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Global Trade Is Why Your Television Did Not Cost US$6,200 Like It Did in 1964

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By Mark J. Perry – Pictured above are some color TVs from the 627-page 1964 Sears Christmas Catalog, from the Wishbook Web website (no longer available). The original prices are listed ($750 for the Sears Silvertone entertainment center and $800 for the more expensive one), and those prices are also shown converted to today’s 2016 dollars using the BLS Inflation Calculator: $5,800 for the basic 21-inch color TV model and $6,200 for the more expensive model.

To put that in perspective, the pictures below illustrate what about $5,800 in today’s dollars would buy in the today’s 2016 marketplace using current prices from the Sears and Best Buy websites:

For an American consumer or household spending $750 in 1964, they would have only been able to purchase the 21-inch color TV/entertainment center from the Sears Christmas catalog pictured above (includes phonograph and AM/FM radio).

An American consumer or household spending that same amount of inflation-adjusted dollars today ($5,800) would be able to furnish their entire kitchen with five brand-new appliances (refrigerator, gas stove and oven, washer, dryer, and freezer) and buy seven state-of-the-art electronic items for their home (a Toshiba Satellite 15.6″ laptop computer, a Garmin 5 Inch GPS, a Canon EOS Rebel T5i DSLR Camera, a Sony 1,000 Watt, 5.1-Channel 3D Smart Blu-Ray Home Theater System, a Samsung 55 inch Smart HDTV, an Apple iPod Touch 64GB MP3 Player (6th generation), and an Apple iPhone 7 Plus.

Measured in terms of the “time cost” of purchasing household and electronic items working at the average wage, there’s a huge difference between 1964 and today. To purchase the $750 Sears TV in 1964 would have required 293 hours of work for the average American at the average hourly wage of $2.56 in November 1964 — that’s 7.33 weeks, or almost two full months of work to earn the income required to purchase the TV.

Today, the average American need only work about 23 hours at the average wage of $21.73 to earn enough to purchase a $500 Samsung Smart HDTV. A $400 laptop would have a “time cost” of only about 18 hours of work today (2.25 days), and a iPod touch would require only 13 hours of work (1.63 days).

And isn’t it an amazing sign of the economic progress achieved over the last half century that even a billionaire in 1964 wouldn’t have been able to purchase most of the items above that even a teenager working at the minimum wage can afford today like a laptop computer, iPhone, iPod and Smart TV?

And because many of the low-cost manufactured goods we have access to today in the US — like TVs, laptops, and appliances — are manufactured or assembled overseas, where labor costs are cheaper, the powerful forces of international trade and global competition are an important part of the “magic of the global marketplace” and the “miracle of global manufacturing” illustrated above.

American consumers benefit enormously both directly from lower-cost imported manufactured goods and also indirectly because foreign rivals discipline U.S. manufacturers to behave more competitively and provide us with lower prices, higher quality products, and better service.

As Don Boudreaux pointed out recently, trade is simply the wonderful opportunity to take advantage of the “lowest-cost method of production” — and it doesn’t matter whether that production takes place on the same side, or the other side, of imaginary lines we call city, state and national borders vis-à-vis the location of the consumer:

…when consumers buy imports, they are simply choosing to make things for themselves and their families using the lowest-cost methods of production available to them: they ‘make’ their consumer goods using the roundabout method of working at their specialties and then transforming through trade some of their incomes into these goods. Sometimes consumers trade with fellow citizens; other times they trade with foreigners. But in all cases the trades are the lowest-cost methods of production available to consumers for provisioning themselves and their families with the goods and services that they desire. Why should the making of such choices ever be blocked?

Bottom Line: As much as we might hear people complain about a slow economic recovery, the lowest labor force participation rate in nearly 40 years, the decline of the middle class, stagnant median household income, and rising income inequality, we have a lot to be thankful for, and we’ve made a lot of economic progress in the last 52 years as the example above illustrates, thanks to the “magic of the global marketplace” and the “miracle of global manufacturing.”

Looking forward, let’s hope that the economic progress we’ve experienced over the last half century continues, unimpeded by consumer-impoverishing trade policies that would prevent or restrict American consumers from having access to goods manufactured at the “lowest-cost method of production” – whether that’s across the street or on the other side of the world.

Mark J. Perry is a scholar at the American Enterprise Institute and a professor of economics and finance at the University of Michigan’s Flint campus. This article was originally published on FEE.org. Read the original article.

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Over 70 Venezuelan Immigrants Stranded on Panama-Costa Rica Border as Officials Ramp Up Controls

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Q24N – Over 70 Venezuelan immigrants, part of a total of 89 people who were prevented from entering  Panama because they did not meet immigration requirements, are trapped on the border between Costa Rica and Panama after official refused to let them re-enter the country.

Among the rejected are also five Hondurans, three Salvadorans, two Nicaraguans and the rest of several European nationalities.

Some 89 immigrants were denied entry in to Panama because their papers were not in order, now stranded between the borders of Costa Rica and Panama. Photo EFE/Marcelino Rosario/Lapatilla.com

Most of them reportedly live in Panama, but went to Costa Rica with the intention of reentering with a renewed tourist visa. However, authorities prevented them from entering.

Versions of the local press refer statements of some confessing to the authorities that they carry out illegal work activities as tourists, and travel for three days to Costa Rica every six months to renew their stay with similar visa.

Alfredo Córdoba, of the Servicio Nacional de Migración in Chiriquí. Photo Lapatilla.com

Alfredo Cordoba, Commissioner of Panama’s National Immigration Service in the  province of Chiriqui reported that the mass movement of people led them to implement a stricter strategy, as it was clear the Venezuelans were living and working in Panama illegally.

“The computer system that we use for verification determines when people have entered and exited several times in order to renew their six month tourist permits. When that time ends, foreigners must use other alternatives that allow them to legally remain in the national territory.”

Immigrants and tourists in line to enter Panama on Thursday, March 2, 2017. Photo EFE/Marcelino Rosario/Lapatilla.com

Cordoba explained that some Venezuelans did not meet the stipulated requirements needed to enter the country again. The requirements include having a return ticket to your home country or country of residence, having a successful interview with the pertinent authority at the time of entry or proving an economic solvency of US$500.

Chiriquí governor, Hugo Mendez, said he will hold a meeting with immigration officials for an update on the group’s situation, some of which claim to have been trying for more than three days to enter Panama with their papers in order.

Source: La Patilla

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Trump’s Support of the Venezuelan Opposition Is a Breath of Fresh Air from the White House

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The Trump administration’s clear position on Venezuela is a welcomed change from the moral ambiguity of his predecessor. (The Daily Signal)

TODAY VENEZUELA, By Jackson Ventrella –  Lilian Tintori understands the Venezuelan regime for what it is: corrupt, criminal, and evil.

Her husband, Leopoldo López, was stripped of his political rights when President Hugo Chávez saw the potential and dangerous competition that he posed. Eventually this led to Leopoldo’s investigation and his current imprisonment, which has been ongoing for three years now.

López is one of nearly 110 political prisoners the Venezuelan government refuses to release. The current president, Nicolás Maduro, frequently protects the corrupt while punishing those who support the opposition. He even contrives enemies for himself out of thin air.

Consider the case of Joshua Holt.

Holt is an American citizen who is currently being held and tormented in a Venezuelan prison after being arrested on “terrorism” charges. After traveling to Venezuela to get married, both he and his wife ended up in prison and remain there to this day.

The inhumane treatment Holt has received is horrifying. Not only has he lost 50 pounds, but the judge has conveniently skipped his trial four times, which seems to have crushed any hope that his case will be heard.

Or consider former political prisoner Francisco Marquez, a dual U.S.-Venezuelan citizen. Marquez was held in a Venezuelan prison for four months before his eventual release. Even after having charges dropped, he was not immediately released. Although he did not experience torture himself, he heard the nearby screams of terror frequently.

The inhumane treatment of prisoners in Venezuela only adds to the laundry list of intentional evils committed by both the Chávez and Maduro regimes.

This brutality has not gone over well recently with the new U.S. administration. President Donald Trump recently tweeted, “Venezuela should allow Leopoldo Lopez, a political prisoner and husband of Lilian Tintori out of prison immediately.”

This remarkable departure from the Obama administration’s policy toward Venezuela reflects a new and robust U.S. commitment to the people of Venezuela. It is a clear sign that the United States stands against the corrupt Maduro regime and supports the democratic aspirations of ordinary Venezuelans.

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The grave human rights violations this regime has committed have spurred the United States, along with other regional stakeholders, to pressure the regime to release its political prisoners.

Former U.S. Ambassador to Venezuela Otto Reich’s assessment of the situation points in the right direction. He says that the United States ought to be “proactive, not vocal: We should not engage in spitting contests with cobras or in verbal battles with deceitful third world autocrats.”

The Maduro regime is undoubtedly governed by the corrupt. Tareck El Aissami, the newest vice president of Venezuela, is widely acknowledged to have ties with drug cartels as well as the terrorist group Hezbollah.

It is clear that the Venezuelan regime does not prefer any ethical system over another, so long as it retains control.

The Obama administration knew full well that the Venezuelan vice president is a criminal, but it took no strong action. Yet within the first month of Trump’s administration, El Aissami’s illicitly obtained assets in the U.S. were confiscated.

The Trump administration’s clear position on Venezuela is a welcomed change from the moral ambiguity of his predecessor. Moving forward, the administration must continue holding the Venezuelan government accountable in the hopes of bringing political freedom to the Venezuelan people.

Article originally appeared on Panampost.com. Jackson Ventrella is a member of the Young Leader’s Program at The Heritage Foundation. His article was originally published in with the Daily Signal

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

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Mexicans Blame Wrangler Firing 600 Employees and Factory Closing To The “Trump Effect”

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Employee holding last paycheck from Wrangler. Photo Sin Embargo
After 19 years of operation, the company so popular for its jeans and other clothing products closed its plant in the city of Aldama, located in the state of Chihuahua.

(Q24N) American clothing factory Wrangler has fired 600 workers from its Mexico-based factory, claiming a lack of personnel as well as difficulty in sending products at a reasonable cost to the United States.

After 19 years of operation, the company so popular for its jeans and other clothing products closed its plant in the city of Aldama, located in the state of Chihuahua.

Employee holding last paycheck from Wrangler. Photo Sin Embargo

The company did not provide an official statement, but local media reported that employees left the company with a severance check for their services and a sudden termination of contract. Many of them claimed the firing was reportedly a result of the “Trump effect.”

Last Friday, employees said they went to work like normal before being called to a meeting during which company managers informed them of the factory’s closure.

State authorities said that they will provide support for workers who were dismissed from the factory. The company IGP-BGD, in Meoqui, a town nearby, will reportedly open positions for many workers.

On February 13th, The Wall Street Journal warned that the cotton industry in the United States was on a “tightrope” because of trade policies proposed by President Donald Trump regarding cotton bales that are collected from Texas and the Carolinas and shipped as thread or cloth to Mexico where they are cut, sewn and assembled.

WSJ also stated that 40 percent of men’s and boys’ denim jeans sold in the US market are imported from Mexico. The world’s largest companies, such as Levi Strauss and VF Corporation, which owns Lee and Wrangler, have operations in Mexico.

Source: Sin Embargo, Panampost.com

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President Ortega Highlights Chavez’s Legacy in Latin America

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In this undated photo we have Hugo Chaves (left) and Daniel Ortega in triumph.

TODAY NICARAGUA (Prensa Latina) Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega on Sunday highlighted the impact of the revolutionary work of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez on Latin America, on the 4th anniversary of his death.

“Chavez (1954-2013) lives in all Latin America, he liberated our region with a great force and success, and we are here to continue his battle against poverty and social exclusion,” Ortega said.

Ortega arrived in Caracas on early Sunday to participate in the 14th Special Summit of the Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America-People’s Trade Treaty (ALBA-TCP), during which he will pay tribute to the leader of the Bolivarian Revolution.

“We come here to pay tribute to Chavez’ work and legacy, which is part of the ALBA, based on the foundations of integration,” stated Ortega.

“The ALBA was a wish by Chavez and the leader of the Cuban Revolution, Fidel Castro (1926-2016), two champions of Latin American and Caribbean integration who are present in this struggle that we are waging today,” he said.

Venezuelan Ecological Development Minister Jorge Arreaza welcomed the Nicaraguan delegation at the Simon Bolivar International Airport, in Maiquetia, Vargas state.

More than 200 dignitaries of the world invited to the event arrived in Venezuela this past weekend, including Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez, and the head of Bolivian diplomacy, Fernando Huanacuni.

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

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The Marimba Is Now a National Symbol

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A law signed by President Solís designates November 30 as the National Day of Costa Rican Marimba

(Q COSTA RICA) by Andrea Solano B., Vozdeguanacaste.com – Once again Guanacaste extends its generous cultural contributions to the rest of Costa Rica. On March 2, President Luis Guillermo Solís signed Law 9419, which declares marimba a “national symbol of Costa Rican culture and folklore.”

The law also designates Nov. 30 of each year as the National Day of Costa Rican Marimba and tasks public institutions such as the Culture Ministry, Education Ministry and municipalities with organizing activities to celebrate the date.

“This declaration seeks to recognize marimba as an instrument that is a national symbol of culture and tradition in our country. … This law allows us to achieve the conservation of marimba among the cultural wealth of our country,” the president said during an official act at Liceo de Nicoya.

The legislation was proposed by Guanacaste lawmaker Marta Arauz.

Land of Tradition

The marimba is now the third national symbol from Guanacaste. The other two are the Guanacaste tree and the white-tailed deer, a mammal whose primary habitat is dry forest, which covers a large part of Guanacastecan territory.

But what does Guanacaste have that makes it such an example of cultural identity for the country?

“Guanacaste is one of the most consolidated historical regions in Costa Rica. Its trajectory is especially long and that can’t be said in most of the other regions in the country. The province’s pre-Hispanic precedents go back to 300 B.C. In that era there already were indigenous villages in that part of the country,” said historian Edgar Solano Muñoz, teaching coordinator at the University of Costa Rica’s Guanacaste campus.

Solano believes the influence of the Guanacastecan popular culture is highly significant in the construction of the Costa Rican nation.

“The Guanacastecan shout, the handkerchief, the rodeos, the bullfights, coyol wine, corn, tortillas (and) the folkloric dances are elements with which the Costa Rican identifies, and it becomes part of the national identity,” he added.

The historian recalled that among the list of the most important national holidays is July 25, which celebrates the annexation to Costa Rica of the Partido de Nicoya.

“The Chorotega region has contributed a symbolism that is very relevant to the manner in which we define ourselves as Costa Rican,” he added.

 

Pride in the Wood

The marimba is a percussive instrument that has been called the “piano of the Americas,” as it’s found in many countries and regions from southern Mexico’s Chiapas to Central and South America.

There is still controversy surrounding its origin on the continent. Some claim that it was introduced to the Americas by slaves from Africa, who were brought by Spanish conquistadors.

Other theories claim its origin is Mayan, and it was used in rituals by that pre-Columbian civilization.

What is certain is that in Costa Rica, it entered from Guatemala through Guanacaste during the colonial period.

The marimba already had been declared a “national musical instrument” by Executive Decree 25114-C of Sept. 3, 1996. Nevertheless, with the most recently adopted law, for the first time it will be designated a national symbol.

While the instrument also can be heard in Puntarenas and some areas of the Central Valley, Guanacaste is the undisputed cradle of marimba tradition.

“The marimba is not simply a decoration or an element only for July celebrations, it’s part of the daily life of Guanacastecans. Marimbas are at weddings, community festivals, and at one point they even tried to have a marimba in every school,” said marimba player Karol Cabalceta, a regional adviser on musical education from the Education Ministry.

Cabalceta said its legacy spreads to all of Costa Rica: “It doesn’t matter what part of Costa Rica you’re from, hearing marimba makes the blood and soul vibrate.”

The historian Solano agrees with Cabalceta that the marimba is more than just an instrument.

“The case of Guanacaste is unique, because it developed the technique of building the marimba and the mallets, treating the wood and tuning. These techniques can’t be found in any other part of the country,” Solano said.

The declaration of the National Day of the Marimba seeks to strengthen a tradition that also involves the marimba maker, known as a marimbero, and the marimbista, the person who plays it.

“Fortunately, excellent builders exist in Liberia, Santa Cruz and Nicoya who put a lot of effort into keeping alive the tradition and teaching it to new generations,” Cabalceta said.

Article originally appeared on Vozdeguanacaste.com and is republished here with permission.

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ICE To Roll Out 100Mbps FTTH in Puntarenas

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ICE’s Red de Acceso de Nueva Generación (Range)

Q COSTA RICA – Stop and think how your Internet usage has evolved during the last few years. If you’re like most, you’re doing — and expecting — a lot more. In Costa Rica, though Internet connection speeds in the Greater Metropolitan Area (GAM) has improved, in the outlying areas, it is still a challenge at best.

One of those areas, Cobano in Puntarenas will soon be getting connections of up to 100Mbps for voice, broadband and TV services as the state-owned operator, the Instituto Costarricense de Electriciad (ICE) announcement plans to install 2,000 FTTH connections.

The plan is part of a major investment by ICE, US$91 million dollars to activated 180,000 next generation access lines across the country in the second half of this year. In second of 2016, ICE says it activated some 103,000 broadband lines.

What is FTTH?

Fiber to the home (FTTH) is the delivery of a communications signal over optical fiber from the operator’s switching equipment all the way to a home or business, thereby replacing existing copper infrastructure such as telephone wires and coaxial cable.

FTTH delivers connection speeds from 20 to 100 times faster than a typical cable modem or DSL (Digital Subscriber Line) connection.

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Lucky To Be Alive After Tourist Boat Capsized Off San Lucas Island

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Q COSTA RICA – The strong winds this weekend that affected most of the country is being blamed for the Saturday shipwreck of a boat with ten passengers near San Lucas Island, off the coast of Puntarenas.

The captain of the boat, 19 year-old Isaac Delgado Casares, explained on Sunday that “the wind played him a bad trick”.

The occupants of the boat that was under water for almost 10 minutes were eight women and two men, between the ages of 24 and 38, residents of Cartago and Desamparados, on a visit to the Cocos beach on San Lucas Island.

The national weather service, the Instituto Meteorologigo Nacional (IMN) had warned boaters of the choppy sea due to the strong winds.

The local tourists were returning from a visit to beach known as Cocos, in San Lucas Island, when the shipwreck occurred.

In her Facebook provide, Eimy Calvo, 24, says: “Thank God he got us out of that”.  Meli Valverde posted, “all rescued and on our way home”. Calvo published a video of the frantic moments the passengers and their captain lived through.

The alert. Seeing the force of the waves, at 3:20pm the captain radioed an alert the Coast Guard According to Miguel Madrigal, the head of Coast Guard in Caldera, the captain did not specify what has happening, only saying he had an emergency on the east side of the San Lucas Island.

Two Coast Guard boats and Fire department speed boat arrived on the scene for the rescue operation. Other boaters in the area at the time of the incident had already saved some of the castaways.

The Fire department refloated the boat, the Sicario II with a capacity of 16 passengers and owned by the captain’s family, and took it to port.

The captain, who has been working in tourism since he was 12, said “as a tourist company we have all the documents in order and all the lifeguard equipment that helped a lot, such as in this case”.

Source La Nacion

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Money Laundering in Central America

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Pincered between supply and demand sides of the drugs trade, Central American states cannot escape involvement at some level and this extends to laundering the proceeds
Pinned between supply and demand sides of the drugs trade, countries in Central America cannot escape some level of involvement in money laundering. Shutterstock image.

Q24N – The housing market, casinos, concert halls, and the livestock sector are all used to launder money in Central American countries.

Excerpted from the report “International Narcotics Control Strategy Report, Volume II, Money Laundering and Financial Crimes” by the US State Department:

Nicaragua

Weak governmental institutions, deficiencies in the rule of law, and concerns about corruption should be addressed. The Nicaraguan legal framework should also continue to be strengthened by considering identity falsification, counterfeiting, and piracy as predicate offenses for money laundering. Without this classification, apprehended criminals using these means explicitly to launder money can be tried for lesser crimes, and are not strongly deterred from continuing laundering activities.

Costa Rica

Transnational criminal organizations continue to favor Costa Rica as a base to commit financial crimes due to its location and limited enforcement capability. Costa Rica’s government has attempted to strengthen the legal framework for supervision and enforcement; however, challenges remain in mitigating money laundering risks.

Costa Rica is a transit point that is also increasingly used as an operations base for narcotics trafficking; and significant laundering of proceeds from illicit activities continues. Costa Rica should continue to close financial crimes legislative gaps and allocate resources for investigation and prosecution.

Narcotics trafficking proceeds represent the largest source of laundered assets. Human trafficking, financial fraud, corruption, and contraband smuggling also generate illicit revenue. The construction industry; MVTS, including money remitters; the casino industry; and real estate have been identified as vulnerable to exploitation

El Salvador

El Salvador is a major transit route for South American cocaine destined for the United States, as well as cash proceeds returning to South America. The lack of supervision of DNFBPs and an independent FIU are key challenges to mitigating El Salvador’s money laundering vulnerabilities.

The current FIU within the Attorney General’s Office (AGO) cannot capitalize on regional information sharing or fully investigate/prosecute complex money laundering cases. While the FIU is not currently subject to political manipulation, the unit has been compromised by previous attorneys general and remains structurally vulnerable to manipulation in the future.

According to authorities, organized crime groups launder money through the use of banks, front companies, parking lots, travel agencies, remittances, the import and export of goods, and cargo transportation

Deficiency. The Superintendent of the Financial System supervises only those accountants and auditors with a relationship with a bank or bank holder

Guatemala

Guatemala continues to be a transshipment route for South American cocaine and heroin destined for the United States, and for cash returning to South America. Smuggling of synthetic drug precursors is also a problem. Reports suggest the narcotics trade is increasingly linked to arms trafficking. Guatemala continues incremental progress in its ability to investigate and prosecute money laundering and other financial crimes, with a key agency beginning to provide technical assistance to other nations.

However, there remain vulnerabilities due to a lack of complete coordination by the Public Ministry (PM) prosecutors, and the tendency of the jurisdiction to treat money laundering as a stand-alone crime, rather than coordinating money laundering cases with those involving extortion, corruption, or trafficking

Money is most notably laundered through real estate transactions, ranching, the concert business, and the gaming industry. It is also laundered through serial small transactions below the $10,000 reporting requirement, either in small banks along the Guatemala-Mexico border, or by travelers carrying cash to other countries.

Detected weaknesses include DNFBPs such as notaries, attorneys, and casinos or video lotteries, as being at high risk for serving as money laundering vehicles

Honduras

The country’s lack of resources and capacity to effectively and efficiently investigate and analyze complex financial transactions, when combined with wide-scale corruption within the law enforcement and judicial sectors, contribute to a favorable climate for significant money laundering.

Although Honduras has developed a national AML strategy, Honduras needs to implement a risk-based approach and must focus on effectively and efficiently implementing its AML regime. Honduras is taking steps to implement a new risk-based approach. It has conducted a national risk assessment with the assistance of an international donor.

The government should make the national risk assessment public. The government has begun to work on creating a degree program, in coordination with a Honduran university, on money laundering and counter-terrorist financing.

Panama

Panama’s strategic geographic location; dollarized economy; status as a regional financial, trade, and logistics hub; and favorable corporate and tax laws make it an attractive location for money launderers. Panama passed comprehensive AML legal reforms in 2015, but it must demonstrate its ability to effectively implement these reforms, including by investigating and successfully prosecuting complex money laundering schemes.

Money laundered in Panama primarily comes from drug trafficking proceeds due to its location along major trafficking routes. Numerous factors hinder the fight against money laundering, including the need for increased collaboration among government agencies, inexperience with money laundering investigations and prosecutions, tipping off of criminals, inconsistent enforcement of laws and regulations, corruption, and an under-resourced judicial system.

Criminals launder money via bulk cash smuggling and trade at airports, seaports, and the FTZs, and through shell companies, which exploit regulatory gaps. Criminals also use the formal banking system to hide and move the proceeds of illicit activity.

See full report “International Narcotics Control Strategy Report, Volume II, Money Laundering and Financial Crimes” (March 2017) by the US Department of State.

 

Source Centralamericandata.com

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The Tragedy of March 14th

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Photo by Mitzi Stark for the Q

Q COSTA RICA – The tragedy that occurred on March 14, 1926 is still remembered by descendents of the victims, historians and the public. A train carrying an overload of passengers, mostly from Alajuela, on an excursion to Cartago, teetered while crossing the bridge over the Virilla river tipping the cars which then fell 70 meters into the river.

A new book by historian Filipe Ovares Barquero recreates the scene with names of victims and survivors as well as reports from the ninety year old scene and the investigation that followed. The trainload of passengers was heading for Cartago to a festival sponsored by the church, the fare was reasonable and the weather was pure summer, and Cartago is the home of La Negrita, Costa Rica’s patron saint.

Whole families signed up to go.

The train, with six cars, had a capacity for three hundred but over 1,000 people climbed aboard.

They were hanging out the windows, which were open, and standing on the balconies at the back of the cars. The aisles were crammed with humanity as the train chugged out of Alajuela at 7:30 that morning. There wasn’t room for another soul, even though at stations along the way in Rio Segundo, Santo Domingo and other towns, crowds were waiting, tickets in hand.

Photo by Mitzi Stark for the Q

The engineer, realizing that the train was filled, planned to pass San Juaquin de Flores without stopping but the waiting crowd moved onto the tracks to forced it to stop. Nobody wanted to miss the fun.

Coming up to the metal bridge over the Virilla river is a slight curve. Under normal conditions it was a matter of slowing down for the bridge, then speeding up for the slight hill after the bridge. But this train was hauling extra cars and an overload of passengers.

The engine and the first three cars made it smoothly onto the bridge. The fourth car tipped just enough to catch on the metal struts of the bridge structure, but passengers fell out of open windows or jumped to their deaths.

Photo by Mitzi Stark for the Q

The next two cars went over completely, killing and maiming all aboard. A few people survived, two small children among them, with no family left to claim them. The accident occurred at 8:20 that morning, less than an hour after getting under way.

Help arrived immediately from towns along the way and police and the army (yes, there was an army then). Many of the bodies were in pieces. Most were left unidentified because the whole family died in the accident. Bodies were hauled by oxcart to the hospital in Alajuela along with metal barrels filled with body parts. Not one family in Alajuela was spared the loss of someone.

This was 1926. The population of Costa Rica was 532,259 and Alajuela claimed 32,142.

This was an emergency. Able bodied men who were left in the city were asked to come to the hospital, with shovels, to help dig a mass grave. A massive grave. Somewhere in the city’s cemetery. The site itself is unmarked but the government of Spain, which kept an interest in her former lands, paid for a monument to remember and honor the innocent faithful who boarded that train to attend a religious event.

Felipe Ovares Barquero’s book, Tragedia en el Virilla is sold through UNED (Universidad Estatal a la Distancia) bookstores, at c10,000. It includes photos, one of the two orphaned children, which appeared in a newspaper at the time to try to find a family for them.

Although many years have passed since March 14, 1926, it is still a date remembered in Costa Rica.

Photo by Mitzi Stark for the Q
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The ‘Platina’ In The Final Stretch

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MOPT promises the six lane 'platina' bridge will fully open by the end of April.
MOPT promises the six lane ‘platina’ bridge will fully open by the end of April.

Q COSTA RICA – The headache called “la platina” that began in April 2009 and turned to a complete nightmare a few months ago, leaving drivers to endure temporary closures, regulated passage and endless congestion on the autopista General Cañas, and the alternate roads, will soon come to end.

So says the Ministry of Public Works and Transport (MOPT).

The ‘platina’ has been a thorn on the side of drivers and three governments, when 8 years ago a four inch gap between one of the expansion joints was noticed. Attempts to repair the bridge that has a vehicular traffic volume of more than 90,000 vehicles daily, failed. Badly.

In the failed repair attempts, steel plates (platinas in Spanish) were used to temporary plug up gaping holes on the road surface of the structure that was built in the 1960s and suffering from wear and tear, excessive vibration,  traffic volume more than 3 times its original design and from what no one can argue, a couple of decades neglect by transportation authorities.

The current government undertook to end the problem once and for all, decidint with the reconstruction of a new bridge. However, tearing down the old to replace it with a new was impossible, thus the new bridge has to constructed around the old.

MOPT promises the six lane ‘platina’ bridge will fully open by the end of April.

The bridge is only one of three routes into and out San Jose from the west. The other routes are the Ruta 27 and road from Cariari to La Uruca.

The bridge is an integral part of the General Cañas the major route from the international airport to and from San Jose. Once a four lane highway (two lanes in each direction), it was converted into six lanes by making the lanes narrower and eliminating the shoulders. But the three bridges (La Uruca, Platina and Rio Segundo) remained four lanes.

According to the MOPT timetable, in the next few days the deck of the Alajuela – San Jose half of the bridge will get its asphalt base, and by the middle of the month the three lanes will be open to traffic.

Then, the 170 construction crew will begin work on the San Jose – Alajuela half,  to complete the remaining three lanes.

When complete, expected by April 30, the ‘platina’ bridge, which has already has an official name, the Alfredo González Flores, will become a six lane bridge and we can expect say goodbye to the congestion.

Andres Muñoz, MOPT engineer in charge of the project, said the work on the “superstructure” is 60% complete, crews are continuing work on the surface, while the bottom portion of the bridge is complete.

According to Muñoz, the work in the coming days (on the Alajuela – San Jose side of the bridge) includes an asphalt deck and the installation of metal joints, key to the project, work that will be supervised by an expert from the U.S.

“It has to be exact, it is a matter of millimeters, it has to be perfect. We do not want to repeat the past,” said Muñoz. “The elements are important from a structural point…their placement is delicate and that is where the foreign expert will hep us”.

Now you know. It doesn’t help with the “presas” (congestion) daily, hopefully it may offer some comfort that all the frustrations lived daily will be for something.

Source: MOPT; La Nacion

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Legislators Get Constitutional Green Light To Revive ‘Corporations Tax’

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The corporations tax would be used to combat insecurity and the hiring of 1,000 new police officials

Q COSTA RICA – The Constitutional Court or Sala IV as it is commonly known gave the green light to the legislative bill to revive the ‘corporations tax’.

The corporations tax would be used to combat insecurity and the hiring of 1,000 new police officials

The Court said it found no procedural or substantive defects (errors). The vote was unanimous.

The Court decision followed a consultation by legislator Otto Guevara, who opposes the revival of the tax imposed by the previous administration and in 2015 found unconstitutional. In his argument to the Sala IV, Guevra alleged that the principles of taxpayers’ ability to contribute was violated.

With the ruling, legislators can now move forward in approving the bill that would impose an initial tax of ¢64,000 colones on the registration of a new corporation (to be paid within 30 days of registration) and on January of each year, all corporations based on their activity, will pay as follows:

  • For ‘inactive’ corporations, the annual tax is ¢64.000 colones
  • For companies with an annual income of less than ¢51 million colones, the tax is ¢106,000 colones
  • For companies with an annual income of between ¢51 million and ¢116 million colones, the tax is ¢127,000 colones
  • For companies with an annual income of more than ¢119 million colones, the tax is ¢212,000 colones

Once legislators give final approval to Ley 19.818, it will be some months before the tax goes into effect, given the government has to draft regulations and that the law goes into effect three months following the publication of the regulations.

The tax is imposed on all types of corporations registered or to be registered; also branches of foreign companies, their representatives, limited liability companies, as well as limited partnerships.

On January 2015, when the previous law was struck down by the Constitutional Court, there were 558,183 registered companies liable to pay the tax.

The main objective of the tax is to finance the fight against public insecurity, through the financing of several police forces. The Ministerio de Seguridad Publica (MSP) will get 90% of the tax to invest in police infrastructure, including new police stations, the purchase and maintenance of police equipment and more police officials.

On that last one, the MSP can only use the funds to hire 1,000 new police officials.

The balance of the tax, 5% will go to the Ministerio de Justicia to run the prison system and 5% to the Organismo de Investigación Judicial (OIJ) with the express intent to combat organized crime.

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Cold Front Over Gulf Of Mexico Responsible For Winds and Cool Temperatures in Costa Rica

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Screen capture from Windytv.com

Q COSTA RICA – A cold front (high pressure) over the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean is the reason for the strong winds and cool temperatures in Costa Rica over the last couple of days, that is expected to continue today, Sunday and possible a few days more.

https://www.windytv.com/?pressure,13.197,-87.012,4
Screen capture from Windytv.com

The Instituto Meterológico Nacional (IMN) – national weather service – reports wind gusts of up to 90 km/h around the Central Valley and North Pacific (Guanacaste).

On the Caribbean side and the northern zone, there are reports of intermittent rain.

The IMN says this is cold front 22 of the season.

The temperature in Greater metropolitan Area of San Jose has been some 3 degrees Celsius or lower than normal seasonal temperatures, dipping to around 15 Celsius at night, even cooler in higher elevations like Moravia.

It wasn’t uncommon to see people wearing overcoats, I mean winter jackets and not just sweaters on Saturday morning in the area of La Sabana.

In Santa Ana, where the Q is located, howling winds were constant through the night. The Sunday morning temperature is a cool 19 Celsius and an expected high of only 27C. The sun is shining, but it’s cold out there.

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OIJ Agent Was Advisor To Narco Group

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When the OIJ comes a-knocking. Photo Albert Marin, La nacion

Q COSTA RICA – Following a year long investigation into a drug trafficking organization that shipped cocaine from Costa Rica to Spain, England and the United States, the Organismo de Investigación Judicial (OIJ) learned that one of their own was advising the narcos.

The official, identified by his last names Aleman Rodriguez, 31 years of age, and a 10 year veteran of the OIJ, was arrested Friday morning in the OIJ Perez Zeledon office.

When the OIJ comes a-knocking. Photo Albert Marin, La nacion

“His role was to advise, provide information and take advantage of his police experience to transmit his knowledge to the criminal organization,” said Walter Espinoza, director of the OIJ.

According to Costa Rica’s Attorney General, Jorge Chavarria, it is normal for criminal groups to seek to penetrate judicial institutions, but what is important is that they are discovered.

“This reinforces our concern to be attentive to the behaviour of officials. There is a cross control that allows us to detect these types of situations in a timely manner. We have a zero tolerance on this,” said Chavarria.

The AG added that the official will not be charged with corruption, rather for international drug trafficking, a crime with a prison sentence of up to 20 years.

During the investigation, it was learned that Aleman was meeting with members of the narco group, however, it was not possible to determine if and how much he was being paid.

“He (Aleman) did not give the appearance of having altered his life with an increase in income, but we will be investigating to determine if he use front men,” said Chavarria.


The raid on the luxury home in La Garita de Alajuela

Friday morning, the OIJ conducted a series of raid in 11 other parts of the country, resulting in taking down the narco group and the arrest of 10 of its members. The Friday morning raids took place in different parts of San José province that included: La Uruca, Santa Ana, San Cayetano, Calle Blancos and Pérez Zeledón; In Puntarenas province : Chacarita, Corredores, Jacó and Quepos, en Puntarenas: and a luxury home in La Garita de Alajuela.

Since January 2016, a joint task force by the OIJ, Dirección de Inteligencia y Seguridad Nacional (DIS) and U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) led to the arrest of 21 people (11 during the course of the investigation and 10 on Friday).

According to the investigation, the organization imported the illegal drug from Colombia by sea, stored it in Puntarenas, moving to Limon for shipments hidden in containers sent to the United States, Spain and England.

Souce: Nacion.com; OIJ

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Colombia Prepares National Congress of Peace

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Photo for illustrative purposes. Reuters

TODAY COLOMBIA (Prensa Latina) Defenders of procedures to end the Colombian conflict, will celebrate in April the Congress of Peace in which ideas to boost implementation of the documents signed with the FARC-EP, confirmed its organizers.

Social and political sectors agreeing with the peace process define the details of the national venue conceived with the objective of creating alliances and outlining actions that support the execution of everything agreed between government and the guerrilla.

They also pursue the dialogues with the equally insurgent Ejercito de Liberacion Nacional (ELN), less numerous than the FARC-EP but also active for half a century, explained the organizing committee of the Congress.

This need to meet is born from the dangers surrounding the present phase of implementation, expressed the same source through a communique released through social networks.

Last November 24, the president Juan Manuel Santos and the leader of the FARC-EP, Timoleon Jimenez, signed the definitive agreement with which they are committed to finish confrontation and hostilities.

Such pact includes measures such as the bilateral ceasefire and the laying-down of weapons of the guerrilla in 19 zones and seven transit points; the latter started on March 1 with the supervisión of a three-way party made up by spokespersions of the government, of the rebel group and the United Nations.

One of the challenges of the present stage is to conclude the temporary camps in the mentioned points and zones where the guerrilla will stay for several months until their reincorporation to civil lifei, given the delays in construction of the infrastructure.

To expedite the procedure at Congress of the so-called peace laws is another sticking points in order to guarantee the success of the post-conflict or post-agreement period, alerted politicians and analysts.

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

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Panama Farmers Give away Tomatoes to Protest Over Imports

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Panamanian Farmers Give away Tomatoes to Protest Over Imports

TODAY PANAMA (Prensa Latina) Growers of tomatoes in the western province of Chiriqui started an unprecedented protest and gave away their products, as a response to the policies implemented by the government.

The farmers told the media that the action contrasts with the wealthy importers actions that bring and sell in the country very expensive tomatoes while they gave them to the people because this was better than let them rotten in the field.

According to Edward Espinoza, the import of the products is the factor that affects farmers the most because until the law is not changed, as they asked the Panamanian Authority of Food Security, foreign products can freely and easily be brought into the country.

The lack of proper markets, support from the Government and policies to reach a well-planned production and distribution, are also key factors in the situation, which leads to a crisis in agriculture, according to farmers and specialists on this subject.

Meanwhile, minister of Development of Agriculture Eduardo Enrique Carles said that despite the fact that all owners of the markets have the right to import whatever they like, the amount is very low and it should not be affecting the final price of products.

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

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Costa Rica Bets on Convention Tourism: Convention Centre To Be Ready In Early 2018

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232/5000 Specialists in diverse fields, like doctors and leaders of social organizations, will become ambassadors of the tourism of meetings, since they will present the candidacy of Costa Rica, advised by the ICT. (Adrián Soto)

 

Specialists in diverse fields, like doctors and leaders of social organizations, will become ambassadors of the convention tourism, is the plan of the ICT. (Adrián Soto,)

Q COSTA RICA – The goal of Costa Rica’s tourism board, the Instituto Costarricense de Turismo (ICT) is to organize 950 conferences and conventions for 500 people each in the next five years, generating US$1.3 billion in revenue.

The five-year plan presented by the  ICT is based on the opening of the Centro Nacional de Congresos y Convenciones (CNCC) – National Congress and Convention Center, which is scheduled for the first quarter of 2018, according to Tourism Minister, Mauricio Ventura.

“… The consultant Juan Jose Garcia explained that they have identified within this plan that number of meetings (950 in five years), with participants from the United States and Latin America, which are the first markets to be focused on in this five year plan.”

Garcia explained that US$1.3 billion is based on data from the International Association of Congresses and Conventions, 2015 (latest available data), to which each delegate spending, aside from airfare, on average US$$2,255 during their stay in the country.

Minister Ventura believes that the international prestige by Costa Rica as a destination for leisure tourism will be the basis for developing the modality of congresses and meetings. The minister recalled that the World Economic Forum placed Costa Rica first in nature tourism and second in adventure, which increases the country’s prestige abroad.

In addition, Costa Rica is one of the countries with the highest rates of car rental worldwide, which implies two things, according to the minister: First, that there is security in the country and is driveable and, second, that it is possible (for visitors) to interact with the local inhabitants without danger.

The having no army, Costa Rica’s democracy and being less than three hours flying time from the United States, in addition to excellent weather and better aerial connections, improved over the years with the arrival of more airlines, also work in Costa Rica’s favor, emphasized Ventura.

The only negative to the ICT’s conference and convention center is the competition Costa Rica will face against nations, such as Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Chile and Peru, very prepared and with advanced strategic plans for this type of tourism.

This due to Costa Rica’s dragging its feet on developing the CNCC, a plan that has been in the works since 2000.

Source La Nacion

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The Potential of Palm Oil in Nicaragua

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African palm oil worker

TODAY NICARAGUA – Twenty two thousand hectares are devoted to growing palm in the country, and investments of US$150 million are planned for maintenance of existing plantations and new ones in the coming years.

The 22,000 hectares of African palm currently produce 70,000 tons of crude oil which are destined for local consumption and export. In 2016 the revenue generated from sales abroad totaled US$33 million, 13% more than in 2015.

Marlon Perez Miranda, manager of the Association of Producers and Processors of Palm Oil (Capropalma) told Laprensa.com.ni that “… ‘Forecasts for this year are to export about thirty thousand tons of crude oil, but investments have already been made to add value to production, i.e. that part of the production that is already being refined and packaged because the goal is to be self-sufficient, because Nicaragua has the capacity to be self sufficient and also to export’.”

“… According to the National Plan for Production, Consumption and Trade, depending on weather conditions in the agricultural cycle 2016-2017, between 70,000 and 74,000 metric tons of crude palm oil will be produced. But there are also 9,200 hectares (about 6,440 fields) that are in development. At least eighty percent of these areas belong to six major established companies, which are also the companies who two years ago founded Capropalma.”

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

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‘What If Mom Doesn’t Come Home’

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An undocumented immigrant and her daughter. Image for illustrative purposes only from Commondreams.org
An undocumented immigrant and her daughter in the United States. Image for illustrative purposes from Commondreams.org

Q COSTA RICA – Parents of children, U.S. citizens, who immigrated illegally to the United States fearing deportation under the Trump administration are seeking advice in securing care for their children in the event both are removed from the United States.

A report by Reuters says the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles (CHIRLA) has been receiving about 10 requests a day from parents looking for temporary guardianship for their children.

Jorge Mario Cabrera, spokesperson for the CHIRLA said last year the group received about two requests a month for guardianship letters and notarization services.

In Washington D.C., the National Lawyers Guild, at the request of a non-profit organization, put out a call this week for volunteer attorneys to help immigrants fill out forms granting friends and relatives the right to make legal and financial decisions in their absence.

In Costa Rica, among the community that has relatives living abroad there is fear for their loved one. Speaking to several Costa Ricans, including a Nicaraguan who has a cousin living illegal in the U.S., the question is always the same, “what do you think will happen to them?”, asking of me as I have the answer.

Although for Costa Ricans the money sent home is not as significant for Nicaraguans, which I suspect if a worry for them, if their relative is deported.

The Costa Rican population in the United States at the 2010 Census was 126,418, representing the fourth smallest Hispanic group in the United States and the smallest Central American population.

Costa Rican populations are prominent in the New York Metropolitan Area, especially in North Central New Jersey. There are also sizable groups of Costa Ricans in the Los Angeles metropolitan area, South Florida metropolitan area, and Lincoln County, North Carolina.

Not all arrived in the country legally, many years later continue to remain in the country, with children born in the U.S.,  in a ‘irregular immigration status’.

One of those is Melvin Arias, 39, a New Jersey landscaper from Costa Rica who entered the United States illegally 13 years ago. He told Reuters he decided, after hearing news of stepped-up immigration enforcement, to take legal precautions for his five-year-old son and six-month old daughter, who are both U.S. citizens.

But when he asked for help from two different lawyers, Arias was told preparing legal documents would cost him between $700 and $1,250. He is looking for a cheaper way to obtain the paperwork he needs.

“If there comes a time when both of us have a problem, I want there to be a responsible person who can come and get [the children] for us, to take them to wherever we might be,” Arias said.

Immigrants fearing deportation under Trump change routines. In San Diego, the Lane family has been on edge since President Donald Trump took office. The mother, a Mexican who is in the country illegally, now carries her birth and marriage certificates and other documents wherever she goes. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull, via Kktar.com/)

‘WORRIED ALL THE TIME’

Another example of the “worry” is that of Seidy Martinez and her husband Jose Gomez, in rural New Jersey, who have begun the difficult conversations with their 10-year-old daughter about what would happen if her parents were to be deported.

Martinez, a house cleaner, and Gomez, who works on a horse farm, are both from Honduras. They entered the United States illegally, and do not have papers, unlike their daughter, who has been granted asylum, and their 3-year-old son, a U.S. citizen.

“Now we are worried all the time. We don’t have anything that would allow us to stay here,” said Martinez. “Our main concern is what will happen to our children.” She has told her daughter that she could live with her aunt in Miami and is considering drafting paperwork that would give her relative some legal rights if she and her husband are deported. The 10-year old tries to comfort her mother. “She tells me, ‘Mami, tranquila. Don’t be afraid, I am scared too but don’t worry everything will be OK.'”

‘IF MOM DOESN’T COME HOME’

Rebecca Kitson, an immigration attorney in Albuquerque, New Mexico, told Reuters she advises her increasingly nervous clients to have the kind of conversations Martinez and her husband are having with their children.

“If Mom doesn’t come home by a specific time, who do [the kids] call?” said Kitson, urging parents to be specific in their instructions to their children.

Randy Capps of the Migration Policy Institute (MPI), a Washington-based non-profit, said that while putting contingency plans in place is a good idea, he does not think the level of fear is justified.

According to Capps, during the President Barack Obama administration, the likelihood of both parents being deported was slim.  He doubts there will be a huge shift under President Donald Trump toward deporting both parents.

“The odds are still very low but not as low as they were – and this is just the beginning of the administration,” he said.

According to a 2016 study by MPI, about five million children under the age of 18 are living with at least one parent who is in the country illegally.  Most of the children, 79%, were U.S. citizens, the study found.

 

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Grecia is Rising to End Violence against Women

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Photo from Facebook One Billion Rising/Un Billón de Pie Grecia, Costa Rica

Q COSTA RICA,  Grecia, Alajuela – The United Nations has declared Wednesday, March 8, 2017, International Women’s Day. This is a day to reflect on progress made, call for change and end all forms of discrimination and violence against women and girls around the world.

A 2016 report, released by Costa Rica’s Social Security System (Caja Costarricense de Seguro Social – CCSS), stated there has been an increase by one-third in the number of domestic violence victims treated at public hospitals over the previous three years.

Women and men are invited to join our dance in Grecia’s Central Park in front of the Mercedes Cathedral on Wednesday, March 8 at 11 am.

UN statistics say that one billion women and girls on this planet will be beaten or raped during her lifetime.

We will rise and dance in solidarity with One Billion Rising, a global movement founded in 2012 by playwright Eve Ensler of The Vagina Monologues fame. Through the collective efforts of activists in 200 countries, One Billion Rising has mobilized, engaged, awakened and joined people worldwide to end violence against women.

This is only one of many activities planned for the week by the Municipality of Grecia.

For more information go to www.onebillionrising.org or our Facebook page “One Billion Rising/Un Billón de Pie Grecia Costa Rica”.

This is a public service community post. For more information on the above contact Joan Ritchie Dewar, 2444-8796 or dewar@casadewar.com


If you or your community has an event and want to share it here, please send an email to editor@qcostarica-082020.mystagingwebsite.com


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El Salvador’s ‘Black Widows’ and the Growing Sophistication of the MS13

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The MS13 allegedly killed husbands to collect life insurance
Image for illustrative purposes

Q24N (Insightcrime.org) Authorities in El Salvador dismantled a MS13 network allegedly dedicated to forcing women into marriages before assassinating the husband to collect insurance money, a scheme that speaks to the gang’s growing business sophistication.

Three women, who are allegedly members of a MS13 structure dubbed “Black Widows,” were arrested on February 24 and given pre-trial detention on February 27, reported La Prensa Gráfica.

The MS13 allegedly killed husbands to collect life insurance

According to a February 24 press release by the Attorney General’s Office, the suspects are facing charges of aggravated human trafficking, intent and conspiracy to commit first degree murder, aggravated fraud and criminal association. Five other suspects are still at large.

The case was built on testimony from two victims in 2014 and 2016. These women described how they were kidnapped in a house after accepting a job as a cleaning lady from members of the criminal structure. They were then forced into marrying a man, who himself was tricked into believing that the marriage would help them move to the United States. The network would convince the male victim into buying life insurance before eventually assassinating him. The widows were then forced to file paperwork so that the group could collect the insurance money.

Authorities were able to trace at least $60,000 from this scheme that ended up in the suspects’ bank accounts. The Attorney General’s Office said that this was the first dismantled MS13 structure of its kind, according to La Prensa Gráfica.

InSight Crime Analysis

The MS13’s elaborate scheme involving life insurance payouts underscores how the gang is finding an increasing number of ways to generate income. Last November, the group was accused of profiting off selling contraband horse meat on the black market. And during a vast operation in 2016, authorities discovered the complexity of the gang’s financial assets, which included motels, bars, brothels and car dealerships.

Three women linked to a trafficking network in San Marcos were detained. Photo Laprensagrafica.com

The MS13’s expanding business portfolio carries important implications for the conflict it is waging against the Salvadoran government. The gang’s growing revenue streams enable it to find news to put pressure on the authorities. For instance, last year’s operation unearthed an MS13 plan to pool nationwide extortion money to fund the creation of an elite unit armed with high-powered rifles that were intended to be used in a frontal attack against state institutions.

Article originally appeared on Insightcrime.org and is republished here with permission. Click here to read the original aritcle.

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Conservation efforts must include small animals. After all, they run the world

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Ladybugs stop pests from eating our food and destroying crops. Flickr/Inhabitat
Ladybugs stop pests from eating our food and destroying crops. Flickr/Inhabitat

(Q24N) Humans like to think that they rule the planet and are hard wired to do so. But our stewardship has been anything but successful. The last major extinction event, 66 million years ago, was caused by a meteorite. But the next mass extinction event, which is under way right now, is our fault. The Conversation

Geologists have even given this era in the history of the Earth a new name to reflect our role: the Anthropocene, the age of humans.

It’s the first time in the history of the Earth in which one species dominates all the others. These “others” numbers are probably around 10 million. The vast majority are the invertebrates, the animals without backbones. Not all are so small – some squids and jellyfish are several metres long or across.

Most, though, are small and unassuming. And they are hidden in plain view. They are busy maintaining the fabric of the world around us. They are the warp and weft of all natural systems. They make the soil, pollinate the flowers, spread seeds, and recycle valuable nutrients back into the soil. They are also food for many birds that are so loved, and keep other small animals in check by eating or parasitising them.

Yet most of us are oblivious of the many roles of these mostly small, even tiny, animals. If all their services were gone tomorrow, many plants would soon go extinct. Crops would be lost overnight. Many birds would die from lack of food, and soil formation would largely halt. The knock-on effects would also be huge as food webs collapse, and the world would quite literally fall apart.

So how can all the small animals be saved?

Saving small animals

Future generations depend on these small animals, so the focus must be on increasing awareness among the young. Research has shown that children are intrinsically interested in what a bee, cricket, butterfly or snail is. Their small world is at the same level as this small world of insects and all their allies without backbones. Yet strangely, while we care about our children, we care so little for all the small creatures on which our children depend on now and into the future.

Children must be shown that the bee is keeping the flowering plant species alive and well, the grasshopper is recycling scarce food requirements for plants, the millipede is making the soil, and the ladybug is stopping pests from eating all our food. Showing children that this miniature world is there, and that it’s crucial, is probably one of the best things to do to help them survive the future in this world of turmoil.

Children need to be shown that the bee is keeping the flowering plant species alive and well to help them understand the importance. Flickr/RDPixelShop

Being aware of what the various species actually do for maintaining ecosystems is crucial to understanding how complex the world around us is. Pointing out that a bee is intimately connected with flowers and so seeds are produced, and an ant is the cleaner of the forest floor, taking away all the debris from other small animals, and the caterpillar is feeding the soil by pooing on it. Then we can conceptually jump to the whole landscape, where there are millions of little claws, mandibles and tongues holding, munching and sucking nectar all the time, even though we rarely see it happening.

Natural communities

A good way to understand this complexity is to view a small community of 1000 species. This can lead to potentially half a million interactions between the various species. Yet the natural communities around us are usually much larger than that. This makes understanding this world too mind boggling, and conserving its complexity too unwieldy. What this means is that for conservation, while we use conceptual icons, like the bee and the butterfly, the actual aim is to conserve landscapes so that all the natural processes can continue as they would without humans.

Conservationists have developed approaches and strategies that maintain all the natural processes intact in defined areas. The processes that are conserved include behavioural activities, ecological interactions and evolutionary trends. This umbrella approach is highly effective for conserving the great complexity of the natural world. This doesn’t mean that particular species are overlooked.

Small-creature conservationists in reality work on and develop strategies that work at three levels. The first is at the larger scale of the landscape. The second is the medium scale of the features of the landscape, which includes features like logs, ponds, rock crevices, patches of special plants, among many others. The third is the still smaller scale of the actual species.

The third is really about a conceptual scale because some particular species actually need large spatial areas to survive. At this fine scale of species, conservationists focus attention on identified and threatened species that need special attention in their own right. The beautiful Amatola Malachite damselfly, which is endangered, and lives in the Eastern Cape mountains of South Africa, is a case in point.

The common thought is that it’s only tigers, whales and parrots that need conserving. But there are hundreds, if not thousands, of small creatures that all need special conservation focus like bees for example. And this focus becomes increasingly and critically important every year, if not every day, that passes. It’s crucial to think and conserve all these small animals that make up the platform for our future survival on the planet.

Time is short as the Anthropocene marches on. Putting in place strategies that conserve as many animals as possible, along with the rest of biodiversity, is not a luxury for the future. New strategies are possible, especially in agricultural and forestry areas where the aim is to optimise production yet maximise on biodiversity conservation and the maintenance of natural ecosystem function.

Michael Samways, Professor, Conservation Ecology & Entomology, Stellenbosch University

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

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Major Colombian Drug Trafficker Detained in Nicaragua

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Amauri Carmona Morelos in 2009 holding his fake Nicaraguan cedula (ID) in the name of Alberto Ruiz Cano. LA PRENSA/ARCHIVO J. UBIETA

TODAY NICARAGUA (Insightcrime.org) Nicaragua’s authorities have detained Amauri Carmona Morelos, putting an end to the criminal career of one of the most prominent drug traffickers operating in the Central American country.

Carmona, a Colombian drug trafficker known to have established a fake identity in Nicaragua as Alberto Ruiz Cano, was captured on February 7 and has been detained in a prison in the Nicaraguan capital of Managua ever since, reported La Prensa.

It is still not clear where exactly Carmona was captured and who conducted the operation that led to his arrest, as Nicaragua’s Army and Police have refused to reveal further information.

However, La Prensa reported Carmona was captured by Honduran security forces, who then handed him over to Nicaragua’s police.

Walpasiksa, the town where Morels’ led a group that in 2009 ambushed a navy patrol and killing two soldiers.

Carmona’s capture is the final chapter in the story of one of the major foreign operators in Nicaragua, who allegedly ran the first drug trafficking organization (DTO) in the Northern Caribbean.

Originally from San Andrés, Colombia, drug trafficking runs in the Carmona family tree, as his father was reportedly linked with the Cali Cartel, a defunct Colombian DTO. Authorities believe Carmona was a member of a DTO that smuggled drugs through indigenous villages in Nicaragua’s Caribbean coast.

While the group’s headquarters were allegedly located in Nicaragua’s North Atlantic Autonomous Region (RAAN), a strategic hub for many of the country’s criminal networks, Carmona was believed to move frequently between San Andrés and Honduras. The Colombian national also allegedly owned a nightclub in Managua, which he used as a strategic spot to negotiate the price of narcotics and organize cocaine shipments.

Carmona’s clashes with Nicaraguan authorities reached a peak in December 2009, when the drug trafficker was allegedly involved in a violent confrontation between the Walpasiksa indigenous community and Nicaragua’s Naval troops. Civilians ambushed the anti-drug unit that had arrived in the area to look for a downed narco-plane. Three Naval officers were killed during the attack, which authorities believe Carmona ordered in order to protect the area as a base for drug trafficking operations.

Article originally appeared on Insightcrime.org and is republished here with permission.

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

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Costa Rica and Nicaragua Agree To More Cooperation in Fight Against Organized Crime and Drug Trafficking

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Costa Rica and Nicaragua authorities meeting in Liberia, Guanacaste. Photo Casa Presidencial
Costa Rica and Nicaragua authorities meeting in Liberia, Guanacaste. Photo Casa Presidencial

Q COSTA RICA (Insightcrime.org) A high level meeting between officials in Costa Rica and Nicaragua is expected to lead to greater cooperation on tackling several facets of organized crime, an acknowledgement of the security threats that criminal organizations pose to both countries.

The summit took place on February 24 in Liberia, Costa Rica, and was attended by Nicaragua’s foreign chancellor and its ambassador to Costa Rica, as well as Costa Rica’s public security minister and vice minister, according to Casa Presidencial (Goverment House) website.

The officials agreed to increase information sharing and bilateral coordination to better combat drug and human trafficking, as well as contraband and other illegal activities.

Specifically, the countries said they will enhance cooperation in the Peñas Blancas and Tablillas regions in Costa Rica, which are home to the only two official border crossing points.

Costa Rica – Nicaragua border at Tablillas, six kilometres north of Los Chiles, in the northern zone

With regard to maritime activities, Costa Rica and Nicaragua — both of which have Pacific and Atlantic coastlines — will aim to develop intelligence sharing mechanisms to intercept drug smuggling vessels and illegal fishing boats.

The bilateral summit followed an initial meeting in July 2016, and the two countries plan to meet again in October 2017.

InSight Crime Analysis

Costa Rica and Nicaragua have long enjoyed much lower levels of violence than Mexico and the Northern Triangle countries of El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras. But that’s not to say that the two countries are exempt from organized crime-related security issues.

Both of the countries’ Pacific and Caribbean coasts have been exploited by criminal organizations shipping drugs towards the United States. And the Peñas Blancas border region — which the two countries highlighted as a priority during the recent meeting — sits along the Pan-American Highway and was until 2015 the sole official crossing point between Costa Rica and Nicaragua. This has made it a main thoroughfare for drug shipments being smuggled through the isthmus.

The bilateral meeting could also be an attempt to contain Costa Rica’s rising violence and organized crime activity within its own borders. In February, Costa Rican officials said that Mexican drug trafficking organizations were training local gangs in the country. This, along with the dismantling of a domestic drug trafficking network linked to Mexico’s Sinaloa Cartel in November 2016, suggests Costa Rica’s criminal groups are grabbing a bigger stake in the international drug trade.

Sources: Presidencia.go.cr; Insightcrime.org; Nacion.com

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Colombia Braces for Impact of Returning Drug Traffickers and Paramilitaries

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TODAY COLOMBIA (Insightcrime.org) The release of Colombian underworld boss “Perra loca” from a US prison is adding to fears that a flood of recently freed drug lords and paramilitaries could have a violent impact on the country’s already volatile criminal landscape.

US authorities have deported Hector Restrepo Santamaría, alias “Perra loca,” back to Colombia after he completed a five-year sentence in a Pennsylvania prison on charges of money laundering, reported Blu Radio.

Restrepo was a renowned drug trafficker who demobilized as a member of the paramilitary counter-insurgency the United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia (Autodefensas Unidas de Colombia – AUC). While some reports list him as a paramilitary leader who received direct orders from top AUC leaders, others dismiss this, claiming he was a “pure blood” drug trafficker who passed himself off as a paramilitary to claim demobilization benefits.

Hector Restrepo Santamaría, alias “Perra loca,”

Although Restrepo is wanted by the Colombian authorities to answer allegations of drug trafficking and other charges, authorities are worried his return could trigger violence in his home territory in the department of Antioquia, reported Semana. Investigators fear that Restrepo will attempt to recover the properties and assets that his old enemies and allies stripped from him while he was in prison, with potentially violent consequences.

Restrepo joins a growing list of powerful underworld actors that have been released from prison over the last two years. Among them are not only drug traffickers but also notorious paramilitary warlords such as Freddy Rendón Herrera, alias “El Alemán,” and Rodrigo Pérez Alzate, alias “Julián Bolívar,” who were released after completing their shortened prison sentences granted as part of the demobilization agreement struck with the AUC.

In addition, yet more underworld players could be released as part of the transitional justice system currently being established as part of the peace process with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia – FARC). According to Semana, the process could see the release of hundreds if not thousands of guerrilla fighters, as well as over 150 members of the police and military imprisoned for colluding with armed groups and drug trafficking networks.

InSight Crime Analysis

Although many of the recently released drug traffickers, warlords and corrupt officials may well opt for retirement and a quiet life, recent history suggests a significant number may not. Those that do choose to return to the world of organized crime may find the currently volatile Colombian underworld full of opportunities.

Some of the worst drug trafficking-related violence seen in Colombia in recent years has been linked to drug lords released early after cooperating with the authorities, especially those imprisoned in the United States.

The department of Valle del Cauca and its capital city Cali, in particular, have seen new cycles of mafia wars led by former drug traffickers from the Norte Del Valle Cartel (NDVC) and Cali Cartel. After serving relatively short sentences in the United States, traffickers such as Víctor Patiño, alias “El Químico,” Carlos José Robayo, alias “Guacamayo,” and numerous others allegedly formed new alliances or criminal groups. They proceeded to launch bloody campaigns to reclaim properties and assets taken from them, take back drug trafficking networks and exact revenge on their enemies.

In contrast, the released former AUC warlords have largely kept a low profile, only making the headlines when they try to present themselves as reformed advocates for peace, or in the case of El Alemán, when he ended up in intensive care after crashing his bicycle.

However, ongoing investigations suggest a significant part of former AUC leaders’ lands, properties and businesses may remain intact, while allegations of their continuing influence persist in their former areas of operations. Given that a significant percentage of Colombian underworld networks partially consist of rearmed former paramilitaries, they would have both the motivation and the means to re-enter the criminal fray.

Currently, the Colombian underworld is in flux due to the ongoing demobilization of the FARC, and the shifts in armed power dynamics would present an opportunity for returning criminal actors to stake new claims to criminal interests. The FARC will be leaving behind vast territories of coca crops and control of drug routes in their rural strongholds, and could provide manpower for new or current criminal organizations in the form of guerrillas disillusioned with the peace process.

In addition, in Colombia’s urban criminal hubs, Medellin and Cali, the underworld power structures are far from stable. Cali and Pacific Coast drug trafficking routes have remained in constant turmoil since the breakup of the Rastrojos, which was the last group to hold a hegemonic power over the city and region. Medellin has been relatively calm since a mafia pact was struck in 2013, but there are signs the new order established in the wake of the agreement is unstable. New alliances and new conflicts are likely brewing under the quiet surface.

Currently, the only criminal organization with a truly national power is the Urabeños, a paramilitary-mafia hybrid descended from the AUC. However, the network’s organizational structure and modus operandi, which consist of bringing semi-autonomous local cells into their “franchise” and outsourcing to local criminal power structures, leave it vulnerable to challenges on a local level, as has recently happened in numerous regions.

It is far from guaranteed that “Perra loca” or any other recently released criminal overlords will have the motivation or the capacity to regain their lost criminal empires. But the coincidence of so many returning to the scene at a moment when Colombia’s underworld is undergoing tectonic shifts in power risks aggravating an already unstable situation.

Article originally appeared on Insightcrime.org and is republished here with permission.

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

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The ‘Lettuce Ladies’ Get To Work In Cuba

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Scantily-clad vegan women wearing bikinis made out of lettuce in Havana to lecture impoverished Cubans against eating meat. Photo Ernesto Mastrascusa EFE

TODAY CUBA – Wasting no time, the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) official vegan ambassadors the “Lettuce Ladies” hit the ground running after arriving on their first-ever flight to Cuba, with plenty of Spanish-language vegan starter kits and a slew of veterinary supplies in hand.

It’s not all photo shoots and glamour. The scantily-clad vegan women wearing bikinis made out of lettuce were in Havana to lecture impoverished Cubans against eating meat.

With travel restrictions between the U.S. and Cuba eased, the leafy-green beauties hopped aboard a flight to Havana in order to spread the vegan message to locals and tourists alike. They had a special delivery in tow: plenty of deworming and mange medications, flea and tick prevention, wound disinfectant, leashes, and collars—as well as medical supplies, including sutures, gauze, syringes, and surgical gloves and masks. And of course, a treat or two:

But not all is leafy.

Dr. Carlos Eire, the T. Lawrason Riggs Professor of History & Religious Studies at Yale University and a member of the Cuban exile community, reacted to the PETA publicity stunt with outrage, highlighting that “meat of any kind is very scarce for 99% of the population” and “it would be impossible for Cubans to follow a vegan diet, due to the scarcity of certain food items”.

Specifically, Cubans are limited in what they can buy by a Communist Party ration book.

According to the Cuban journalist Yusnaby Pérez, the average Cuban ration book allows for the monthly purchase, among other minor items, of five eggs, five pounds of rice, half a pound of oil, 1/4 pound coffee cut with toasted split peas, two one-kilogram packages of salt a year, a pound of chicken, and another 3/4 pound of chicken meant to substitute a no longer existent fish ration. Pérez quotes one pensioner as estimating that the monthly rations last him an average of ten days.

Families with school-aged children can rely on schools feeding their sons and daughters outrageously meager lunches, exposed in a Cuban television report that resulted in official sanctions by the Communist Party for the network that aired it.

The Miami-based outlet Martí Noticias consulted a Cuban nutritionist identified as “Leonardo” to evaluate the quality of the average Cuban diet last year. “In Cuba, the variety of food is very limited. It has been years since Cubans have eaten fresh fish, beef, or shellfish,” he explained. “People do not eat enough fruits and vegetables. Half the population gets its calories from carbohydrates like pizza, bread, and sweets, what we call junk food.” Despite the possible presence of eggs in some of the pizza dough and sweets, Cuban diets are already largely vegan-friendly by necessity.

The situation only appears to be getting worse, reports indicate, because of tourists like the “lettuce ladies.” In a report in December, the New York Times warned that increased tourism to Cuba – triggered in part by the Obama administration’s decision to issue major diplomatic concessions to the Communist dictatorship – has forced the government to scramble its food supply to feed tourists, leaving many Cubans starving. “It’s a disaster,” one woman told the Times, who complained she had not been able to buy an onion for the entirety of 2016.

“Tourists are quite literally eating Cuba’s lunch,” the Times concludes.

Photos Ernesto Mastrascusa EFE

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

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Cuban Baseball Player José Abreu Says He Ate a Page of His Fake Passport to Enter US

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I swallowed the first page little by little,” Jose Abreu told the jury. “I could not reach the United States with a fake passport.” (MLB)

TODAY CUBA – Cuban baseball player Jose Abreu admitted to eating a page out of his fake passport in order to enter the United States.

Abreu, a first basemen and designated hitter for the Chicago White Sox, made the confession during a trial Wednesday, March 1 involving players his Agent Bartolo Hernandez and physical trainer Julio Estrada, both of whom are involved in smuggling people into the United States.

Abreu testified that he ordered a beer during an Air France flight from Haiti to Miami and slowly consumed the page containing a false name and his photo.

“I swallowed the first page little by little,” he told the jury. “I could not reach the United States with a fake passport.”

Abreu said the page he had eaten came out of a fake passport he used to travel to Haiti as part of a trip that would allow him and other Cuban players to make it to the major leagues.

Miami’s immigration policy at that time favored his situation, as he was allowed to stay in the United States without the proper documents once actually making it onto US soil.

The baseball player explained that the reason he traveled illegally was due to the fear of not complying with a 2013 October deadline that would have lost him a US$68 million contract.

“If it was not there that day, in that period of time, then the contract would not materialize and would be invalid,” Abreu said. “We had to be in Chicago to sign the contract.”

Deiny Hechavarría of the Miami Marlins and Leonys Martín of the Seattle Mariners also admitted to having acted illegally under the direction of officials in charge arrivals to the United States.

Fuentes: Cubanet; El Universal; La Opinión.

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

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OIJ Gets Serious In Combating ‘Specialized Criminals’ Plaguing The Country

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The OIJ in action.
The OIJ in action.

Q COSTA RICA – The Organismo Investigación Judicial (OIJ), Costa Rica’s judicial police, announced the creation of a major crimes unit to combat the ‘elites’ of organized crime.

The unit, Seccióon Especializada Contra Crimen Organizado (SECCR), that is made up of 20 agents, began operations on March 1.

Walter Espinoza, director of the OIJ, said the group was born out of a need to combat the “specialized criminals” plaguing the country.

According to Espinoza, the idea was inspired due to the “increase in violence, the number of homicides and the growth of criminal groups involved in drug trafficking”.

Christian Montenegro, heading the SECCR, explained that the agents are group specialized in fraud, corruption, money laundering, kidnappings and narcotics, drawn from different sections of the OIJ.

The agents fo the SECCR, under the direction of Departamento de Investigaciones Criminales (DIC) – Department of Criminal Investigations, received training on organized crime in Colombia and Mexico.

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Cops Break Up Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Championship for No Good Reason

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Montreal Police/Shutterstock

(Q24N) Some Canadian cops apparently have nothing better to do than ruin the weekend for hundreds of martial arts athletes and enthusiasts.

Canada’s Brazilian jiu-jitsu championship was supposed to have been hosted in Montreal over this past weekend. As CBC News reported, “About 240 competitors, some as young as nine, were registered to take part.” But the night before the event, the Montreal police informed the organizers that the scheduled competition was illegal and threatened to arrest its participants and guests.

Break It Up

According to Canadian law, the cops complained, contests can only be held for combat sports that are “on the programme of the International Olympic Committee or the International Paralympic Committee.” The problem with this reasoning is that, also according to Canadian law, Brazilian jiu-jitsu is not a combat sport, since it involves no strikes (“an encounter or fight with fists, hands or feet”) but only takedowns.

According to the organizers, the commander in charge of the complaint “did not know that Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu (BJJ) was different from “Jiu-Jitsu” and did not have any strikes in its matches.”

The organizers tried to explain the distinction to the officer, but since the complaint/threat was so last-minute, there was not enough time to ensure that the championship’s attendees would not be hauled off to jail. So they decided to just call it off the whole weekend, and postpone the championship to a future date and a different locale (hopefully one with less blundering authorities). Registered individuals who cannot attend the rescheduled event will be given full refunds.

So Much for Fun

Fiascos like this belie the trite saying, attributed to Bernie Sanders, that “government is simply the name we give to the things we choose to do together.” In this case, hundreds of martial arts enthusiasts were trying to do something fun and community-building together for the weekend, and the government stepped in, implicitly waved guns around, and forced them to remain scattered and apart.

Moreover, the government agents did so from a position of rank ignorance, failing to comprehend even the most rudimentary fact about the sport they presumed to regulate. As economist Edward Stringham elaborates in his book Private Governance: Creating Order in Economic and Social Life, private clubs are vastly more competent at regulating their members’ behavior and ensuring optimal outcomes than government regulators.

Not only do private associations have superior access to relevant, on-the-spot knowledge (both explicit and tacit), but they also have superior incentives. Private associations must keep their members happy, lest they see membership dwindle. At most, the Montreal Police will suffer some fleeting, embarrassing press for their costly gaffe, since their “customers” are not free to take their business elsewhere.

The affair also highlights the difference between the violence of sports and the violence of the state. When a Brazilian jiu-jitsu combatant takes down an opponent, no rights are violated, because both parties consented to the fight’s rules beforehand. But the Montreal police takedown of a scheduled series of voluntary fights was nothing but a capricious act of aggression.

This article was originally published on FEE.org. Read the original article.

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Most Forest Fires Are in Guanacaste

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Photo by Luciano Capelli
Photo by Luciano Capelli

Q COSTA RICA ( by Roberto Acuña Ávalos, Vozdeguanacaste.com) If you’ve seen a burning field or mountainside in the summertime, it’s not a coincidence. In fact, it’s an everyday occurrence in Guanacaste, the province with the most forest fires in the country.

Of the 10 Costa Rican cantons with the most forest fires, six are located in Guanacaste, according to the System of Conservation Areas’ (SINAC-MINAE) National Fire Management Program.

Statistics from 2016 show that Santa Cruz is the canton with the most emergency fire calls in all of Costa Rica. Last year, 20 percent of the country’s total burned land area was located in Santa Cruz, about 11,755 hectares. That’s the area equivalent of 16,000 National Stadiums.

Of 114 total forest fires across the country last year, 42 percent were attributed to “vandalism” and hunting, 39 percent to agricultural burning and 11 percent to land-use modifications.

All 114 fires were caused by humans.

Authorities hope to reduce that number In 2017 and provide better a response. But they admit that funds earmarked for more resources to fight forest fires, available because of a national emergency declaration after the 2015 drought, have not yet been allocated.

What’s the 2017 Outlook?

Guanacaste’s landscape of glowing fires in pasturelands isn’t going away in 2017. According to Luis Diego Román, coordinator of the National Fire Management Program, SINAC already is preparing for this summer’s fires.

The good news is that experts say fewer forest fires are likely this year, with a greater gap between them, due to heavy rains in 2016.

Román said that in mid-January, officials began using a Permanent Alert System that allows for daily vigilance with satellite imagery, the activation of permanent watchtowers and seasonal posts, and land patrols.

The system was launched as part of the national emergency declaration that responded to the 2015 drought. That declaration helped secure ¢1.6 billion for an upgraded fire response program.

Firefighters also have new equipment, including radios, protective gear and firefighting tools. Officials also plan on hiring new firefighters.

Administrative Delays

Although SINAC has the government’s support to make improvements, Román said further delays could jeopardize future fire response effectiveness.

For example, a purchase order delay for 11 pickup trucks and two all-terrain fire trucks to be used throughout the country means they won’t arrive until 2018.

The same kind of administrative delay means that funds won’t be available until next year for 25 new fire responders, who were supposed to provide support in Guanacaste during the three most intense summer months this year.

For now, SINAC is reminding the public that it is illegal to burn trash or burn on vacant lots and in urban areas. Landowners who need to set agricultural fires must obtain a permit from the Agriculture and Livestock Ministry.

Article originally appeared on Vozdeguanacaste.com and is republished here with permission.

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The King of Pastries

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The pastries are the product of an equal effort by both members of the Herrera Campos marriage. Carmen adds the flavor, while Daniel makes the sale. Photo by David Bolaños

Q COSTA RICA (by Roberto Acuña Ávalos, Vozdeguanacaste.com) I opened the refrigerator door and there was absolutely nothing to eat for breakfast. Not in the mood to go to the supermarket, I immediately recalled that a work colleague had the number of a man who sold empanadas, or as some people call them, “pastries,” because they’re made from wheat flour.

“Let’s have it, my king!” the voice on the phone said, as if we’d been friends all of our lives. Less than two minutes later, the famous “Mi Rey” (“My King”), whose real name is Daniel Herrera, was in front of my house, telling I don’t know how many improvised jokes as I took out the money to pay him.

In an instant, Mi Rey had transformed my frustrating morning with nothing to eat and no desire to cook into a beautiful day with a breakfast of champions, because his pastries have everything: rice and beans, eggs, cheese and even sweet plantain.

This is exactly how he brightens mornings for the dozens of Nicoyans who call him, set out in search of him or bump into him in the street every day to buy his delicacy worthy of kings (kings who love carbohydrates and grease, of course). He makes about 80 empanadas (or pastries) a day, but he doesn’t eat any of them, not even half of one.

“I was sick of them by the third day,” he admits while smiling broadly.

Mi Rey is always happy. He starts his days like the Duracell Bunny, with too much energy. Actually, that’s why he’s cherished in Nicoya, because wherever he goes on his bicycle, with that characteristic whistle, he delivers kisses, greetings and jokes. And he calls everyone, of course, “my king.”

He’s like that at home, too. His wife of 29 years (although it seems like they’re still on their honeymoon), Carmen Campos, and sons Héctor and Fernando confirm this. There’s not a single day that Mi Rey isn’t laughing or singing his Christian songs at full uvula.

Fleeing from ‘Sandinismo’

Carmen and Daniel were born in Nicaragua. Few job opportunities and “Sandinismo” – which landed them in jail for a few days – forced them to come to Costa Rica 28 years ago. Their children were born here.

The family spent their first few years in the tough neighborhood of Los Cuadros de Goicoechea, in San José. They didn’t sleep a single night peacefully, worried that something would happen to the kids.

“I bought them video games and things so they wouldn’t feel like they were living in a prison,” Mi Rey says.

Twelve years ago, they finally decided to end the torture by moving to Nicoya, where in many ways it feels like their native Nicaragua.

“Only God knows how much I’ve enjoyed Guanacaste,” says Mi Rey, who’s an excellent narrator. Each of his life stories is a blend of specific details, sidesplitting humor and an ingredient he never leaves out: the lessons of Christianity.

In addition to calling all of his customers “my king,” he also often calls them “mi brother” or “brrrothercito,” with that drawn-out “r” pronunciation.

Golden Pastries

When Mi Rey moved to Nicoya, he arrived with one hand in front and one hand behind – he had a family to raise without any money. While in Nicaragua, and during his first few years in Costa Rica, his talent was construction. He feared no job, however, and eventually decided to sell orange juice in the mornings.

The juice sold well, but he realized his business wasn’t very competitive, so he began selling other kinds of juices as well. He would sell in the streets while Carmen took over production at home. It was her idea to make empanadas.

At first, Carmen wasn’t happy with the product. She started watching potential customers, and she noticed that people in the village preferred wheat pastries to regular dough empanadas. So she changed the recipe, and… what a recipe it is!

Since then, the business has grown. It did so well that Mi Rey was able to pay for an education in systems engineering for his son Héctor and in mechanics for his younger son, Fernando.

The pastries were so popular that both of the sons took them to high school and college to sell to classmates and teachers.

“I’ve always insisted that the responsibility of maintaining this house belongs to all four of us, together. We are a family,” Mi Rey says.

The Blessed One

Mi Rey doesn’t have many other hobbies. He doesn’t like football, although sometimes he watches big-league baseball teams. His passion is the church. He is a faithful evangelical, as is the rest of his family.

He’s so religious that some of his former construction coworkers called him “the blessed one.”

At 53, Mi Rey is relaxed. His sons are grown up, and he was able to provide them an education. His dream now is to buy the house where his family lives, in San Martín de Nicoya.

Mi Rey might not know much about marketing or brand strategy, but his pastries and his personality are hard to match in Nicoya. In Mi Rey, we empanada lovers – or rather, pastry lovers – have found our own king. My King.

 

Article originally appeared on Vozdeguanacaste.com and is republished here with permission.

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27 March 2026 - At The Banks - Source: BCCR