does not require a visa to enter Costa Rica, the same experience could apply to a U.S. passport holder.

“At the immigration in San Jose, I was greeted by a friendly young man who welcomed me to Costa Rica. He took my passport and flipped a little through the pages. Then he started inspecting it more closely. My passport is quite battered as I travel +300 days a year and have done so for more than a decade. It’s not broken though and has worked fine for me when visiting 75 countries around the world. I have crossed borders more than 500 times without ever having problems.

“I could not have been denied entry to Costa Rica by a friendlier bunch,” wrote .

Another issue often faced by Americans and many other no visa required countries is the length of time one can stay as a visitor.

The rule is a maximum of 90 days – not three months as is often said. For example, the month of February always has less than 30 days. If you came in today, February 10, 2019, you would be incorrect to say you can stay to May 10, 2019. Your visitor visa would actually expire on May 12, 2019. However, if you came in on June 1, for example, you 90 days are up on August 29.

Of course, your visitor time granted is up to the immigration official at the time of entry. I have seen (sent to me) entry stamps of Americans for 7 and 14 days.

Here is the Costa Rica immigration Visa requirements. (Scroll down to requirements in English)

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Not Welcome. Costa Rica Rejects Entry of Canadian With Ties To Drug Gang & Organized Crime

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Photo Migracion Costa Rica ‏

Costa Rica’s immigration officials denied a Canadian entry suspected of ties to a drug trafficking gang and organized crime.

Photo Migracion Costa Rica

The Canadian, identified as Dan Hann, was rejected at the Daniel Oduder International airport (LIR), in Liberia, Guanacaste.

“The mechanisms of migratory control and the execution of the police actions by the immigration officers, allow us to continue ensuring the national security, especially avoiding the entry of foreign people with dangerous profiles or cases in which Costa Ricans are involved, also watching over their safety and compliance with the law,” said Stephen Madden, deputy director of the Immigration Police.

 

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Protesters take San José to support women who denounced Oscar Arias (Photos)

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A significant number of people seized Avenida Segunda in downtown San José Friday night to demonstrate their support for the women who reported being victims of rape and sexual abuse by former President and Noble Laureate, Oscar Arias Sánchez.

Front of the Arias Foundation for Peace and Human Progress

Several groups participated in the demonstration, such as “Ni una Menos” and “Lucha Mujer”, demanding that there be no impunity in the case against Arias.

This week, two women filed ‘denuncias (criminal complaints) for rape and sexual assault and four other women told their story to the media of being groped by the former president.

The rally began at the Parque Central and from there the protesters walked along Avenida Segunda towards the Plaza de la Democracia, carrying posters and flyers with messages against Arias.

The demonstration reached the outskirts of the Fundación Arias para la Paz y el Progreso Humano (Arias Foundation for Peace and Human Progress), where the participants chanted for justice be done for the women who were victims of the alleged sexual attacks.

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Yazmin Morales

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Yazmin Morales is a former Miss Costa Rica 1994, Señora Costa Rica and Chica Soho.

On February 7, 2019 Yazmin filed a “denuncia” (Criminal Complaint) against former president of Costa Rica and Nobel Laureate, Oscar Arias, for sexual assault.

See more of Yazmin at Costa Rica Confidential.

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Costa Rica defies Maduro: will send a diplomat to Caracas after recognizing Guaidó

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an otography published in the Twitter account of the Foreign Ministry of Nicolás Maduro on January 9, when Chavista Foreign Minister Jorge Arreaza (left) presented Danilo González with a note of protest for Costa Rica's refusal to recognize Maduro's new term. Photo: Taken from the Twitter of the Chavista Foreign Ministry.

Costa Rica will send its Chargé d’Affaires in Venezuela back to Caracas after recognizing Juan Guaidó as the interim president of Venezuela, instead of the Nicolás Maduro regime.

On January 9,  Maduro’s Foreign Minister Jorge Arreaza (left) presented Danilo González with a note of protest for Costa Rica’s refusal to recognize Maduro’s new term. Photo: Taken from the Chavista Foreign Ministry Twitter acccount.

The Foreign Ministry informed that Danilo González will return to the capital of Venezuela “during the next weeks”. In his last visit to that nation, in January, González received a diplomatic threat from the Maduro regime, given Costa Rica’s refusal to recognize him as the president of Venezuela.

After that episode, González returned to Costa Rica.

“Currently, Mr. González is in the process of induction and preparation before moving to Caracas,” the Foreign Ministry said.

In Venezuela, Danilo González will be the head of the diplomatic representation of Costa Rica, as befits the Chargé d’Affaires in countries where there is no designated ambassador. This is the case of Venezuela, where Costa Rica has had no ambassador since 2015.

At the moment, in its consular building in Caracas, Costa Rica maintains only one Venezuelan official in charge of administrative and archival tasks, such as the payment of public services.

Former Foreign Minister Manuel González explained that Costa Rica requires having a person in charge of business there to be able to meet the needs of people who require consular services, be they Costa Rican or Venezuelan.

The government of President Carlos Alvarado recognized on January 23 Juan Guaido as the legitimate governor of Venezuela.

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Second “Denuncia” For Sexual Assault Filed Against Oscar Arias

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Image of Yazmín Morales Camacho. The philologist and ex-competitor of beauty contests said she was scared by the criminal process that is approaching / Image Yazmín Morales Camacho for LN.

Yazmín Morales Camacho, Miss Costa Rica 1994, who accuses Oscar Arias of sexual abuse, says she feels strong, but with “fear of reprisals”, after filing a denuncia (criminal complaint) against the former president and Nobel Laureate on Thursday.

Image of Yazmín Morales Camacho. The philologist and ex-competitor of beauty contests said she was scared by the criminal process that is approaching / Image Yazmín Morales Camacho for LN.

Yazmín, 48, told Nacional that she decided to file a criminal complaint after the denuncia for rape filed on Monday by Dr. Alexandra Arce von Herold.

“If a young woman like her did it, why not me, who represented Costa Rica in beauty contests…I think we have made a lot of progress in raising our voices,” she said.

The former Miss Costa Rica, talking to Ameliarueda.com, on Thursday said “Yes, I filed a denuncia about what happened to me in 2015. At the time it happened, I talked to three lawyers and the three refused to help me denounce it and even recommended not to do so, maybe they were afraid because they told me that ‘they’ knew him (Arias), that’s why I preferred to leave it there, because the three of them told me it was not convenient.

“When I saw what happened with the new girl and the #MeToo movement, I thought I had to have strength because I saw that the issue was habitual in him. I sought two lawyers and they said they would not help me, but I managed to find a third that decided to help me and to accompany me today (Thursday) to file the complaint.”

According to Yazmín, the former president contacted her through Facebook and the events occurred when she went to Arias’ house to pick up a book he was giving her.

“He stood in front of me, blocked the closed, I’m taller than he, however, he grabbed my head by the hair, he forced me closer to him, then with one of his hands he touched my breasts over my clothes and then he kissed me against my will. I froze, I was shocked, I did not know what to say, the only thing I could think to tell him was ‘Don Oscar, I have to go’ I went to the door, he did not say anything to me, he did move away, I did not expect something like that from a person so recognized and who I admired a lot,” says the complaint under filed number 19-98-0994.

In the telephone interview with La Nacion, Yasmín related “it made me feel flattered. He began to like my photos and I told myself: “Oscar Arias follows my publications.”

According to he recollection of that period in 2015, it was through Facebook’s messaging service that Yasmín thanked Arias for following her publications, “I assure you it was a very diplomatic and respectful message for which I said thank you for that gesture”.

She added that, through messenger, Arias asked her for her cell phone number and she gave it to him, assuming that it was logical that a person of that stature would prefer not to handle his communications through a social network. Then, offered the invitation of to go for the book.

Asked why she waited to now, four years laer, to file a complaint, Yasmín said: “I kept silent because we know the fear that his ‘character’ can infuse.”

She added that she made the decision on Tuesday night, on Wednesday she consulted with her family who supported her, “I was very afraid and I really did not sleep well.”

“These incidents are not easy to explain or talk about, it really is not…I’m still scared. I know that the truth is with me but I fear for what is coming,” Yazmín told La Nacion’s Juan Fernando Lara.

This is the second denuncia – formal complaint – and the sixth woman to come forward, accusing Oscar Arias of sexual assault or misconduct.

 

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External Bonds and No Strikes Key To Growth

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The growth of the Costa Rican economy will be 3.2% in 2019 and 3.0% in 2020 – levels higher than the estimated increase for 2018, of 2.7% -, according to the Macroeconomic Program 2019-2020 of the Central Bank.

Even several indicators are positive, from stable inflation to credit growth, driven by a better business climate to the detriment of last year’s uncertainty, reports Costa Rica’s business newspaper La Republica.

The newspaper says government debt will continue to be a threat to financial health, increasing to more than 60% of the value of domestic production by 2020.

On the other hand, the deficit would not grow, with the expectation of stable interest rates – that is, assuming that the Legislative Assembly approves the issue of the Eurobonds, Also called external bonds.

Among the risks at the national level, the absence of an authorization for external financing from the Government would affect consumption, investment and therefore growth, given the upward pressures on interest rates in both currencies, due to the need to seek money. in the domestic market.

As far as external risks are concerned, the Costa Rican economy would be affected by the increase in commercial tensions, particularly between the United States and China.

On the continent, a greater conflict in Venezuela could mean an increase in the price of raw materials, especially oil, while national trade would be affected by deteriorating conditions in Nicaragua, both due to delays in cross-border transport and a drop in demand in a Central American market, of which 90% of exports in 2017, valued at just over US$1.6 billion, passed through Nicaraguan territory.

The Macroeconomic Program 2019-2020 is the first of the Alvarado administration, as well as Rodrigo Cubero as president of the Central Bank.

Positive projections

Even when the projections seem to be positive, it is necessary that all actions be carried out as the Central Bank thought when carrying out its analysis, according to the Central Bank president.

Silvia Jiménez, Investment manager at the Mercado de Valores (Stock market), says “The cloud of the day has not yet been clarified for Costa Rica, however, little by little the light begins to be seen.”

Luis Diego Herrera, Economic analyst or the Acobo Financial Group, “The Central Bank bases this growth on the recovery of private consumption and government consumption, claiming that confidence will be restored.”

 

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Aeronautical Festival in Jacó will offer balloon flights, paragliding and paramotor

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The Jacó Air Fest is an aeronautical, cultural, sports and family event, which will be held from February 8 to 10 on the grounds of the Jacó Walk Shopping Center in Jacó Beach.

In addition to top-level air shows, involving paragliders, paramotors, paratrikes, aeromodelists, paratroopers, wingmen, drones and a hot air balloon; the public can enjoy various alternative activities such as the flight and adventure fair, the display of flying discs, kites, juggling, a water slide and children’s workshops.

“There will be recreational paragliding flights with Bex Paragliding certified pilots, also paramotor departing from the beach or the show area in Jacó Walk and they will be able to ride the balloon between 6 and 9 a.m. and the 4 and 6 p.m., on February 9 and 10,” said Claudia Gallego, the festival’s media director.

Gallego clarified that the balloon is tethered, that is, it is tied down, but the 10 minute experience for up to four people at the same time, reaches a height of 120 meters.

Some activities will depend on weather conditions, however, organizers don’t expect the strongs winds this weekend to be of any inconvenience.

More information is available online at Jacoairfest.com and Facebook.

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Driver of Vehicle That Slammed Into Ambulance Did Not Have A License

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The driver of the vehicle that slammed into an ambulance Wednesday morning, in which two people died, in Caldera, Puntarenas did not have a driver’s license.

The collision in Caldera Wednesday morning

The Consejo de Seguridad Vial (Cosevi) confirmed they have no record of the driver. The lack of a license was also confirmed by German Marin, head of the Policia de Transito.

Dead in the accident was 81-year-old Práxides Leandro Marín González and a 12-year-old (whose name is withheld for being a minor). Injured in the crash were also two other minors, a 15 and 17-year-old, the latter the brother of the dead girl. Three other people were treated in hospital and released. The license less driver remains in hospital in delicate condition.

In a video by Teletica and Accidendes de Costa Rica, we can see the driver of the SUV losing control, crossed the median, and slams into the oncoming ambulance almost head-on..

In the first 38 days of the year, 39 people have lost their lives in traffic accidents. This number is only of the deceased at the scene.

 

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President Alvarado Calls For Guarantees For Accusers and Right To Defense For Arias

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Carlos Alvarado (left) and

In the face of accusations of rape and sexual misconduct by five women against former President Noble Laureate Oscar Arias, President Carlos Alvarado, requested guarantees for the accusers and the right to defense for the former president.

File photo of Carlos Alvarado (left) and Oscar Arias, at the latter’s home in Rohrmoser in February 2018. Photo Graciela Solis / La Nacion

“There are two central and important elements that must be considered in this. One, everything that has to do with guarantees for the women in this and in any case. And in the case also of the former president, his right to defense must be guaranteed,” he said.

Alvarado made the statement during the inauguration of the Jardín de Niños República Francesa school, in San Nicolás Tolentino, Cartago.

Although Arias faces only one (criminal) complaint filed with the Prosecutor’s office, four other women (two at the time Alvarado made his statement) alleges acts of sexual abuse, one case occurring as far back as 35 years ago.

“I have never disrespected the will of any woman,” said Arias following the denuncia filed by a doctor and activist, Alexandra Arce von Herold, on Monday. The doctor also told her story to the New York Times.

Arias held the presidency of Costa Rica twice (1986-1990 and 2006-2010) and received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1987.

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13 Legislators Propose Changes To Constitution To Restrict Marraige To Man & Woman

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A group of 13 legislators presented, on Wednesday, a bill to reform the Constitution to restrict marriage only for heterosexual couples.

The group want to change the Constitution to literally read marriage is between a man and woman

This group of legislators proposes to modify Article 52 of the Constitution, to add a sentence that says literally that marriage “is the union between a man and a woman” and, in this way, restrict the possibility that same-sex couples can marry.

Currently, the Article does not define in any way that marriage should occur between heterosexual persons, saying: “Marriage is the union of a man and a woman, rests on the equal rights of the spouses, and is the essential basis of the family”. (“El matrimonio es la unión de un hombre y una mujer, descansa en la igualdad de derechos de los cónyuges, y es la base esencial de la familia” in Spanish).

The prohibition for same-sex marriages was in paragraph 6 of Article 14 of the Family Code, which was declared unconstitutional by the Constitutional Court last August as a result of the advisory opinion of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (IACHR) that ordered the country recognize same-sex marriage without any discrimination.

The boxes containing the 150,000 signatures supporting the initiative

The legislators said they collected 150,000 signatures, from all over the country since 2013, who support the initiative.

 

 

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UCR Student Federation Requests Withadrawl of Doctorate Honoris Causa to former President Óscar Arias

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Following the allegations of sexual abuse and rape against former President Óscar Arias, the Federación de Estudiantes de la Universidad de Costa Rica (FEUCR) – Student Federation of the University of Costa Rica – called for the withdrawal of the Doctorate Honoris Causa to the Nobel Laureate.

“That all his medals fall (or we will take them from him)”

This Thursday morning, FEUCR in its Facebook profile, requested the University Council of the university to withdraw this distinction delivered to personalities whose work or studies of a cultural nature have reached a significant significance and international importance.

“As a result of the complaints of recent days, as Student Federation we call on the University Council of the University of Costa Rica to withdraw the Honoris Causa Doctorate awarded in 1987 to former President Arias Sánchez. Likewise, we request the Nobel Foundation to carry out the same action with the award granted in the same year. He does not deserve a distinction of peace, who snatched it from so many women. #YoTeCreo, we and we believe them,” reads the publication.

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Five, Now The Number of Women Alleging Oscar Arias of Sexual Assault

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Five is now the number of women who have come forward, accusing former president and Nobel Laureate, Oscar Arias, of sexual assault or misconduct.

Former president of Costa Rica (1980-1984 and 1996-2010) and Nobel Laureate, Oscar Arias

On Wednesday, Marta Araya Marroni, 53-year-old editor of a book “Con Velas, Timón y Compass” by Arias, said that when she worked with him in 2012, during one meeting, he abruptly put his hand on her leg, which she brushed off and informed him was inappropriate. Twice after, she claims, he called her insisting that she visit his home for a massage.

Araya assured that although her experience was not as serious as the other women’s claims, she wanted to share her story to support them. In addition, she indicated that her main annoyance was that the former president tried to make her believe that his behavior was normal and that he was worried about her.

Araya told the Tico Times Arias made “multiple unwanted sexual advances over the course of several weeks in 2012 when they met regarding a book he was writing”.

“He was always respectful until he wasn’t,” Araya said.

The first case was known on Monday doctor and activist for nuclear disarmament, Alexandra Arce von Herold, filed a ‘denuncia’ (criminal complaint) against Arias, alleging he attacked her in his home in December 2014.

She told the university newspaper ‘Semanario Universidad’ that in December 2014, in Arias’ house of the former president, in Rohrmoser, when she went to leave documents.

Also on Monday, journalist ‘Nono’ Antillón told La Nacion her story of how Aria “touched her” when she worked with him 35 years ago.

On Wednesday, Emma Daly, a Human Rights Watch journalist, joined the list by revealing on her Twitter account that Arias touched her breasts when she was a reporter for The Tico Times and Reuters news agency during the 1990s and frequently covered Oscar Arias during his first presidential term (1986-1990).

Daly told her story to the Washington Post, of the incident in 1990, in the lobby of the Intercontinental Hotel in Managua, Nicaragua.

Finally, Monica Morales, journalist Perfil magazine, published on Wednesday her story of her “uncomfortable moment” with Arias, at his home, during an interview in 2013.

“At the end of the interview he went to his desk to look for some photos on his computer. There he hinted (with a gesture) that I should sit on his leg so she could see the (computer) screen. I do not know what face I made but I remember that he mentioned to me that his wife was not going to get angry. ”

“I changed the subject because I had met his wife who was on the cover of our magazine in February of that year. I told him that I had interviewed her and that she was an admirable lady.

“It did not happen anymore. There was no sexual assault, luckily. I left scared and overwhelmed. At that time I was 27 years old – although I could have been 18 or 33, and possibly I would not have known how to react,” Morales wrote.

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Invasion unlikely, but fever builds in Venezuela, Reports

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Caracas is a city where everyone knows the dominant political affiliation of each neighbourhood. Basically, the east belongs to the opposition, much of the west to the Chavistas.

Many opposition supporters would be reluctant to venture into the poor barrios where President Nicolas Maduro can still find support, and foreign journalists who visit them are sometimes met with considerable hostility.

But CBC News found only kindness and hospitality when we visited the Marin barrio in San Agustin parish, a towering ridge of cinderblock houses and corrugated iron roofs that is served by a cable car built 10 years ago by the Chavez government at an exorbitant (and heavily padded) price.

Most of the residents CBC News spoke to in San Agustin agreed about one thing: they don’t like Venezuela being threatened with potential military action by the United States.

“The psychological warfare is very strong,” says Reinaldo Mijares, who’s lived his whole life in this neighborhood.

“It’s been tough for me to sleep, because I’m nervous. I don’t doubt that the gringos, with their desire for hegemony, can invade any country in the world, and that includes Venezuela.

“In history, we have cases where they’ve created an atmosphere, and a self-justification, to allow themselves to invade countries. They’ve been doing it for 200 years, but more recently, they’re doing it right now in Syria. They did it in Libya, and they did it in Iraq.”

‘They’d have to kill everyone here’

Maria Lourdes Rodriguez speaks through the iron bars that cover her window. She apologizes for not opening the door, but she’s cleaning.

She says that for the U.S. to occupy Venezuela, “they’d have to kill everyone here.”

Does she really think they’ll do it?

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

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“Illegal” Tica Worker Was Present at The State of the Union Tuesday

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Double talk. That is what Costa Rican Sandra Diaz thinks of U.S. President Donald Trump and his message to the world of expulsing Latin migrants and his controversial border wall with Mexico project.

Diaz is one of the undocumented (illegal) that worked Trump’s Mar de Lago golf resort in Florida, working for Mr. Trump for more than 3 years, although they knew she had no papers.

Diaz was present at the State of The Union delivered Tuesday night by Trump in Washington, invited to be part of the event by Democratic legislator Jimmy Gómez.

According to Gómez, representing the district of Los Angeles, Trump’s hypocrisy shines at its worst. The legislator argued that the president wants them to clean their hotels and golf resorts and, in turn, insults them and wants to get them out of the country.

Díaz’s presence in Washington on Tuesday was to make visible the division of the United States on the issue of migration and that the rights of all are respected equally in the first world country.

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27 March 2026 - At The Banks - Source: BCCR