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How Nicaragua’s good guys turned bad

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New Internationalist (August 2018) – It hurts to breathe, please don’t let me fall asleep. If I sleep I won’t be able to wake up again.’ These were the last words of 15-year old Álvaro Conrado, the first victim of a bullet in Nicaragua’s current freedom struggle.

He was taken to the first nearby hospital and was denied attention due to a macabre order from the government of Daniel Ortega that the wounded should receive no treatment. Álvaro bled to death during the search for another hospital that might see to him. His crime: bringing water to protesting students who had been attacked by the police.

A mural of Sandinista leader Augusto Cesar Sandino is seen on a wall, with bullet holes, at the National Autonomous University of Nicaragua (UNAN) in Managua, Nicaragua 23 July 2018. REUTERS/Oswaldo Rivas

It’s three months since the start of the civil society protests against the regime of Daniel Ortega – the once respected leader of the Sandinistas who overthrew the Somoza dynasty dictatorship that ruled with an iron fist between 1934 and 1979.

Today, Sandinismo has become a despotic regime, like the one it fought against. It has killed, in a spate of state terrorism, more than 300 people – among them students, peasant farmers, even children, in just over 90 days.

What began as a protest by students against government plans to cut social security benefits became a living nightmare. Before the current popular revolt, the country of six million people had enjoyed the lowest murder rate in the region.

But this paradise of apparent security was brewing its own destruction since the Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN), the largest and most dominant party of the last few decades, cemented its power. This article attempts to descanalyzed analyse what has gone wrong.

Demonstrators hold up crosses with backpacks during a march to demand the ouster of Nicaragua’s President Daniel Ortega in Managua, Nicaragua, 23 July 2018. REUTERS/Jorge Cabrera

While it’s true that the FSLN never had a clearly defined doctrine, the party always had socialist leanings, at least at the level of discourse. Since the party’s founding in 1961, Christians, Marxists, professionals, intellectuals, small farmers, workers and students, all with different ideologies, have supported the FSLN’s goals as a broad movement of the left, and a commitment to try and avoid the dogmatism of some socialist and communist parties of the past.

To become a national movement, this armed political organization reclaimed the name ‘Sandinista’ as a way to fight for sovereignty and national autonomy, echoing the struggle led by Augusto C. Sandino, a liberal party militant, during the US military intervention from 1927 to 1932.

But the political diversity honeymoon did not last long, particularly at leadership levels. The mix of ideas and class backgrounds of party members caused serious ruptures and led to the formation of factions within the original clandestine military movement and as that movement evolved into an electoral party. There were already three distinct factions before the Sandinista armed victory of 1979: the Guerra Popular Prolongada (GPP), the Proletarians and the Terceristas, the so-called ‘Third Way’. These factions differed more in political and military tactics than in ideology.

While some thought the FSLN should overthrow the dictatorship and take power rapidly, members of the GPP faction thought the party needed to first consolidate its ideological base and work on grassroots consciousness-raising to support a socialist transformation in Nicaragua. The most pragmatic faction, the Terceristas, won out in part because they had money, international support and support from the private sector in Nicaragua. Once the Proletarian faction joined forces with them, they focused on channelling mass discontent in the country against the Somoza family dictatorship (1934-1979).

Nicaraguans took to the streets in significant numbers, some armed, though without military experience, along with the FSLN and its three factions, all convinced that the time to overthrow the dictatorship was now or never. Thirty-eight years ago, this mass movement triumphed after a fierce struggle that lasted 45 days. This so-called Final Offensive (5 June through 19 July 1979) was touched off after spontaneous rebellions in some of the country’s major cities.

It is important to remember that the FSLN was created by a few idealists in 1961 and was a clandestine military movement for 18 years before the party took power in 1979. During those 18 years of clandestine organizing, the party appeared and then faded from the public stage. The National Directorate – the party’s leadership council – had a collegial authority-sharing structure but its leadership was continually deci mated by violence of the dictatorship.

A party founder, Apolonio Martinez, explains that at the end of the 1960s after many key FSLN leaders had been killed, party leaders decided on a strategy of silence except for the occasional well-planned and executed attacks. The armed occupation of the home of one of Somoza’s most loyal ministers, Jose Maria Castillo in December 1974, is one of the most famous of these operations. FSLN combatants took soldiers, politicians and even the US ambassador as hostages. Four years later in 1978, the young guerrillas occupied the National Palace. During both of these guerrilla actions Somoza agreed to FSLN demands to free political prisoners and to pay a ransom to help finance their cause.

When the FSLN finally took power in July 1979, the new leaders had scant experience with internal democratic structures, as the party had always operated under unrelenting attack from the Somoza regime. However, they did have a political strategy. Party leaders pledged to promote a model based on a mixed economy, political pluralism and a foreign policy of non-alignment.

With the triumph of the Sandinista revolution, the FSLN abolished Somoza’s repressive National Guard and created the Sandinista Popular Army and Sandinista Police based on the ideal of being the guardians of ‘the people’s happiness.’ The new government also set up a national council to rebuild the country with representatives from all sectors of society, but it was not long before council members began to quit. Soon the only member left was FSLN representative and writer Sergio Ramirez from the prestigious Group of Twelve.

Daniel Ortega sworn in for his first term as President
on January 10, 1985. Credit: Chicho96 (CC 4.0)

In 1984, five years after the revolution, the FSLN called for elections but ultimately undermined political pluralism by limiting participation to certain parties while aligning itself politically and economically with the then-socialist camp of Eastern Europe. During this same period, US President Ronald Reagan declared war on Nicaragua through an economic blockade and the illegal financing of an army made up of former Somoza national guardsmen, US mercenaries and small farmers fed up with the revolution.

The FSLN’s leadership promoted a revolution with socialist tendencies, with access to public health and education, culture, agrarian reform, and the organized participation of different sectors to defend their rights. The party also welcomed international solidarity. For better or worse, because of all of these measures many people continued to believe in the party-as-savior. But as the war spread, the government had to start a military draft, forcing thousands of young people into the military. The draft, along with the growing internal contradictions within the party as the leadership became more estranged from its political base, undermined public support for the party.

The US also invested several million dollars to fund the political opposition’s campaign to the FSLN. In 1990, after years of peace talks with the Contras and some democratization in rural areas, people voted against the party and the FSLN lost the elections to Violeta Chamorro, presidential candidate for the UNO opposition coalition and widow of journalist Pedro Joaquin Chamorro, assassinated by Somoza’s National Guard in January of 1978.

On the heels of the electoral defeat, party leadership was tainted by another phenomenon that further ate away at its prestige: the Sandinista ‘piñata’ which was in its essence a significant sacking of state properties by the party leadership. This created the foundation for a new social economic base of power in Nicaragua’s post- war period.

Despite these examples of moral bankruptcy, political surveys showed that at least 35 per cent of the population continued to support the FSLN. The party maintained most of its international relationships with solidarity organizations and governments, and its reputation as a major force on the left.

The first split in the party: the Sandinista Renovation Movement

In its new position as an opposition party to the incoming Chamorro government, the now reeling party of the red-and-black broke into factions once again, with the first faction emerging in 1995 with the creation of the Sandinista Renewal Movement (MRS). The MRS arose during the debate over a series of constitutional reforms. At this time, the FSLN held two internal party congresses to debate the future of Sandinismo and democratization of the party. However, top party leaders turned a deaf ear to calls for democratization.

FSLN members who also were elected representatives serving in Nicaragua’s National Assembly, (the country’s legislative branch), walked out of the party congress in protest, quit the FSLN and founded the MRS because of the party’s refusal to democratize.

A year later, and in the wake of the internal crisis sparked by the creation of the MRS and the loss of credibility among many of the party faithful, the now ‘Orteguista’ FSLN suffered its second consecutive electoral defeat. As the Nicaraguan daily and generally pro-Sandinista El Nuevo Diario explained it: ‘The party entered a vulnerable phase that it tried to ameliorate through a strategy of governing from below [a slogan Ortega had introduced days after his first electoral defeat in 1990] by organizing strikes and protests to destabilize the government of Arnoldo Alemán,’ the right-wing mayor of Managua who was elected president in 1996.

The Second Split in the Party: Rape Charges and Backroom Deals

In March of 1998, many Sandinista supporters were shaken by the explosive accusations made by Zoilamérica Narváez Murillo, Daniel Ortega’s stepdaughter, who charged her stepfather with sexual assault, rape and sexual harassment. She told news reporters that the assault, rape and harassment began when she was 11-years-old and continued for 12 years (see New York Times, March 29, 1998). Ortega and his closest advisors closed ranks. Zoilamérica’s mother (now Vice President) Rosario Murillo publicly defended Ortega and declared that her daughter had been ‘brainwashed’. A number of party officials who defended Narváez Murillo were expelled from the party.

A year after the rape allegations and four years after the MRS split from the FSLN, in December of 1999, Daniel Ortega signed an agreement with then-president Arnoldo Alemán of the Constitutional Liberal Party (PLC), to reform the constitution and carve up state power between the FSLN and his rightist party. This agreement which Nicaraguans refer to derogatorily as ‘El Pacto’ – signaling shady backroom dealing – lowered the margin for winning elections to 35 per cent of the vote (during the two prior elections, in 1990 and 1996, the FSLN won 40 per cent and 38 per cent of the vote, respectively). This agreement significantly increased Ortega’s power, laid the groundwork for his future re- election and severely weakened the rule of law in Nicaragua, a legacy that continues today.

At that time, El Nuevo Diario reported that dissident Sandinistas filled the halls of the National Assembly to voice their disagreement and vote against Ortega’s new deal with the Liberal Party. But the dealmakers prevailed, with the Ortega-controlled FSLN casting 30 votes and Alemán PLC casting 35 votes. Several key FSLN leaders quit the party in protest, including FSLN elected legislative representatives Mónica Baltodano and Victor Hugo Tinoco, and Victor Tirado, a former commander in the nine-man FSLN directorate and delegate to the Central American Parliament. In fact, two-thirds of the FSLN’s highest governing body, the National Directorate, distanced themselves from the party with only Tomás Borge and Bayardo Arce supporting Ortega and his new deal with President Alemán.

A demonstrator walks by posters demanding justice for the victims of protests to oust Nicaragua’s President Daniel Ortega during a gathering to mark one hundred days of anti-government protests, in Managua, Nicaragua 26 July 2018. REUTERS/Jorge Cabrera

The Third and Final Party Split in 2005

In the lead-up to the 2006 elections, FSLN Secretary Daniel Ortega, strengthened by his pact with the rightist government, and with the support of government technocrats in different state agencies, distanced himself further from the party’s grassroots through a strategy led by his wife, Rosario Murillo. Murillo abandoned former party symbols like the red and black flag and forged an alliance with the Catholic hierarchy. She began dressing all in white and promoted a former Contra leader, Jaime Morales Carazo, as the FSLN’s vice-presidential candidate. Murillo crafted a new conciliatory message based on a Christian discourse, which had virtually nothing to do with the original ideals of Sandinismo.

Though the new discourse sounded good, this latest shift meant pushing out the Sandinista old guard, including former historical guerrilla combatants and supporters who were still moral leaders in their communities. These grassroots leaders had become poorer as the party leadership became richer. Murillo’s new political strategy succeeded and helped the FSLN win the majority of municipalities between 1996 and 2006.

Nicaraguans have seen just about everything in politics, but they had never seen a married couple as president and vice president

The FSLN won back the presidency in 2006. Right after the election, the party created a new Sandinista Youth organization based on its version of Christian ideology, not the FSLN’s revolutionary ideology. The new organization even had a theme song dedicated to Cardinal Miguel Obando, former FSLN nemesis (in fact, before the election, Ortega married his long-time partner Rosario Murillo, in a wedding officiated by Cardinal Obando).

Yet, as legendary revolutionary poet and liberation theologian Ernesto Cardenal put it the year before the elections, ‘The FSLN no longer exists. It’s just an electoral party to put Ortega in power again.’ Cardenal added that the party had given all state power to Ortega and was allowing him to ‘become fabulously rich.’ The Nicaragua constitution prohibited a president serving for consecutive terms. However, an FSLN-controlled Supreme Court overturned that constitutional ban, allowing Ortega to run for president again in 2011. After he won, again, in 2014, the Nicaraguan National Assembly, dominated by the El Pacto machine, voted to scrap presidential limits entirely (the opposition walked out in protest), allowing Ortega to run for office and serve as president, indefinitely.

From 2007 to 2017, the new PRI-style FSLN dominated by Ortega and Murillo disbanded former grassroots Sandinista organizations and stripped party organizations of any political agency, including the key workers, agricultural, peasant and women’s associations. Ortega and Murillo coopted other organizations like the Nicaraguan Students Union while strengthening others like the National Worker’s Front (FNT), which functions as a government union and replaced the Sandinista Worker’s Union (CST). The FNT, which claims to represent the most impoverished workers in Nicaragua, is led by Gustavo Porras, an MD and current head of the National Assembly. Porras is an example of the so-called ‘new Sandinismo’, in which an upper middle-class doctor and congressman represents the working class.

Many NGOs supported Ortega’s candidacy in the 2006 elections, including numerous women’s organizations. Yet immediately after Ortega won this election, he declared war on these organizations and attacked international organizations like Oxfam for supporting national NGOs. NGO offices were ransacked and their leaders accused of destabilizing the country, despite a lack of evidence. This was the beginning of a 10 year tenacious and hostile campaign by Ortega and Murillo to destroy independent civic organizations.

Pro-government supporters sit in a barricade after clashes with demonstrators in the indigenous community of Monimbo in Masaya, Nicaragua 17 July 2018. REUTERS/Oswaldo Rivas

PRI-Style Politics: Handouts and Widespread Abstention

At the same time, the Ortega government created new community structures that were complete failures such as the Citizen Power Councils, Sandinista Leadership Councils and Family Committees, all entities that historic grassroots Sandinista neighbourhood leaders never joined. These new organizations were similar to clientelist organizations set up by the PRI (Institutional Revolutionary Party) in Mexico with the aim of consolidating and ensuring its power.

The Ortega government used these groups to hand out zinc roofing, food and other goods – essentially, political handouts that ended up in the hands of family members and friends of the Ortega regime, and eventually were sold in local markets. This corruption at the grassroots level further undermined respect for the FSLN.

Many former grassroots Sandinista leaders who were still committed to revolutionary ideals distanced themselves from the official party and its practices. Along with these new clientelist, PRI-type organizations, the Ortega government set up the much-feared paramilitary ‘shock’ forces to terrorize dissidents. These groups began to harass people who had never stopped protesting the growing corruption and the government’s abandonment of revolutionary ideals.

Meanwhile, the historic base of the Sandinista party, confused and deeply disturbed, reacted by not voting in fraudulent elections resulting in high levels of abstention during the rigged re-election of Daniel Ortega in 2011.

Ortega achieved total control over the country’s political structures when he ran for re-election in 2016, this time with his wife Rosario Murillo as his running mate. The Ortega-Murillo team was thus able to consolidate the family dynasty it had been carefully building since 2007.

In the 11th year of the Ortega government, it is clear that the majority of the discontent comes from the grassroots, including the Sandinista base

Nicaraguans have seen just about everything in politics, but they had never seen a married couple as president and vice president. In April 2018, just 15 months after the election, Nicaraguans exploded. Nicaragua’s political processes seem to disintegrate every 10 years, and it seems that time has run out for Ortega and Murillo. Nicaraguans are quite simply, fed up. And after 11 years, the official Sandinista organizations that continued to limp along are now joining that fed-up majority.

This happened first in 2015 when a group of small farmers joined others to protest the environmentally devastating ‘Canal Law 840’ that would have created an inter-oceanic canal in Nicaragua and sold the country out to a Chinese entrepreneur (the project remains on the books, but the canal has not been built, as the entrepreneur ran into financial difficulties).

The lid flew off this Pandora’s box of accumulated collective rage with the ‘April Insurrection’, when people flooded the streets in enormous marches after the Ortega government beat and murdered 40 students and young Nicaraguans for protesting. The protests were sparked by government measures to limit pension payments but quickly snowballed into a grassroots struggle to throw out the presidential power couple.

Just one month after student protests, most cities, including those long considered traditional Sandinista bastions have risen up against the Ortega regime. Government security forces continue to repress protesters and the country is paralyzed.

These protests are not the work of the CIA, the National Endowment for Democracy, Donald Trump, or any other international conspiracy. Give Nicaraguans some credit. In the 11th year of the Ortega government, it is clear that the majority of the discontent comes from the grassroots, including the Sandinista base.

Evidence of that is when party leaders faithful to Ortega ordered their college student members to attack the student protesters, students from several major universities – the National Agrarian University, the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Nicaragua, the UNAN de Managua y León, and the Universidad Nacional de Ingeniería – all refused.

Government security forces then targeted the universities, arresting, beating and killing some of the students. The cities and neighbourhoods that long symbolized Sandinista resistance to the Somoza dictatorship, including Monimbo, Matagalpa, León, Jinotepe, Diriamba and Estelí, are where students and citizens are rising up against the dictatorial regime of Daniel Ortega and Rosario Murillo. Isn’t this the process that sociologists call ‘implosion’?

And these are the goals of the FSLN, from 1969, that were never met: ‘people power, a special development plan for the Atlantic Coast and region of maximum abandonment, land for farmers, an end to exploitation and misery, women’s liberation, administrative honesty, a revolution in culture and education, respect for religious beliefs, an independent foreign policy, Central American unity, and solidarity among all people…’

Carmen Herrera Vallejos is a Nicaraguan journalist, based in Managua. She has more than 25 years’ experience in political, economic and social analysis and is Nicaragua correspondent for the progressive, Peru-based Noticias Aliadas. She also writes for the online magazine gatonegroni.com

Article first appeared on the New Internationalist. Read the original.

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

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Union Leader Compares Carlos Alvarado To Daniel Ortega

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Albino Vargas

Union leader Albino Vargas compared the President Carlos Alvarado to his Nicaraguan counterpart Daniel Ortega.

Albino Vargas

According to Vargas, both leaders have similarities in their relationship with the people, they talk about talking and talking, “but nothing will change here”.

Vargas considered the president’s Sunday night speech on national television as “threatening and disqualifying” by pointing out that it is a “group of unions” that call for a strike, when in reality it is the National Trade Union Movement along with other social sectors.

The public union sector commenced an indefinite strike in the country on Monday against the Plan Fiscal (Tax Reform).

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The Posters Of The National Strike Against The Plan Fiscal (Photos)

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On Monday, public sector unions and other social organizations started an indefinite strike movement against the Plan Fiscal (Tax Reform) currently being promoted by the government and discussed in the Legislative Assembly.

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Fuerza Publica keeps road closed despite there being no protesters in Cuesta de Moras

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Though the early Monday afternoon rains on downtown San Jose dispered the hundreds of protesters in the area of the Legislative Assembly, khnown as Cuesta de Moras, a lone Fuerza Publica (National Police) vehicle closed off traffic.

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San Jose municipal employees prevent the passage of the commuter train (Photos)

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Although the commuter train service was not suspended due to the strike, a group of San Jose municipal employees hindered in protest the service by blocking the road in the vicinity of the municipal offices.

Despite the blockade, the President of the Incofer (railway) Elizabeth Briceño said today that all train services will be maintained given none of the conductors joined the strike.

The public sector unions today began an indefinite strike against the Plan Fiscal (Tax Reform) that is currently being discussed in the Legislature and threatened to collapse the country.

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Strike Dissenter Confronts Union Leader

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A man named Enrique, employee of the Municipality of San José, confronted the ANEP public sector union leader, Albino Vargas, during a protest behind the San Jose municipal offices.

For not joining the strike, Enrique was cornered by his follow municipal workers, requiring a police intervention to prevent an escalation to the confrontation.

Vargas was not amused, as he led the workers to join other protesters at the Leon Cortes statue in La Sabana park.

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Immigration Reports Working At Full Force

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Raquel Vargas, director of the Dirección General de Migración y Extranjería (DGME) – immigration service – reported her agency is working at full power this morning at the country’s international airports, land border crossings, regional offices, and the main offices in La Uruca, in San Jose.

Archive photo

“There is an increase of people in the waiting rooms of the airports because the passengers took the advice to arrive early so as not to lose their flights. However, all services are work at their maximum capacity and there is no impact up to now,” said Vargas early this Monday morning.

According to the official, her officers are active in processing passports, visas, attention to users and the immigration police working normally on immigration control at official border posts, as well as at international airports and road operations.

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Trains Running, 850 Transitos To Guarantee Free Transit This Monday

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The road in front of the San Jose airport is a key point for prevention by police

Working closely together, the Ministry of Public Security (MSP), Municipal Police forces throughout the country, and the Policia de Transito (Traffic Police) took to the streets shortly after midnight in an operation to guarantee free circulation on national roads today Monday.

The road in front of the San Jose airport is a key point for prevention by police. In the photo by Casa Presidencial police buses are used to move officers to hotspots.

And possibly for the coming days if the national strike continues as threatened by the public sector labor unions.

The traffic police say it has 850 officers – the entire active force – in the different national routes and in key points.

In cases of tortuguismo (slowdowns) or blockades, interventions will be carried out with the Fuerza Publica (national) and municipal police, and with instructions from higher-ups so that it is a coordinated and non-provocative action.

The Traffic Police has a mapping of the different intersections that are traditional places for roadblocks, so that road users will be guided on alternate routes.

The entire national territory is being monitored, with main attention in:

  • Autopista General Cañas (Ruta 1) in the area of the Hospital México
  • Ruta 2 in the area of Ochomogo
  • Cartago – San José route
  • Alajuela – San José route
  • Areas around the San Jose airport
  • Areas around the Liberia airport
  • Barranca, in Puntarenas
  • Hospital de Puntarenas
  • Ruta 32 – San Jose – Limon – at different points normal for blockades
  • Ruta 27
  • The road to Peñas Blancas, the Nicaragua border

As to the commuter train, INCOFER president, Elizabeth Briceño, assured train service will be operating normally today.

But, according to social media, expect interruptions in service on all tracks.

The scene this morning in the area of the San Jose municipal offices

Early this morning, protesters interrupted service in the area of the San Jose municipal offices on the Belén-Pavas-Curridabat track.

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Ortega says ‘ready to meet Trump’

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President Daniel Ortega said he is open to meeting U.S. President Donald Trump at the United Nations (UN) later this month despite expressing concerns that the United States could launch a military intervention.

With his country embroiled in a major political crisis since April, Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega has granted an exclusive interview to FRANCE 24.

The U.S. on Sept. 5 declared Nicaragua’s civil unrest a threat to the region’s security, saying government repression of protests risked creating an overwhelming displacement of people akin to Venezuela or Syria.

Ortega says he is ready to meet US President Donald Trump in the coming weeks at the UN General Assembly.

“We are under threat,” Ortega told France 24 TV in an exclusive interview being broadcast on Monday. “We can’t rule out anything out as far as the U.S. is concerned. We can’t rule out a military intervention,” he said.
“The idea of having a dialogue with a power like the U.S. is necessary,” said Ortega, in the interview. “It could be an opportunity (to meet Trump) at the United Nations General Assembly. I’d like to go.”

The annual gathering of world leaders starts on Sept. 24 at the U.N.’s headquarters in New York.

Accusing the U.S. of training armed groups to stoke trouble in his country, Ortega reiterated that early elections would be detrimental to Nicaragua, as such he has refused to meet the demands of the Civic Alliance for his stepping down and calling early elections in March 2019.

The next presidential election is due in late 2020.

Washington has blamed Ortega, and his wife and Vice President, Rosario Murillo, for the situation. The U.S. has also imposed sanctions against three top Nicaraguan officials, citing human rights abuses.

Respect for institutions’

Ortega insisted that the situation in his country is under control, despite thousands of Nicaraguans taking to the streets again on Sunday, September 9, in Managua to demand his departure and the release of “political prisoners”.

Ortega, who has held the presidency since 2007, said he is in talks with the UN and European countries, such as Germany and Spain, to restart the stalled dialogue with the opposition.

He also accused Nicaragua’s Catholic Church, which has acted as a mediator, of siding with the opposition, and accused the latter of taking orders from Washington.

More than 300 people have been killed and 2,000 injured in crackdowns by Nicaraguan police and armed groups in protests that began in mid-April over an abortive plan by leftist Ortega’s government to reduce welfare benefits.

Ortea said he would be prepared to meet Trump if it could be arranged.

 

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

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Ministry of Security takes control of Japdeva ports, Recope plants and airports

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the Government guarantees the continuity of fuel supply, port services and traffic in international air terminals.

On the orders of President Carlos Alvarado, the Ministerio de Seguridad Pública took the control of the Limón and Moín ports of JAPDEVA, the RECOPE plants and the international airports Juan Santamaria in Alajuela (San Jose) and Daniel Oduber in Liberia (Guanacaste) on Sunday night.

The Government guarantees the continuity of fuel supply, port services and traffic in international air terminals.

The Fuerza Publica (National POlice), Vigilancia Aérea  (Air Surveillance) and Servicio de Guardacostas (Coast Guard Service), coordinated with the administration of both the Refinería Costarricense de Petróleo (RECOPE) and the Junta de Administración Portuaria y de Desarrollo Económico de la Vertiente Atlántica (JAPDEVA) and the manager of the country’s main international airports to guarantee the continuity of services.

“With these actions we are guaranteeing the Costa Rican citizenship the continuity of fuel supply, port services and traffic in international air terminals, before the announcement of a national strike,” the president said.

On national television Sunday night, the president said his government has taken measures to maintain public order and essential services and minimize the impact of the strike.

The Government guarantees that it has the personnel required to handle operations in ports, airports and in the supply of fuel.

 

 

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Tax Department Will Not Yield To Strike, Business As Usual Minister Assures

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MINISTERIO DE HACIENDA-SAN JOSE COSTA RICA

One public institution that is guaranteed to be operating normally on Monday is the Ministerio de Hacienda (Ministry of Finance) and all its dependencies, such as customs and tax offices across the country.

Ministerio de Hacienda, San Jose

The ministra de Hacienda, Rocío Aguilar, confirmed this on Sunday, that even if some Hacienda employees have difficulties getting to their work, all the offices are prepared to function and provide services to the public.

“From the Ministry of Finance we will do what is necessary to guarantee the continuity of the service. At this moment, the country requires the contribution of all sectors to achieve the economic reactivation and the fiscal stability that we so badly need. The servants of this institution are aware of the fiscal problems, and we work every day to improve collection rates and stabilize public spending, we are not going to fail them,” said Aguilar.

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President Carlos Calls National Strike Unjustified, Unfair and Illegal

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President Carlos on national television Sunday night

On national television, Sunday night, President Carlos Alvarado, asserted that the illegality of the national strike for today, Monday, September 10, “will be presented before the courts”.

President Carlos on national television Sunday night

At the same time, he assured that together with his government team he has taken the measures so that public order and essential services are maintained and the impact of the strike is minimized.

President Carlos qualified the strike as: unjustified, unfair and illegal.

The President said that stopping services and affecting millions of Costa Ricans is not a solution.

With a firm tone, the President Carlos said that “this country should continue to function and the task of my government team is to ensure that this is the case”.

“Every person counts,” the president said, and immediately invited all Costa Ricans to assume as their own “the path of historical responsibility”.

When calling on public employees to appear tomorrow to their jobs, he assured that he trusts their commitment to the country.

To the union leadership, the President reminded them that the doors of his government are still open to dialogue: “You have the word,” he told them.

For President Carlos, Costa Rica is facing a historic crossroads. In the televised message, he was vehement in describing the approval of the Ley Fortalecimiento de las Finanzas Públicas (Bill Strengthening Public Finances) – “Plan Fiscal” (Tax Reform) as is commonly referred to – as the only way to avoid an impending financial crisis.

“Not only is it necessary, but it is also urgent,” he said.

President Carlos, in his opening remarks, noted that the unions refused his call to dialogue, recalled that as a candidate he was always clear, in all the forums where he participated, regarding his commitment to fiscal reform, and that is the way to ensure a good future for Costa Ricans “even for the organizers of the strike and those who participate.”

“My government together with the current legislators,” he said, “we are taking the path of responsibility when addressing a problem that has been postponed for decades.”

Affecting people to get to their jobs, children without school, people who need medical attention, and those who are prepared to work, “is not the Costa Rican way. Most Costa Ricans do not want to go down that road,” he said.

 

 

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The Orosi Valley

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The Orosi Valley is located just a short distance to the southeast of San José. It offers an alluring buffet of smaller attractions—sort of like grazing on appetizer portions of Costa Rican points of interest.

A view of Ujarrás from the Mirador

The best place to begin your visit is the Mirador Ujarrás, to the east of Paraíso (Cartago) and before the turnoff to the Ruins of Ujarrás. This is a picnic and observation area with a panoramic view of the Orosi Valley and offers a nice vista of the ruins surrounded by coffee and chayote plantations. Chayote is grown on a framework of posts and cables about six feet high, so the very flat looking fields you see are chayote. Just beyond the ruins you can see Lake Cachí. The Town of Orosi is visible to the south. Please note there are restrooms, but food and drink are not available at the Mirador.

The Ruins of Ujarrás are not well known, even though they were declared a National Monument of Costa Rica by executive decree in 1985. Watch for the sign to the ruins as you wind your way down the hill from the Mirador.

The first church on this site was a rough chapel built between 1561 and 1569. It was upgraded to an adobe structure a few years later (1575-1580). The current building was constructed between 1681 (1686 according some sources) and 1693. It suffered severe earthquake damage in 1822.

The church of San Jose de Orosi

In 1832 the town was moved to a place called Llanos de Santa Lucía, which is today known as Paraíso. There are various reasons given for the move—disease, flooding, poor quality local building materials, etc. Some allege there were political and economic pressures behind the decision.

Today, the church is a lovely historic ruin which has been partially restored. It is surrounded by a verdant park with picnic tables and a playground—an ideal spot for a family or group outing. Take a walk through the old church and then enjoy outdoor dining under the many shade trees. You will need to bring your meal with you as no food is sold in the park, but there are rest rooms.

Rather than backtrack through Paraíso, I recommend taking the shorter and more scenic route to Orosi. This means continuing in the direction you were taking before making the turnoff to the ruins—follow the signs to Cachí. This road will take you by the dam and hydroelectric project of Cachí. There are several very nice restaurants along the way.
The main attraction in the Town of Orosi is also a church—still in use. San José de Orosi was built in 1767. It was named part of the National Patrimony in 1920 and a National Monument in 1985. Next to the church, in the old Franciscan convent, is the Museo de Arte Religioso (Museum of Religious Art).

This is one of the oldest and most beautiful churches in Costa Rica. Its beauty is not derived from soaring spires or Baroque ornamentation, but from its simple architectural lines and quiet humility.

The Ruins of Ujarrás

Zorba the Greek said the unforgivable sin is when a woman calls a man to her bed and he does not go. I would add the travesty of building a thoroughly modern church—charitably described as nondescript and ill-defined—adjacent to the beautiful colonial-era church of San José de Orosi. I’m sure some bishop is going to have a difficult first encounter with St. Peter over that.

Other menu items of places to see or things to do include rafting; trout fishing—a number of catch and fry operations; coffee tour; scenic overlooks—more than just the Mirador Ujarrás; bird watching; spas—with assorted pools, hot springs, saunas; zip lining/canopy tours; art gallery, etc. A point of special interest would be La Casa del Soñador (The House of the Dreamer), production and sale of small sculptures made from coffee wood and roots. Finally, Parque Nacional Tapantí (Tapantí National Park) should not be missed—it is a huge and very wild area.

The valley is close enough and small enough to make for an easy day trip from San José or its surrounding communities, but I would recommend a couple days to take it at a leisurely pace. Also, there are a number of substantial places worth seeing just outside the valley like Irazú Volcano and the Basilica of Our Lady the Virgen of Los Angeles (Basílica de Nuestra Señora de los Ángeles). Orosi makes for a relaxing base camp from which to explore the entire region.

On the way to or from the Orosi Valley, you should consider visiting the Lankester Botanic Gardins (Jardines Botánicos Lankester). They are located just off the road between Cartago and Paraíso. The Japanese garden and the orchid nursery alone make it worth the stop. The gift shop is also excellent.

While the portions may be small—like dim sum—the experience as a whole is entirely satisfying. Don’t miss it.

 

 

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Children’s Hospital treats more cases of sexual abuse than physical

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In 2017, the Children's Hospital treated 3,753 emergencies. Photo: Gesline Anrango.

In spite of the fact that this Sunday, September 9th was celebrated as Children’s Day and that everything should be happiness, there is a sad reality that can not be hidden and that affects dozens of children all over the country.

Children between the ages of 5 and 6 are the most vulnerable to being sexually assaulted. Photo for illustrative purposes.

Currently, the Hospital Nacional de Niños (HNN) – Children’s Hospital – receives more children for sexual abuse than for physical aggression, something they consider alarming.

Cindi Mora, head of the social work department at the medical center, explained that the four most attended emergencies in 2017 were, the negligence of parents with 669 cases, (the child had an accident due to carelessness of the parents), emotional injuries with 665 (adults treat them badly), sexual abuse with 69 and physical aggression with 33 incidences. That year the HNN evaluated a total of 3,753 emergencies.

Mora said that the 2017 figure could be maintained or at worst increase for this year, since up to June there have been 1,031 different cases.

“It could repeat the same order… unfortunately the statistics continue to grow,” said Mora.

Mora added that during the second half of the year the number would increase due to the holiday season and most of the children are in their homes so they are more vulnerable to accidents or to being abused.

The social worker added that in order to determine if there was any abuse or rape, they do medical exams and also approach the child in a psychological way so that he/she can express what happened.

“The hospital has a protocol where not only medical assessment is important, but also that other professionals in different areas can contribute and the child can tell us to get an idea of ​​what happened,” Mora explained.

Abusers target 5 and 6 year-olds

Mora explained that they investigate all cases; however, in most cases, abuse occurs in children between 5 and 6 years old

“When we talk about abuse with them it is done in a general way, in this there could be children who suffer from touching in their private parts or suffer another type of abuse, for example, taking photos or compromising videos,” added the specialist.

In 2017, the Children’s Hospital treated 3,753 emergencies. Photo: Gesline Anrango.

“All this obviously causes an emotional injury that will affect them. There are children who, after such an act, stop eating, feel discouraged, have changes in their behavior, do not sleep well and there are others who do not present any visible alteration, but that does not mean that it does not affect them,” she added.

According to Mora, in most cases relatives are the abuses, as stepfathers, grandparents, uncles, aunts, cousins, and even dads.

“They are people of the intrafamilial nucleus who have or earn the trust of the parents and the child to commit the abuse. Many times parents do not realize this because they are in a family and do not believe that something like this could happen,” Mora explained.

Although those who commonly abuse minors are men, the social worker indicated that women also commit this atrocity.

“With our experience we can say that out of ten cases, about six suspects are men and 4 are women. It has always been said that men are the abusers, but we are also seeing that women also commit abuses,” she said.

As a social worker, Mora has something very clear: When a child says they were abused, it’s true.

“What the abuser does is threaten their victim, tells them that if they talk they will hurt the father or mother, but when the child gets tired of this and talks, we must believe them because the children do not lie when they are abused and you have to understand that when they talk it is because they have already thought a lot about what happened, so we have to pay attention to them” Mora said.

Alarming data

Data from the Children’s Hospital is just a small sample of the harsh reality that many children live in that medical center.

Most cases of sexual abuse are not treated in a hospital but are addressed by the Patronato Nacional de la Infancia (PANI) – the child welfare agency.

Data provided by the PANI showed that last year, 2,816 children were sexually abused. However, the majority of cases do not end in abusers being sentenced.

According to the Ministerio de Justicia y Paz, the ministry that operates the jails and prisons, up to this September there are 919 people convicted of sexual abuse against minors, of which 915 are men while four are women.

Irene Lobo, a psychologist from PANI, said “There are specific factors that make the victim not want to report, for example, they have received threats from the abuser or not feel safe to say for being a relative or a close person,” said Lobo.

Both in the Children’s Hospital and in the PANI, they are aware of the importance of maintaining a relationship of trust with the children so that in the event of any abuse, the child has their support.

Source (in Spanish): La Teja

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The places that refuse to go on strike!

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En el bar La Flota habrá una sabrosa promoción a tan solo 2 rojitos. Foto: Mayela López.

Since Friday night, circulating on social media is a list of places where the effects of the strike on Monday – or the rest of the week –  against the tax plan, will not affect.

Bar La Flota. No strike here.

We are not talking about hospitals, clinics, or much less public institutions, it is a selection of recognized bars in downtown San Jose, Barrio Mexico, Alajuelita and Heredia, where there will be no shortage of anything, on the contrary, there will be an abundance of “ricas comidas” (great meals) and alcohol.

The select list includes bars such as La Bohemia in downtown, La Flota in the barrio La California, Rio de Janeiro and Castro’s Bar in Barrio Mexico, and the El Gran Vicio in the Central Market, all in Chepe (San José.

In the barrios south of Chepe, in Alajuelita there is Los Maderos, but beware of staying stuck there, there is also the Cali bar, the Conce Abajo, and the emblematic 8 de Diciembre. In those watering holes the word “huelga” (strike) is missing from the dictionary.

What would you rather be doing this, this (as in the photo) or cooling off with a cold beer while the strike passes you by?

In those bars, the sounds of demonstrators will be drowned out by the flow of beer and other spirits, a plate of wings, a good chifrijo or cervichazo.

Stress goes out the window, no blockades inside, just good music. No shortage of cold beer, unlike the gasoline stations expected to be out of fuel by Wednesday.

La Flota, founded in 1957, located 100 meters from the Legislative Assembly, where most of the protests are expected to take place, has a brave plan to face the strike.

Its owner Ana Carballo says she will have a special lunch and at a special price all who want to beat the strike. The ¢2,000 colones lunch includes soup, rice, beans, meat, salad, and drink.

At La Bohemia, Gorgio the owner assures the beer will be cold.

At the La Bohemia, “We will offer the usual, a good deal, good food like meatballs and ‘cubaces’. It seems that on the day of the strike is going to rain, but here it is true that the rain is not going to wet anyone and the beer is going to be quite cold,” said owner Don Jorge Motta, better known as “Giorgio”.

Here is the complete list:

  • Bar Pingos
  • Bar Rio de Janeiro
  • Castro’s Bar
  • La Porteñita
  • La Bohemia
  • La Embajada
  • El Super Gigante
  • El Gran Vicio
  • Cantina Morazán
  • Bar La Flota
  • Las Condes
  • Bar Buenos Aires
  • Bar Firuláis
  • Aquí es Tista
  • Bar Olafos
  • La Cajeta
  • El Quita Penas
  • Donde Yesca
  • El Ballestero
  • Mi Parcela
  • La Cabaña
  • La Vieja Milonga
  • La Villa
  • Disco Bar
  • Bar Americanos
  • Garrito’s Bar

 

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Be Prepared For The “Indefinite” National Strike Starting Tomorrow

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Wednesday, September 12, there will be protest march in the heart of San Jose

Beginning tomorrow, Monday, September 10, the country’s public sector employees are expected to begin a strike the unions have defined as “indefinite” arising as a measure of opposition to the bill of Plan Fiscal (Tax Reform) that is currently being discussed in the Legislative Assembly.

Archive photo

The strike action is expected to be nationwide, but the Central Valley and in particular the greater metropolitan area of San Jose (GAM) – the area to most to be affected –  that my include roadblocks, significant disruptions to traffic, public services including medical and transportation services.

The citizenry is encouraged to take precautionary measures in advance of the strike, stocking up on fuel, water, and prescription medication, as an example.

Following are expected activities and/or service disruptions on Monday and possible for the rest of the week.

  • Possible interruption in ICE cell service. Private cellular services such as Claro and Movistar  are not expected to be affected.
  • Areas around the Legislative Assembly, Casa Presidencial; Ministry of Education (MEP); the Caja Costarricesense de Seguro Social (CCSS), Avenida Segunda (2nd Avenue) and the Bulevar / Avenida Central are expected to be key points of demonstrations.
  • Roadblocks could occur on rutas 27 (San Jose – Calder), 32 (road to Limon), 39 (the Circunvalacion), 1 (Interamericana norte / Bernardo Soto / Autopista General Cañas, 2 (Interamericana Sur, road to the south) and 34 (Costanera) are possible.
  • The port of Limon and Moin are expected to be shutdown with roadblocks affecting the Caldera and Golfito exits.
  • Demonstrations are expected at or near universities: UCR, TEC, UNA and UNED
  • There will be a significant reduction in medical services at clinics and hospitals, emergency response.
  • Though schools will be opene, classes may be interrupted.

Possible Violence

The Minsterio de Seguridad Publica (MSP) said it is taking preventive action before possible blockades.

Security Minister, Michael Soto, said that the Fuerza Publica (National Police) is prepared to respond promptly in the event of blockades. “We have concentrated all the resources of the Police at a national level to organize ourselves and to react in any part of the country,” Soto said Friday.

Wednesday, September 12, there will be protest march in the heart of San Jose. Archive photo

The minister stressed, “that one of the main objectives of the authorities will be to keep functioning the essential services for the development of the country.”

Soto, however, expressed hope that during the strike there will be no road blockades or violent events that force police intervention.

“Costa Rica is a state of law where people have the opportunity to demonstrate, but remember that there is legislation that makes it a crime to block roads,” Soto added.

The minister referred to Article 400 of the Criminal Code, which states that “He shall be punished by a fine of five to thirty days (…) The one that obstructs or, in some way, hinders traffic on public roads or their sidewalks, with materials, debris or objects, or cross them with vehicles, beams, wires or similar objects, without using the means required by the case to avoid harm or inconvenience to passers-by or drivers, if they had been placed without a license from the competent authority ”

The head of Public Security said that there is a specific plan of operations, whose execution will depend on what occurs.

Previously, Soto had indicated that they hoped not to have to use force or other resources as riot police (antimotines in Spanish).

Meanwhile, the Policia de Transito (Traffic Police) said that its officers would work in coordination with the Ministry of Public Security.

Unions Deny Blockades

On the other hand, union leaders denied on Friday the existence of a list of blocking points in the country and dismissed audios that circulate on social media with false information about alleged actions and “agendas” for the day(s) of protest.

They labor unions indicated that the concentrations will be regionalized on Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday; on Wednesday there will be a march in downtown San Jose that will leave at 10 am of the statue of León Cortés, on the east side in the La Sabana metropolitan park.

They added that the detailed actions of the movement will be announced as the days go by.

Foreigner recommendation

Foreigners visiting or living in Costa Rica are encouraged to remain vigilant at all times, avoid all demonstrations and large gatherings, follow the advice of local authorities and monitor local media.

The Q recommends that they contact their families to their whereabouts and well being in Costa Rica, even if they have not been affected by the strike.

The recommendation for foreigners is to also have their embassy contact at hand and consular hours.

Airport manager recommends allowing more time to get to the airport

Though, Aeris, the administrator of the international airport Juan Santamaría (SJO – San Jose international airport) expects that airport operations will remain normal, it pointed out that “due to the nature of the government agencies or officials working at the airport,” passengers are advised to follow the indications of their airlines.

People who plan to leave the country next week should take to take precautions, such as checking with their airline for updated flight information and allowing additional time to arrive on time for their flights.

“It will be important that outgoing passengers present themselves with sufficient anticipation, in order to carry out in a calm manner the migratory, security or boarding procedures. Also, keep them informed of points to the airport that could be affected,” said in a statement.

Roadblocks, for example, can delay travel time to the airport. Flights could be delayed or even canceled due to a work slow down or stoppage by one or a number or all of the public sector agencies. Public transportation, ie buses, taxis could be affected or even join the movement.

Arrivals may also be affected. The airport manager warns that there could also be delays in international arrivals.

If you are traveling to Costa Rica this week take into account there could be delays at the airport and/or getting to your destination.

If you are picking someone up at the airport, confirm arrival times with the airline or the airport, and road conditions to the airport.

The Liberia (LIR) airport may also be affected. The strike by public sector workers could cause delays and/or stop of services at the Daniel Oduber international airport, as well as road blocks in the area around the airport and/or to tourist destinations.

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Independence Torch Ceremony To Be in La Cruz

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This year, due to the crisis in Nicaragua, the Independence Day torch will be delayed about 90 minutes in arriving at the Peñas Blancas border. In previous years, normally the torch arrived at 10:00 am but for this year it is expected that the Nicaraguan Minister of Education, Miriam Soledad Ráudez, will deliver the torch at about 11:30 am to Costa Rican Education Minister Edgar Mora, explained Wilman Chévez, Social Studies Advisor.

“The arrival of the Torch to Costa Rica remains the same, what changes is only the schedules, for a diplomatic question of knowing what time the torch would arrive, which will be delayed an hour or an hour and a half to the Frontera (border),” commented Chévez.

As a result of the conflicts north of the border, this year the Ministry of Public Education decided to carry out the protocol acts in the Parque del Cantón de la Cruz as a way of preventing any inconvenience from arising.

La Cruz is about 20 minutes (19 kilometers on Ruta 1) from Peñas Blancas.

The protocol acts are typically held at the border, each year alternating. This is it was to be in Nicaragua.

The first three Costa Rican students to run with the torch are Deilyn Ugarte, Gilberto Aguilar and Heiner Cambronero, who study at Liceo Nocturno de la Cruz.

Another change this year is that none of the students running the torch can be minors.

“This year we will not have minors for a safety issue, they will not be students of legal age, to protect the students in case there is a problem in the area,” Chévez said.

It is expected that the ceremonial acts to be held in the canton of La Cruz, next Thursday, September 13, once the torch arrives, start at 12:30 pm.

The torch will then be carried by students, in tandem, to Cartago for the Independence Day ceremonies on September 15.

Source: Guana Noticias

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Foreigners again dominated the Tamarindo Marathon

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Palmenia Agudelo was greeted with applause as she was the first woman to cross the goal of 42 km. Photography: Graciela Solis

As had has been in the last five years, this 12th edition of the Tamarindo marathon was again dominated by foreigners, both male and female.

The Ethiopian Hunde Gezahegn ran first place in the Tamarindo 42 km marathon. Photo: Graciela Solis

The national classic was held this Saturday, starting at 4:30 am, with its classic humidity and around 2,600 participants.

Colombian Palmenia Agudelo was greeted with applause as she was the first woman to cross the line of 42 km. Photo: Graciela Solis

The Ethiopian Hunde Gezahegn (02:27:47) and the Colombian Palmenia Agudelo (02:57:51) took the finish line without problems, suffering from the climate prevailing in Tamarindo, a characteristic that affects every runner and, above all, foreigners.

Tamarindo’s classic humidity challenged all participants, foreigner and national. Photo: Gabriela Solis
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Boat with tourists overturned by whale in Drake de Osa

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A boat in which eight tourists were traveling and the captain overturned Saturday afternoon after which it was hit by a whale, confirmed the Red Cross.

Archive photo of boats at sea to view the whales in Osa

The incident was occurred about 1:30 pm in the mouth of the Sierpe river, at the moment the group watched several whales, while another appeared suddenly made for them and capsized the boat, El Gaspar de Sierpe, captained by Miguel Martínez.

Martínez said they were hit by the tail of a whale.

Thanks to the fact that he had a radio, he was able to call for help that came minutes later from another boat with tourists.

The Red Cross indicated that five of those affected were assessed, but only one required a transfer to Thomas Casas Hospital.

This weekend began the Tenth Festival of Whales and Dolphins in the Marino Ballena National Park, which will run until next weekend.

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They walked more than 2 hours to say no to child abuse

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A group of children from the Ñari Ñak Indigenous Community school walked more than 2 hours to be able to join the demonstration on Saturday against child violence.

These residents of Chirripo de Turrialba left morning Friday to join the demonstration in downtown San Jose, to make a call to the national population to curb cases of child abuse.

Professor Gerardo López, who accompanied the children, explained that proudly dressed their traditional clothes they also joined the cause. Most, said the professor, came to know San José for the first time.

“It’s a new experience. They were a little shy because they are not used to seeing so many people, but they are very excited,” explained López.

They left Chirripo de Turrialba Friday at 9 am, had to walk 2 hours and 30 minutes to Roca Quemado, where they had a transport waiting that took them to Grano de Oro hotel, where they spent the night.

The Hospital Nacional de Niños (HNN) – Children’s hospital in San Jose –  data indicate that up to 5 children per day suffer assault or injury due to negligence.

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When is the best time to buy an international flight?

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(Cheapair.com) It’s hardly a secret that airfares fluctuate a lot. Knowing the best time to purchase a flight has turned into something like Russian roulette for travelers – if you don’t “win” a low fare, you can lose big and be left with a sense that there has to be a better way. That’s where we come in.

In our study, we reviewed a total of 917,000,000 airfares, including fares covering more than 1,000,000 international trips over the last year. These airfares covered more than 3,000 international markets. For each trip, we studied all the possible days you could buy that airline ticket – to uncover when international flights have the lowest fares.

We identified the best day to buy a ticket in the different regions around the world, and we identified the “prime booking window” for each region as well. The prime booking window is the range of days in which you are likely to see the lowest fares – the window where it’s generally not too early to get a good deal, but also not too late. If price is most important, you should plan to purchase your flights within this range. Of course, the prime booking window is a generalization, and you should be aware of events like large festivals, international sports events, and major holidays. At a very busy time for the destination – Oktoberfest in Munich, the Edinburgh Festival in Scotland, and Holi in India are just three examples that come to mind – you’ll want to buy in the early part of the prime booking window, or in some cases even earlier. Otherwise, use the prime booking window as a good estimate of when it will make the best sense to buy.

We also looked at whether traveling in certain seasons will impact when you should buy your flights, and which travel months had the highest and lowest airline ticket prices for each region. Finally, we analyzed the days of the week to determine whether there was a price advantage to buying, or flying, on any particular day.

Here is a breakdown of the average number of days before departure that yields the lowest airline ticket price for U.S. travelers heading to international regions:

We’ll now review each region in more detail, and address how to approach buying a ticket to each destination, using a range of criteria as explained above:

Canada
The Canadian market is very similar to the U.S. market – it’s best to buy your airline ticket to Canada 66 days in advance, on average. Flights to Canada are about 3% cheaper than they were last year on average, which is a modest savings but hey—we’ll take a modest savings over a modest increase any day! No big surprises that Canada’s warm summers see the most expensive airline tickets, with July being the most expensive month to visit, but still – the difference between July and October (the least expensive month) is relatively modest—about $64.

Prime Booking Window: 3 weeks to about 5 months before departure
Best time to buy: About 66 days from your travel date
The average airfare: $427
Cheapest month to travel: October
Most expensive month to travel: July
Least expensive days of week to fly: Tuesday and Wednesday

Mexico/Central America
Mexico and Central America were quite similar to domestic U.S. flights (this has not always been the case in the past) – you can generally wait about 70 days out for the best fares to Mexico or Central American destinations. The airfares to our neighbors to the south are also trending slightly cheaper overall versus last year, translating to an average 3% savings on each ticket. December is the most expensive month, so get your Christmas beach vacation booked stat!

Prime Booking Window: 2 weeks to almost 6 months before departure
Best time to buy: About 70 days from your travel date
The average airfare: $489
Cheapest month to travel: September
Most expensive month to travel: December
Least expensive days of week to fly: Tuesday and Wednesday

Caribbean
On average, the cheapest flights to the Caribbean are found when you buy that tropical airline ticket a whopping 207 days in advance – nearly 7 months before you go. The prime booking window is enormous as well – which frankly, is good news to travelers. You don’t really have to scrutinize the calendar as closely when the fluctuations in price remain fairly small over the course of most of the time before your trip. Having said that, the fares do still jump up in that last month before you plan to go. And you should also pay close attention to booking holiday flights early if you’re spending Christmas or Hanukkah in Jamaica. December is the priciest month to travel.

Prime Booking Window: 1 month to almost 11 months before departure
Best time to buy: About 207 days from your travel date
The average airfare: $545
Cheapest month to travel: January
Most expensive month to travel: December
Least expensive days of week to fly: Tuesday and Wednesday

South America
Airfares to South America will set you back the fewest dollars on average at 110 days out—closing in on three months before you go. Tickets are a bit more expensive, and are trending more expensive than last year. Travelers can expect to spend an average of 8% more – about $65 more than they would have paid in 2017. One reason for this might be that destinations like Colombia and Argentina are pretty hot right now – the ole’ supply and demand driving up prices. It’s almost $250 cheaper to visit South America in February (the cheapest month to go) than in December. That’s a savings of nearly $1,000 for a family of four!

Prime Booking Window: 5 weeks to almost 11 months before departure
Best time to buy: About 110 days from your travel date
The average airfare: $845
Cheapest month to travel: February
Most expensive month to travel: December
Least expensive days of week to fly: Tuesday and Wednesday

South Pacific
A vacation to Australia, New Zealand, Tahiti or other South Pacific spots in theory should be planned pretty far in advance, as the cheapest time to buy clocks in at 197 days before takeoff. But here again, the prime booking window is very wide, which means that the airfares are not very volatile for a good chunk of time. Because flights are already so expensive, if you have a trip in December (summer down under), you can expect to pay more than $550 more on average than if you travel in the cheapest month of May. That’s a gargantuan argument for visiting in late spring, wouldn’t you say? Airfares to South Pacific destinations are also a modest 3% cheaper this year – so visitors do have that going for them!

Prime Booking Window: 54 days to just over 8 months
Best time to buy: About 197 days from your travel date
The average airfare: $1,708
Cheapest month to travel: May
Most expensive month to travel: December
Least expensive days of week to fly: Tuesday and Wednesday

Asia
Airline tickets to Asia are cheapest right around 4 months (120 days) in advance. The prime booking window is also quite wide for Asia, so you can relax a bit and not worry that prices are going to have a huge spike while you’re watching and waiting. November is the cheapest month to travel with the popular North American travel month of June being the most expensive. Travel in the least expensive month can save you $420 on average. Insider Tip: Asia is a huge region, so we urge our readers to do some research on their own – using our Best Time to Buy Flights Widget. You’ll want to fine-tune these results for your particular itinerary.

Prime Booking Window: A little over a month to 7 months
Best time to buy: About 120 days from your travel date
The average airfare: $1,113
Cheapest month to travel: November
Most expensive month to travel: June
Least expensive days of week to fly: Tuesday and Wednesday

Europe
The cheapest airline tickets to Europe are, on average, found 160 days before departure, and prices have dropped close to 10% since last year (great news for North American travelers, as Europe is always a pricey but coveted vacay – every little bit helps)! One way that the data was a little different for flights to Europe – the best days to travel include Monday—more options! It’ll probably come as no surprise that July is the most expensive time to go across the pond; if you can handle the weather March is the best value hands down, with an average savings of $371 dollars per ticket. We know that people usually try to tackle Europe in the summer, so for more guidance on the best days to fly to Europe this summer (with a handy color-coded calendar for reference), see our Europe Summer Flights page.

Prime Booking Window: About 1.5 months to a little more than 8 months
Best time to buy: 160 days from your travel date
The average airfare: $1,151
Cheapest month to travel: March
Most expensive month to travel: July
Least expensive days of week to fly: Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday

Africa/Middle East
If you’re traveling to a country in Africa or the Middle East, you’ve got some wiggle room in the “when to buy” department. The prime booking widow is pretty wide, so there aren’t huge variations in price for much of the time leading up to a flight. The absolute best best airfares to Africa and the Middle East are found 199 days in advance, close to 7 months, on average.

Prime Booking Window: 96 to 287 days before departure
Best time to buy: About 199 days from your travel date
The average airfare: $1,238
Cheapest month to travel: February
Most expensive month to travel: July
Least expensive days of week to fly: Tuesday and Wednesday

There you have it. The insider’s scoop on 2018 international travel. In case you want to do further research, here are a few more airfare tools for you to check out:

When to Buy Domestic Flights Study

Please feel free to comment with your individual questions below – we always take the time to address each question and/or comment from our readers and we know that planning an international trip can be a complex undertaking. We love helping people plan trips.

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Amazing spanish words that don’t exist in English

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"I care for you but I don’t love you"

Amazing words that don’t exist in English — but really should. There are a lot of terms missing from the English dictionary that perfectly describe many common aspects of everyday life.

From very specific emotions to awkward situations, the Spanish language can describe certain scenarios we’ve all experienced perfectly, while the English vocabulary falls short.

1Estrenar

Example, “estrenar” a new car

2Pena ajena

“Pena ajena” means “to be embarrassed for someone.” Have you ever seen someone wear or do something embarrassing and you feel a pang of shame for that person? Well, in Spanish there’s a way to describe that feeling. “Pena ajena” or “Verguenza ajena” is a phrase used to describe the feeling of shame/embarrassment for someone else, whether or not they feel embarrassed

3Desvelado

“Desvelado” is a way to describe your inability to sleep or sleep deprivation or unable to sleep. Literally, it could translate to “I haven’t been able to get much sleep.”

4Friolento

Have you ever used the phrase “I get cold easily” to explain why the heater is one at all times? Well, “Friolento” or “Friolero” is a Spanish word used to describe someone who is sensitive to cold.

5Te Quiero

“I care for you but I don’t love you”

6Madrugar

“Madrugar” is used to describe the act of getting up early or to get a head start. While there are phrases you can use to translate that word. There is no single-word translation for that act.

7Anteayer

“Anteayer” is a one-word way of saying, “the day before yesterday.” The English equivalent is a rather uninspiring day before yesterday. Anteayer is short, it’s crisp, and it rolls off the tongue.

8Buen Provecho

“Buen provecho” is a commonly used phrase to tell someone to enjoy their meal or to wish them good eating. Many people have probably heard, or even used, the french version “Bon appétit.” Nonetheless, there is no common phrase that expresses the exact sentiment in English.

9Amigovio

This sounds like an amalgam of amigo, meaning friend, and novio, meaning boyfriend. And that’s because it is. This alone should give you a fair idea of what the word means. Amigonovio is one of the Spanish words with no English translation, not a one-word translation anyway.

The word refers to someone you’re just friends with but also don’t mind sleeping with, something usually reserved for steady couples. So it’s more than a friend but not yet a boyfriend.

10Morbo

“Morbo” sounds like morbid, and that should be an easy hint to what the word actually means. Then how come morbo figures in a list of Spanish words with no English translation? That’s because morbid is just a hint, not the actual meaning. Morbo more accurately translates into morbid fascination. Think unhealthy interests. Or anything that immediately makes you look or sound like a freak.

11Puente

Besides referring to a bridge on a road for example, “Puente” also refers to a very different kind of bridge, a long or extended weekend. For example, when Thursday is a holiday and you take off Friday to bridge the holiday to the weekend, or, likewise, when Tuesday is a holiday and you take off Monday to extend your weekend. Or, in some cases it simply a long weekend. Can you think of a one-word equivalent to this one in English?

12Quincena

Quince is Spanish for fifteen. Quincena is fifteen of anything but more specifically, it refers to a period of fifteen days. And it has no English counterpart. Thus “Quincena” refers to salary. More specifically, one that comes twice a month on the 15th and 30th of each month.

Salary, by the way, is “salario” in Spanish. If you’re talking wages, that would be “sueldo”.

13Trasnochar

“Trasnochar” can be translated as to stay up late or to stay up all night in English, and it doesn’t have to be used only to describe staying up late to finish laborious school essays; you can use it even if you plan on staying up for fun, like an all night outing!

14Concuñado

“Concuñado” is the husband of your spouse’s sister or the husband of your sister-in-law. If your wife has a brother, his wife is your concuñada. Or if your husband has a sister, her hubby is your concuñado. The word comes from cuñado which is Spanish for brother-in-law. Con is Spanish for with; so think of the prefix con- as such. So concuñado is someone who comes with your cuñado. For example, your wife’s sister is your cuñada; her husband comes with her, so he’s your concuñado. Makes sense now?

15Madrugar

“Madrugar “describes the act of waking up in the early morning, usually before sunrise. Just as trasnochar has the word noche (or night) in it, madrugar, contains the word madrugada (meaning dawn or early morning).

 

Panama vs. Costa Rica: The Real Scoop, Part 2

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The cost of living in a particular country is in many cases the most important factor people consider when moving abroad. More often than not, they will select one country over another because it is more affordable or it offers more perqs.

However, smart retirees should take a close look at the quality of life and lifestyle a country offers, not just the low cost of living, before making a choice; after all, cheap living is no fun if you are miserable doing it.

What a person can spend in any country depends their particular lifestyle. I know expats who have scraped by for less than$1,000 per month in Costa Rica; they live like many of the locals and manage to get by. (However, I don’t think many expat retirees from North America would be content to live their lifestyle!)

Panama vs. Costa Rica: The Real Scoop, Part 1

On the other hand, I also know other expatriates who spend US$1,000 or more weekly, because they can afford and enjoy all of the amenities that come with a more affluent lifestyle. In the end, the actual cost of living in Panamá or Costa Rica boils down to what one can afford to spend.

As one retiree living in Panama told me, “Coronado, Boquete, and El Valle de Anton are probably the three most expat-friendly, move-in-ready destinations in Panama, which of course makes them a lot more costly. Rent in Coronado and El Valle de Anton begins around US$1,400 on the low end. In Boquete you’ll find homes advertised at US$1,000 and up.”

Another expat said, “If you live in an apartment in Panama City or another lowland area, your electric bill can easily be as high as $200 to $300 per month. On the other hand, in cooler places like Volcan and Boquete, and even the mountain town that’s super close to Panama City, Cerro Azul, there’s a good chance you’d never need to run the air conditioner.”

In contrast most home in Costa Rica’s Central Valley have no air-conditioning or heat; they don’t need them because climate is nearly perfect. In fact, the town of Atenas bills itself as having the best climate in the world.

Here are a few links where you can check out and compare the approximate cost of living in Panama and Costa Rica:

The first link is from Numeo’s website.  It features the approximate costa of living for many countries around the world: https://www.numbeo.com/cost-of-living/country_result.jsp?country=Panama

To quote Numbeo, “The cost of living in Panama is 3.57 percent lower than in Costa Rica (aggregate data for all cities, rent is not taken into account). Rent in Panama is 57.36 percent higher than Costa Rica (average data for all cities).”

Another source for the approximate cost of living in several areas that are popular with expats is: http://livinginpanama.com/living-in-panama/cost-of-living-coronado-el-valle-boquete/#sthash.4GmeP9gl.AVLRfktd.dpbs

And for more costs you can also check out: http://www.panamaforreal.com

Without a doubt, Panama’s major appeal to some potential retirees are the incentive programs available to them. Attractive discounts are offered for elderly Panamanian citizens and foreign residents in a wide range of areas: Importing an automobile tax-free every two years, a one-time exoneration of up to US$10,000 in household goods importation duties, plus reduced prices on transportation, restaurants, doctor’s visits, entertainment and more. These programs are very appealing to anyone who wants to save money, especially to those who receive small pensions and must be cost conscious.

Costa Rica eliminated its exonerations on household goods, automobiles, and a few other perqs for retirees (pensionados) in 1992. The main reason was that the court said it was unconstitutional and discriminatory for foreign retirees to enjoy certain privileges that Costa Rican citizens could not. Nevertheless, this hasn’t stopped expats from flocking here. Some of the draws are the country’s stellar international reputation, unparalleled natural beauty, friendly people, excellent medical care, user friendliness for foreigners, which helps them feel confortable and fit right in, the year-round spring-like climate, and the unparalleled lifestyle with every imaginable activity to stay busy and happy.

As an article in International Living states, “It’s true Costa Rica doesn’t have an official retirement incentive program; it got rid of it in the 1990s. But Costa Rica does make it easy to qualify for residence. The pensionado program requires only income of only $1,000 a month from Social Security, a pension, or a similar source, per couple. The major benefit; you join Caja, the national healthcare system, and get all your medical needs covered for free after your small monthly payment. Plus, those over 65 can get discounts of 10% to 20% through the Golden Citizen (Tarjeta de Oro) program.”

Most people who relocate to Costa Rica are willing to give up the incentives the Panamanian government offers because they realize that the quality of life, locally known as the “pura vida” lifestyle, is so much better; there is much more to see and do and there are many more places from which to choose for living in Costa Rica.

Bottom Line: As International Living states in their Annual Global Retirement Index, “It’s true that Costa Rica isn’t the cheapest country we list, but it offers excellent ‘bang for your buck’.” In fact, Costa Rica is ranked #1 and Panama #3 according to IL’s research. To see their list go to: https://internationalliving.com/the-best-places-to-retire/

As in Part One of this series, this has been a look at some of the factors to consider when evaluating a retirement relocation. If you detect some bias on my part towards Costa Rica, I apologize. But, with many years of experience with both countries, and when I compare them fairly, it always comes out in favor of Costa Rica.

Stay tuned for Part Three which compares medical care and costs in both countries.

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Should the people decide if they want UBER in the country? Association presents referendum request to the TSE.

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Daniel Vega, Merilyn Ortiz and Carlos Porras, members of AVES, submitted the request for a referendum.

The legalization of transport services such as Uber and other apps could be left up to the people if the initiative by the Asociación Víctimas del Estado (AVES) materializes.

Daniel Vega, Merilyn Ortiz and Carlos Porras, members of AVES, submitted the request for a referendum.

The group presented this Friday before the Supreme Electoral Tribunal (TSE) a request to put the question of legalizing Uber, Cabify, Onbis and others to a referendum.

“It must be the people and not the government who chooses if they want the services such as Uber,” said Carlos Porras, president of AVES.

The proposal comes after the Governing Council agreed last Tuesday “urgingUber to stop operating in Costa Rica, under the pressure of the formal (red) taxi drivers who threatened blockades.

On Friday, the government, in a statement, clarified that “the current regulation prevents a private person from providing the paid transport service of persons, if they do not have a concession or permission from the State”.

Uber began operations in Costa Rica three years ago and according to the company has 22,000 associates (drivers) and almost 800,000 users.

“The aim of our Association is to defend people from state abuses. The project proposes that the public transport service can be provided through a technological platform and that it authorizes us to collect signatures so that it is then the people who decide if they want UBER services. We believe it is essential that if this is a transport service, the people are the ones who decide or not if they want it and not the government,” said Porras.

AVES is an association that was formally incorporated at the beginning of this year and has about 25 members.

The referendum process
The citizen initiative (referendum mechanism) is established in the Referendum Act of 2002.

Héctor Fernández, director of the Electoral Registry of the TSE, explained that the first thing is to determine that the request does not reach some of the issues prohibited by law to submit a referendum, such as human rights, criminal, State contracts or taxes.

The TSE then sends the text of the bill to the Department of Technical Services of the Legislative Assembly to formally review it, a process that will last eight business days and it passes through all the ‘filters’, the TSE authorizes the collection of signatures through a process and time limit established in the law.

Important to note, in Costa Rica, to date, only one referendum has been held. This is the consultation to approve the Free Trade Agreement with Central America, the Dominican Republic and the United States, (CAFTA) or Tratado de Libre Comercio (TLC) in Spanish, on October 7, 2007.

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Correos (Post Office) Guarantees Service During National Strike

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The Post Office says it will be business as usual on Monday, Sept. 10

Despite the call to a national strike on Monday by the trade union groups, Correos de Costa Rica (the Post Office) reaffirms its commitment to provide normal service.

The Post Office says it will be business as usual on Monday, Sept. 10

The 110 branches of the Correos and the 18 regional distribution centers will work in their usual hours.

However, Correos warns that the services could be affected by circumstances beyond the company’s operations such as the closure of roads and the demonstrations of union groups.

Correos de Costa Rica president, José Alexis Jiménez Chavarría said that “the Correos keeps the promise of delivery established with its customers”.

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CNC approves expropriation plan for Ruta 27 expansion

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This year and next the CNC is budgeting ¢3.5 billion colones for the expansion of the Ruta 27, part of the ¢5 billion colones fo the road infrastructure plan the government is driving (no pun intended) to reactivate the economy

The National Council of Concessions (CNC) approved on Thursday the expropriation plan 2018-2019 for the Expansion Project of Ruta 27, the San José – Caldera.

This year and next the CNC is budgeting ¢3.5 billion colones for the expansion of the Ruta 27, part of the ¢5 billion colones fo the road infrastructure plan the government is driving (no pun intended) to reactivate the economy

This Friday started the process with steps for the acquisition of the first 9 hectares that will be required for the improvement of the Santa Ana intersection, of the total of 79 hectares for the entire project.

“For this (Santa Ana purchase we have a budget of  ¢1.5 billion colones,” explained Paola Benavides Chaves, Technical Secretariat of CNC.

She added that these 9 hectares – located in an area of ​​high added value – have no buildings which will facilitate the procurement process, scheduled to conclude by the end of this year

For next year, in accordance with the plan approved this Thursday by the CNC, a second stage of the expropriation process will allow the purchase of approximately 28 hectareswill start on route 27,  budgeted at ¢2 billion coloens.

“With these lands it will be possible to face the stabilization works of the new and existing slopes… The remaining 42 hectares will be expropriated “according to the budgetary capacity,” said Benavides.

The resources for the Ruta 27 expansion are part of the ¢5 billion colones budgeted for 2019 by the CNC, which were announced on Thursday by the Minister of Transport and Public Works (MOPT), Rodolfo Méndez Mata, part of the road infrastructure plan the government is driving (no pun intended) to reactivate the economy.

“These funds are resources from the 2019 national budget that were obtained by reducing sub-executions of other state institutions,” explained the MOPT Minister.

Méndez added that “we are still focused on works that will improve the flow of vehicles and reduce travel time (congestion).”

 

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Emirates and Jet Blue open shared route to connect San José with Dubai

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Costa Rica’s Civil Aviation approved the request of the Emirates Airlines and Jetblue Airways, for the operation of flights under the figure of shared code between San José and Dubai, via points in the United States.

Costa Rica, “one stop to Dubai” will be the center of the promotion of the country and a tourist destination. Emirates Airlines facilitates the connection of Costa Rica with the Middle and Far East and Africa.

Emirates is one of the most sophisticated airlines in the world, flying with its fleet of 244 aircraft, all Airbus 380 or Boeing 777-300, to more than 160 countries directly or in shared flight. The company uses the Dubai International Airport as a base of operations.

The Dubai International Airport airport, base of operations for Emirates, with 78 million travelers last year, will provide Costa Rica with a direct connection from Dubai to the markets and destinations of the Middle and Far East and Africa and will open an important niche for tourism attraction and investments for the country.

The UAE has shown interest in Costa Rica. Since 2010, an air services agreement was negotiated and a Memorandum of Understanding was signed.

Under the codeshare agreement, passengers by way of Jetblue’s Orlando – San Jose, New York – Liberia and Fort Lauderdale – San José can connect to Emirates five weekly flights from Dubai to Fort Lauderdale, five weekly flights from Dubai to Orlando and a daily flight from Dubai to JFK airport in New York.

Vice President and Chancellor, Epsy Campbell Barr, expressed her satisfaction with the news.

“I am particularly pleased to know that the work developed by the Costa Rican Embassy in the United Arab Emirates, our officials in the Foreign Ministry and the Costa Rican Tourism Institute (ICT) has paid off. We show that there is inter-institutional capacity to work successfully in the benefit of the country. Economic diplomacy is an important development tool for the progress of our society,” she said.

For her part, the Minister of Tourism, Maria Amalia Revelo Raventós, stressed that “this is the first step of a long road that awaits us for the opening of the Middle East market and destinations beyond. We are hopeful that in the medium term we will begin to venture into the different markets with actions that are effective and that promote the trips of both the Middle East and of already identified destinations of connection such as India, South Africa, Australia and some parts of Asia “, sHe said

Emirates Holidays, the tourism company part of the Emirates group, will promote Costa Rica as a destination in the Americas.

Costa Rica and the United Arab Emirates have reciprocal embassies in San José and Abu Dhabi since 2017 and 2018, respectively. The citizens of both countries do not require a visa to travel between both countries.

 

 

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Venezuela’s Maduro Says He Bought School Supplies, Goods Worth $200 Million Using The Petro

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CARACAS – Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro said on Wednesday that his government made international purchases of school supplies and raw materials worth US$200 million with the petro cryptocurrency, banned by the United States and declared illegal by the opposition-led Venezuelan Congress.

Maduro, at a business event that was a mandatory broadcast on radio and television channels, said that his government bought raw materials and school supplies – pencils and notebooks – from international companies using the petro currency.

“There are those who called the petro a lie. But if it were so why do they sanction it, why would they persecute it?” Maduro asked.

“The petro is a reality and we have been doing international negotiations with economies, governments, states and strong companies, which will allow us to expand the petro far beyond what has been its use so far,” he added.

Maduro introduced the oil-backed petro in late 2017, referring to the reserves of the Orinoco Belt, to move towards new financing methods and to overcome an alleged international economic blockade.

On Jan. 5, Maduro announced the issuing of 100 million petros which were sold between Feb. 20 and March 20.

But the opposition-led Congress declared the petro illegal in early March, warning potential investors about the unconstitutionality of the petro and any other currency issued by the Venezuelan government that is backed by oil or any other mineral resource.

The administration of US President Donald Trump issued an executive order prohibiting “all transactions related to, provision of financing for, and other dealings in, by a United States person or within the United States, any digital currency, digital coin, or digital token, that was issued by, for, or on behalf of the Government of Venezuela on or after January 9, 2018.”

Venezuela launched the petro in the middle of a severe economic crisis that has led to hyperinflation and shortages of goods, with a decline in production at the state-owned oil giant PDVSA.

Source LAHT.com

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

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RECOPE guarantees supply of fuels during national strike

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The RECOPE, the national refinery that does not refine anything, says has optimal inventory levels and sales logistics that ensure the continuity of operations in the event of an indefinite national strike that is to start on Monday, September 10.

Faced with the call to strike of public sector unions, RECOPE says it has activated protocols for contingency situations to guarantee the supply of fuels throughout the country.

As a preventive measure, the sales schedule will be extended on Saturday and Sunday in all distribution centers. This in order that the service stations are supplied and can meet the demand and thus avoid lineups at gas stations.

Citizens are urged to remain calm and not store fuel in containers in their homes or businesses that put the safety of people and their property at risk, the RECOPE said in a statement.

 

 

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Coffee farmers struggle to adapt to Colombia’s changing climate

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In Colombia’s coffee-producing region of Risaralda, small trees run along the sharp incline of the Andes Mountains, carefully tended in tidy rows. Thousands of green coffee berries turn brilliant red as they ripen, ready to be harvested by hand. The steep hills here prevent mechanized techniques.

Its unique geography makes Colombia one of the world’s greatest coffee-producing nations, selling US$2.64 billion of mild, high-altitude Arabica beans to countries around the world each year. Only Brazil and Vietnam export more coffee.

Despite their global reach, coffee farms in Colombia are generally family-owned and modest in size – perhaps 5 to 12 acres.

These fertile mountains already face weather-related risks, such as mudslides and erosion. Now, the country’s coffee region is increasingly vulnerable to climate change-induced disasters like flooding, drought and invasive pests.

For the country’s 300,000 coffee producers, these extreme weather threats – coupled with the increasingly unpredictable seasons, crop disease and invasive insects associated with climate change – endanger their livelihoods.

Farmers see the changes around them

Our research team went to Colombia in early 2018 to talk with the coffee farmers of Risaralda about how they are adapting to climate change.

We asked 45 farmers questions that tapped into the farmers’ own conceptualization of climate change, such as “What is climate change?” and “How, if at all, has climate change affected you as a farmer?”

The results were stark.

Over 90 percent of the coffee farmers reported changes in average temperature. Seventy-four percent said droughts had gotten longer and worse, and 61 percent reported an increase in mountainside erosion and landslides because of more rain.

The farmers also perceived impacts of these environmental changes on their crops. Ninety-one percent reported changes in the flowering and fruiting cycles of the coffee plants. Seventy-five percent had noticed an increase in pests, and 59 percent reported an increase in crop disease.

Colombian coffee farmers see the impacts of climate change on their crops, but many are not sure how to respond. Reuters/Jose Gomez

These changes have created uncertainty about previously routine farming decisions.

Because the planting and harvesting seasons are no longer regular or predictable, for example, many farmers cannot rely on traditional seasonal indicators to guide them about the right time to plant, harvest or tend to their coffee crops.

Organizing labor to pick the coffee beans has also become a struggle because the trees often do not flower at the same time due to unstable seasonal conditions. New Colombian labor laws meant to decrease child labor make finding farmhands difficult, compounding the problem.

In short, the farmers saw climate change as nothing less than an existential threat.

“Our ability to counteract the effects of climate change is minimal,” one farmer told us. “It is a threat capable of greatly incapacitating us. So we must be very attentive to the little we can do to mitigate.”

Growing coffee in today’s climate

From 2008 to 2013, Colombia’s coffee production dropped approximately 33 percent due to the El Niño and La Niña inclement weather patterns, when rains, clouds and hot spells all increased.

The country has worked to increase its production since then, and this year Colombian coffee farmers are expected to produce 13.3 million bags of coffee beans – roughly 1.8 billion pounds – up about 23 percent from 2013 levels.

But they’re still short of the national production goals of 14.7 million bags, a shortfall the Colombian National Coffee Federation has attributed to excessive rain and cloudiness.

Even before climate change endangered their crop, Colombian coffee farmers were already operating on a very slim profit margin.

Most producers sell their coffee to the Colombian National Coffee Federation, a nonprofit cooperative founded in 1927 to represent Colombia’s coffee farmers nationally and internationally. It values Colombia’s coffee exports using a price scale tied to the New York Stock Exchange.

Since that price fluctuates daily, it is difficult to calculate an individual farmer’s exact income or losses, but most small farmers in Colombia barely break even.

Under such circumstances, even one crop failure can devastate the family farm.

Farmers struggle to adapt

To adapt to Colombia’s changing climate, some farmers have begun experimenting with new farming techniques they think might help offset its impacts.

Roughly one-third of the farmers we interviewed had planted trees on their farms to shade coffee plants during hot spells and to prevent soil erosion during big storms. Others were building water tanks to collect rainwater during droughts.

Some coffee farmers had also diversified their crops, adding banana and avocados trees to their farms to reduce the risks of any one crop’s failed harvest.

Risaralda has a unique geography that is perfect for coffee production but vulnerable to climate change. Natalie White

But fully one-third of all the coffee producers we spoke with – 14 of our interviewees – are still farming as their families have for centuries.

They’re not unconcerned about the environmental changes affecting their farms. Yet time pressures and lack of resources give them little choice but to focus on short-term demands like making payroll, paying debts and keeping food on the table.

Keeping Colombia’s coffee industry alive

Climate-related production challenges are a concern not just for the farmers we interviewed but also for Colombia’s economy.

Coffee is the South American country’s most important agricultural export, representing 31 percent of all agricultural trade. The industry is worth around $1.97 billion a year and employs an estimated 800,000 people.

Other developing countries where the coffee industry is being hit hard by climate change, such as Brazil and Tanzania, have tried some successful adaptation strategies. These include introducing new varieties of coffee beans, improving soil and water management and increasing access to loans and other financial services to help farmers weather failed crops or invest in new technologies.

Research shows that teaching people to farm in a new and unpredictable environment requires a detailed understanding of how a given population is vulnerable to climate change now and in the future. That means asking farmers what they think and feel about what’s happening to design contingency plans that will actually work for them.

That was the work we began to do in Risaralda. We hope our findings can help the Colombian government work with farmers to help them adapt their farming practices for a future of more extreme, unpredictable weather.

Farming in the face of climate change involves grappling with many complicated economic, informational, labor and business problems. Colombian coffee farmers want to succeed, but they’ll need help in all of these areas just to survive.The Conversation

Jessica Eise, Ross Fellow in the Brian Lamb School of Communication Doctoral Program, Purdue University and Natalie White, Assistant Professor of Communication, Purdue University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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

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MOPT Says It Will Present Proposal For The Juan Pablo II Bridge. Will History Be Repeated?

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MOPT work crews on Thursday repaired the loose expansion joint or platina on the Juan Pablo II bridge. Sound famiiliar?

Rico’s TICO Bull – The Ministerio de Obras Públicas y Transportes (MOPT) on Thursday made “an emergency intervention” on the Juan Pablo II bridge in La Uruca, after one of the expansion joints broke off, due to the normal deterioration (and lack of maintenance) of the road.

MOPT work crews on Thursday repaired the loose expansion joint or platina on the Juan Pablo II bridge. Sound famiiliar? Photo Casa Presidencial.

With the immediate work, it was possible to solve the problem and normalize the traffic on the Autopista General Cañas, the busiest road in the country, says the Casa Presidencial website.

In addition, the MOPT is expected to present in 15 days a structural proposal for the maintenance and general attention of the bridge and avoid situations like the one Thursday morning.

Keywords here are “present”, “proposal”, “maintennce” and “general attention”.

It took the MOPT, years, from 2009, to present, proposal, maintenance and general attention of the bridge over the Virilla river until a ‘real’ fix that was finished last year.

The Virilla bridge problem started with a loose expansion joint or platina in Spanish. Several major ‘interventions’ or fixes failed.

This is the first major ‘interventions’ or fix of the Juan Pablo II bridge of the loose expansion joint or platina.

Will history be repeated?

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Tropical Wave #35 Dumps On Costa Rica

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lluvia en la plata

The Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) and tropical wave #35 have caused heavy downpours in the Pacific, Central Valley and mountainous areas of the Caribbean.

Areas like Buenos Aires Aires in Puntarenas and Santa Bárbara de Heredia have been most affected.

The Instituto Meteorológico Nacional (IMN) is forecasting the tropical wave should be leaving by today, Friday, however, its effects could continue into the weekend.

The IMN recommends:

  • Caution in areas with vulnerability to flooding due to saturation of the sewage system, due to the increase in the flow in rivers and streams. In addition to places with high propensity to landslides as national routes.
  • Take shelter in a safe place in case of thunderstorms or strong gusts of wind or storm clouds, as well as precaution for possible fall of tree branches, power lines among others.
  • Stay informed by visiting the IMN Facebook page, Twitter or website at www.imn.ac.cr for the latest weather conditions.

PS, don’t forget your umbrella and galoshes when going outside!

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27 March 2026 - At The Banks - Source: BCCR