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I’m Spartacus! One Hundred Years Ago Today

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“I’m Spartacus!” – “I’m Spartacus!” – “I’M SPARTACUS!” Every film buff knows that moment, every panel-show comedian riffs on it. A mob of defeated slave rebels in the pre-Christian Roman empire is told their wretched lives will be spared, but only if their ringleader, Spartacus (Kirk Douglas), comes out and gives himself up to be executed.

Just as he is about to sacrifice himself, one slave, Antoninus (Tony Curtis) jumps up and claims to be Spartacus, then another, and another, then all of them, a magnificent display of solidarity, while the man himself allows a tear to fall in closeup.

Actor and birthday boy Kirk Douglas turns 100 today!

This variant on the Christian myth – in the face of crucifixion, Spartacus’s disciples do not deny him – is a pointed political fiction. In real life, Spartacus was killed on the battlefield. The screenplay was written by Dalton Trumbo, the blacklisted author who had to work under aliases and found no solidarity in Hollywood. Yet Douglas himself, as the film’s producer, stood up for Trumbo. He put Trumbo’s real name in the credits, and ended the McCarthy-ite hysteria.

He’s Spartacus: Douglas in his most famous role. Photograph: Pictorial Press Ltd/Alamy
He’s Spartacus: Douglas in his most famous role. Photograph: Pictorial Press Ltd/Alamy

The main reason the scene is so potent is its extraordinary irony. Who on earth could claim to be Spartacus when Spartacus looked like that? Douglas is a one-man Hollywood Rushmore, almost hyperreal in his masculinity. He is the movie-world’s Colossus of Rhodes, a figure of pure-granite maleness yet with something feline, and a sinuous, gravelly voice. Douglas is a heart-on-sleeve actor, mercurial and excitable; he has played tough guys and vulnerable guys, heroes and villains. And, as a pioneering producer, he brought two Stanley Kubrick films to the screen: Spartacus (he hired Kubrick to replace Anthony Mann) and his first world war classic Paths of Glory in which he was superb, playing a principled French army officer.

One hundred years ago today, Douglas was born Issur Danielovitch, the son of a Moscow-born Russian Jewish ragman, in upstate New York. An uncle had been killed in the pogroms at home. In his 1988 memoir, The Ragman’s Son, Douglas describes the casual antisemitism he faced almost throughout his career. Rebranding yourself with a Waspy stage-name was what actors – and immigrants in general – had to do in America to survive and thrive.

After a start on the Broadway stage, he made his screen reputation playing the driven fighter Midge Kelly in the exhilarating boxing movie Champion (1949), which earned him the first of his three Oscar nominations. Champion has stunning images and a notable slo-mo scene: it is much admired by Martin Scorsese and transparently an influence on Raging Bull. In Detective Story (1951), directed by William Wyler, Douglas gives a grandstanding star turn in a melodrama set in a police station, playing the vindictive, violent McLeod, an officer with an awful secret. It was a movie that laid down the template for all cop TV shows, including The Streets of San Francisco, which was to star Douglas’s son Michael.

Legendary screen actor, Kirk Douglas, sat down with USA TODAY's Andrea Mandell to talk about his poems in 'Life is verse.' Douglas tells stories about his son Michael's entry into acting. Video shot by Dan MacMedan for USA TODAY.
Legendary screen actor, Kirk Douglas, sat down with USA TODAY’s Andrea Mandell to talk about his poems in ‘Life is verse.’ Douglas tells stories about his son Michael’s entry into acting. Video shot by Dan MacMedan for USA TODAY.

But it was in Ace in the Hole (1951), directed by Billy Wilder, that Douglas gives his first classic performance: the sinister newspaper reporter Chuck Tatum, who prolongs the ordeal of a man trapped in a cave to create a better story. He is an electrifying villain in that film, a Phineas T Barnum of media untruth. At one stage he slaps the wife of the trapped man (whom he is also seducing) because she wasn’t sufficiently demure and sad-looking for his purposes, like an imperious film director looking for a better performance. He is also brilliant in Vincente Minnelli’s The Bad and the Beautiful (1952) as Jonathan Shields, the diabolically persuasive movie producer who betrays everyone.

Arguably, it is in Paths of Glory (1958) that Douglas finds his finest hour as the tough, principled Colonel Dax, who stands up to the callous and incompetent senior officers of the high command. Douglas’s handsome, unsmiling face is set like a bayonet of contempt.

Douglas himself prizes his sensitive and Oscar-nominated performance as Vincent van Gogh in another Vincente Minnelli film, Lust for Life, from 1956. Some may smile a little at this earnest and high-minded movie now, but it is very watchable, with a heartfelt belief that Van Gogh’s art can be understood by everyone. There is a bold, passionate performance from Douglas, who simply blazes with agony. Not everyone liked it. John Wayne famously stormed up to Douglas after a screening to rage: “Christ, Kirk, how can you play a part like that? There’s so goddamn few of us left. We got to play tough, strong characters. Not those weak queers!”

Douglas has endured a scene of almost Freudian trauma in his career. Having bought the rights to Ken Kesey’s novel One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest in the 1960s, he himself played the lead for its Broadway adaptation: McMurphy, the subversive wild-man imprisoned in a psychiatric hospital. For years, he struggled to raise the money for a film version. His son Michael took over as producer and, in the early 70s, brought his dad good news and bad news. The film would get made, but with the younger hotshot Jack Nicholson in the lead. It was a uniquely painful moment for both father and son. Kirk Douglas’s A-list moment had passed.

Douglas is the quintessential hero and star of old Hollywood. I treasure all of his great performances, but my favourite is the defiant cowboy Jack Burns in the superb western thriller Lonely are the Brave (1962). He plays perhaps the last cowboy in America, surreally leading his horse across a modern landscape of automobiles. Douglas was never more cool, witty and charismatic. It’s a glorious film – and he is a glorious star. Happy birthday, Kirk!

Original article appeared on TheGuardian.com

Article originally appeared on Costa Rica Extra and is republished here with permission.

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Three Generations of Cuban Women, Three Different Opinions of Castro (Video)

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Q24N – Three generations of Cuban women, three different opinions of Castro. The leader’s death highlights a divide between Cubans young and old.

Some of the comments on the Fusion.net video include:

EL Yamasaero:

This happens all over the world, not only in Cuba. The young girl will only appreciate the revolution when she goes through real struggles and racism in another country. Millions of people all over the world would love to have what Cubans have. She hasnt lived in a country with real racism like the US and most European countries. Cuba is the least racist country in the world. The grandma lived through the struggles before the revolution. And the mom appreciates the stability it has given her.

Neteret Nneka:

Idk, I think the young one feels she’ll have a better chance at doing what she loves to do to support a living if she leaves rather than stays. Also feeling like her color wont be such an issue elsewhere. But the harsh reality is artist struggle all over the world, daily, and racism is almost everywhere. She should travel. You always appreciate home when you travel

Vanessa Kerr:

She (the grandaughter) sounds very naive and ignorant. If she does leave Cuba, I think she’ll be in for more than a bit of a shock. Make a career out of music and films – how many people from her standing does she think chase those pipe dreams and are successful, and not just waitressing waiting for their ‘talent’ to one day be recognised and to hit the big leagues? She doesn’t understand what the world outside of Cuba is like or how it works.

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

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Too Much Trump and Too Little PISA

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On 6th December 2016 the results from PISA's 2015 round of testing of 15-year-olds in science, reading and mathematics in 72 countries & economies was released.
On 6th December 2016 at 11h00 (Central European Time) the results from PISA's 2015 round of testing of 15-year-olds in science, reading and mathematics in 72 countries & economies will be released on this site.
On 6th December 2016 the results from PISA’s 2015 round of testing of 15-year-olds in science, reading and mathematics in 72 countries & economies was released.

(Q24N) Central Americans and other Latin Americans are feeling more concerned about what Trump can say or do, than over the only thing that can really change the fate of poverty in the region, which is education.

The recently published results of the PISA tests confirm that in the best case, these countries maintain positions midway down the table of global results, and in the worst case have fallen in the objective measurement of quality of the most important resource for economic and social development, people and their cognitive abilities.

In Central America, Costa Rica is the only country that took part in the OECD’s 2015 PISA program, which assesses the skills of its youth, which is already remarkable, because the first step to improving the management of any system or company is to measure its results. Panama, which participated in 2009, did not take part in 2015, although apparently it will in 2018. Other Central American countries simply do not participate.

Trump’s rise as a leader in the United States – and other demonstrations in many parts of the world of the weariness with the growing and dominant bureaucracies that make states less and less effective in fulfilling their main functions – should be seen as a serious threat to all countries seeking to get ahead with small begged advantage of ideological political favoritism in respect to the great economic powers. The choices being made by the next president of the United States over who holds positions in his cabinet, shows that he intends to do a lot of what he announced in his election campaign. And it is very possible that Central America will suffer from the results of policies designed to make his concept of making “America for the Americans … in the North” a reality.

The River Bravo will once again be the border between North and South America, and Mexico, a very important trading partner for the countries of the isthmus, will be the main victim of the Trump government. And through the suffering of Mexico, Central America will also suffer.

We must stop analyzing and comparing the results of the PISA tests and rejoicing because there are countries that are worse off than ours, or because we improved by one percentage point, or because “within the region we are not that bad”. We must RIGHT NOW, today, devote major State efforts to dramatically improving education systems, starting by carrying out PISA tests, setting the goal of reaching the level not of some of our neighbors, but of Singapore, Japan and Estonia.

If we really want a better future for the coming generations -our children- we must stop wasting time on criticizing Trump – inane water cooler chatter – to face the corporatism of educational systems that are resistant to change and leave our own conformism in order to overcome the feeling of inferiority that we have with the developed world.

If we do not like Trump we should not complain, rather we should be much more competitive in everything, especially in education.

Source:  Centralamericandata.com

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Seasonal Influenza Claims Nine Lives (So Far) In Costa Rica

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Outside the San Carlos hospital. Photo from file, Carlos Hernández/ La Nacion

Q COSTA RICA NEWS – The Ministry of Health confirmed Thursday night that in the last six weeks nine people died of influenza in different parts of the country.

The victims, aged between 4 months and 74, were infected with the AH1N1 and AH3N2 strains and in eight of the nine cases they high risk factors such as diabetes, hypertension, obesity, pulmonary diseases, heart disease or kidney diseases.

According to the preliminary report by Ministry of Health (Ministerio de Salud) none of the dead had been vaccinated against the seasonal virus. Four patients resided in Florencia, Guatuso, Aguas Zarcas and Santa Rosa de Pocosol (San Carlos); the others in Esparza (Puntarenas); Tibás and Goicoechea (San José); Cartago; and Santa Cruz (Guanacaste).

Outside the San Carlos hospital. Photo from file, Carlos Hernández/ La Nacion
Outside the San Carlos hospital. Photo from file, Carlos Hernández/ La Nacion

Melvin Anchía, a regional epidemiologist at the Ministry of Health in San Carlos, confirmed that there was one more death in that region, which occurred in the last week of October.

He added that there are 20 people with these same characteristics hospitalized at the San Carlos hospital, two of them in critical condition.

At the end of last year, starting in the second week of December, the country experienced a late peak of severe acute respiratory infections (SARI), which claimed 27 lives by January 17.

Authorities urge proper hygiene measures such as washing hands and sneezing into forearms or a handkerchief to avoid spreading infection; avoid smoking; and if flu symptoms appear, do not go to work until coughing and sneezing ceases. Those suffering from respiratory diseases should also avoid going to places with large groups of people

Transplant patients, people with a high level of obesity, immune system disorders, chronic respiratory or cardiac problems, diabetics, children under three years and over 65 years need to take extra care against the influenza virus.

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Upholding The Law Wasn’t Their Best Suit

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115 police officials were fired or in the process of being fired for committing serious crimes
115 police officials were fired or in the process of being fired for committing serious crimes
115 police officials were fired or in the process of being fired for committing serious crimes

Q COSTA RICA NEWS- A total of 115 police officers have been sacked or in the process of being sacked for (allegedly) committing serious crimes, such as homicide, rape and kidnapping. That number represents 0.8% of the police force of 14,200 officers, reported the Ministry of Security.

Security Minister Gustavo Mata made the announcement on Wednesday morning accompanied by the senior officials of the various police forces under the Ministerio de Seguridad Publica (MSP).

El ministro Gustavo Mata Vega, centro, hizo el anuncio la mañana de este miércoles acompañado de los jefes de los diversos cuerpos policiales de Seguridad Pública .
The Minister of Security, Gustavo Mata (center, in suit and tie) alongside senior officials of the various police forces, made the announcement at a press conference Wednesday morning.

The minister explained that so far this year 51 officials have already been dismissed; 31 are pending official notification and the rest (33 cases) are in the midst of the administrative process that would conclude in early 2017.

According to a detailed report from the MSP, 15 of those dismissed committed apparent sexual abuse against children and adults; eight are linked to homicides, seven allegedly involved in drug trafficking, and five are linked to rapes. Four other officials are being investigated for illicit association, another four for organized crime and two for kidnapping and extortion. The rest (72) are charged with crimes against property.

Mata said a review was underway to determine whether recruitment vetting or psychological testing were at fault for letting such individuals into the police force. He did not exclude the possibility of organised crime infiltrating the police.

Minister Mata said the dismissals affect the understaffed police forces, but “it was more dangerous to have them (the dismissed officers) here than not to have them. We will make the necessary effort to hire (new staff) as soon as possible.”

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Police Report The Arrest Of Suspect In The Murder of Frenchwoman In Limon

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The murder occurred on October 27, in the property owned by the victim. Photo La Nacion
The murder occurred on October 27, in the property owned by the victim. Photo La Nacion
The murder occurred on October 27, in the property owned by the victim. Photo La Nacion

Q COSTA RICA NEWS – Authorities report the arrest of a 21-year-old man suspected of the murder of Estelle Marie Clare Jeanne, a 50-year-old French hotelier, in the town of Punta Uva.

Estelle Marie-Claire Jeanne had been living in the town of Punta Uva for six years, where she owned and ran the Pachamama Jungle River Lodge, in Punta Uva de Cahuita, Limón, where she was killed on October 27.

The man captured is Murillo, a native of Limón and a neighbor of Hone Creek, is believed to have acted with two accomplices who are being sought, said the Organismo de Investigacion Judicial (OIJ).

On October 27, assailants entered the hotel — empty of guests at the time — tied up Jeanne and asphyxiated her. Her body was found lying on the ground the next day by one of her employees.

Police believe the assailants’ motive was robbery, noting that a computer, a tablet and a cellphone were stolen.

The Pachamama Hotel is located eight kilometres south of Puerto Viejo, near the entrance to the Gandoca-Manzanillo National Wildlife Refuge.

Source La Nacion

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How Many Languages does Costa Rica Speak?

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Costa Rica’s official and predominant language is Spanish*. The variety spoken is Costa Rican Spanish, is a form of Central American Spanish.

not-speaking-spanish-in-costa-rica-mainA Creole-English language, Jamaican patois (also known as Mekatelyu), is spoken along the Caribbean coast.

About 10.7% of Costa Rica’s adult population (18 or older) also speaks English, 0.7% French, and 0.3% speaks Portuguese or German as a second language.

The Quakers community, who settled in Monteverde in the early 1950s, speaks an older dialect of English, using thou instead of you. Mennonite immigrants to the country also speak Plautdietsch.

Costa Rica is also home to at least five living local indigenous languages spoken by the descendants of pre-Columbians. Those languages are:

  • Maléku: Also known as Guatuso, spoken by around 800 people in north-eastern Alajuela Province. This language, along with Rama, belongs to the Votic branch of the Chibchan language family.
  • Cabécar: Spoken in the Talamanca mountain range and in the southern Pacific region, Cabécar is the sister language to Bribri in the Isthmic branch of the Chibchan language family.
  • Bribri: Bribri is spoken on the Atlantic slope of the country, including Limón Province, the Talamanca mountain range, and the south Pacífic region. Together with Cabécar, it forms the Viceitic subgroup of Chibchan languages.
  • Guaymí: Spoken in various indigenous territories to the southeast of Puntarenas Province, bordering Panama. Together with Buglere, it belongs to the Guaymic subgroup of the Chibchan languages. Also known as Ngäbere or Movere.
  • Buglere: Spoken in the same territories as Guaymí, the language to which it is most closely related. It is also known as Bocotá.

Immigration has also brought people and languages from various countries around the world.

Costa Rican Sign Language is also spoken by the deaf community.

Costa Rican Spanish slang is known as “pachuco”.

Traditionally, Costa Rica has had no policies in favor of multiculturalism. The greatest advance in this respect came with the amendment of Article 76 of the Constitution of Costa Rica, which now states: “Spanish is the official language of the Nation. However, the State will oversee the maintenance and cultivation of indigenous national languages.”

*Spanish is the official language in Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Equatorial Guinea, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Player, Puerto Rico, Spain, Uruguay, and Venezuela.

Source  Wikipedia, Google

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Guanacaste Real Estate Market Finally Bouncing Back From 2008 Crisis

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Aerial picture of Coco Sunset Hill condos, in Playas del Coco. Carlos Barrera
Aerial picture of Coco Sunset Hill condos, in Playas del Coco. Carlos Barrera
Aerial picture of Coco Sunset Hill condos, in Playas del Coco. Carlos Barrera

Q COSTA RICA, by César Brenes Quirós, Vozdeguanacaste.com – In 2007, Guanacaste witnessed a boom in real estate and tourism, prompting Costa Rican developers DWL to invest in a mixed-use megaproject called Solarium. Located across from Daniel Oduber International Airport, the development was to include offices, warehouses, universities and other offerings.

Just two years later, an economic crisis stopped in its tracks the ambitious plan to build on land big enough to house 28 national stadiums.

From 2007-2009, the financial crisis that shocked the global economy froze investments in Guanacaste’s real estate sector , which for years had been driven by U.S. dollars. Faced with massive losses of international funding, the real estate sector entered a depression that wiped out numerous projects and suspended further construction in the region .

Today, the DWL project still retains more than half of its original property, about 511,000 square meters. And little by little, that megaproject is moving forward.

DWL spokeswoman Gabriela Mata said talks have restarted with companies interested in joining the planned free zone next year .

“We’re seeing opportunities to develop a cluster of light manufacturing, aviation and food production industries,” Mata said.

DWL’s experience is part of a general trend in the market of buying and selling land and buildings in Guanacaste. Analysts consulted by The Voice of Guanacaste believe that new highways and plans to develop a new cargo terminal at the airport will help add to market revitalization in the region.

The proof is in the numbers: Several real estate companies have increased sales by more than 15 percent in the past year , as well as resuming work on pending projects and new phases of hotel development.

Numbers Don’t Lie

mapa-desarrollos_ing

 

The latest biannual study of Guanacaste by real estate analysis firm Newmark Grubb highlighted sales growth ranging from 14-40 percent during the first six months of 2016 compared to the same period last year for real estate companies surveyed. Pedro Sánchez, a Newmark Grubb market analyst, said the first half of 2016 has been the best period in the past five years .

VIP Costa Rica Real Estate Services, which operates in the province, has seen in the last three years 12-15 percent growth in land and condominium sales in places like Flamingo and Potrero.

The market’s awakening has even helped revive certain projects, such as La Meridiana, a second-home project located between the communities of Huacas and Tamarindo. Investment in the 23,000-square-meter La Meridiana is $13 million (¢7.3 billion at a dollar rate of ¢559), with 94 homes planned.

Work had advanced by roughly 60 percent in the first phase until it was paralyzed in 2009 as the global recession absorbed resources earmarked for a second phase, prompting Citibank to take it over. According to VIP, a group of Israeli investors acquired it and have since sold at least 25 percent of the planned units . Another 25 percent is actively being marketed.

Hoteliers Awaken

Another niche with strong movement in Guanacaste is the hotel sector. According to Newmark, the RIU chain has started building a third hotel in the canton of Carrillo , and in places like Papagayo, new developments continue springing up .

For example, the Rosewood Hotels & Resorts chain announced at the beginning of the year franchise expansion that includes a 130-room luxury hotel in Bahía Culebra de Papagayo , with a $100 million (¢56 billion) investment fund from securities group Aldesa.

Reserva Conchal and Hacienda Pinilla in Santa Cruz, Eco Desarrollo Papagayo and Secrets Papagayo in Liberia, Azul Paraíso and Las Catalinas in Santa Cruz and Dreams Las Mareas in La Cruz, among others, also have joined the list by developing new phases .

Government Investment Shows Returns

Recent construction on the Cañas-Liberia stretch of highway and the eventual expansion of a cargo terminal at Daniel Oduber International Airport will create even more opportunities in the real estate market .

Airport terminal concessionaire Coriport announced last March construction of a second cargo terminal to help boost both exports and imports and attract new businesses and industries. Inauguration of the new facilities is expected by year’s end.

Randall Fernández, general manager of real estate analysis firm Colliers International, said this type of infrastructure expansion helps create new opportunities in Guanacaste – primarily in Liberia – in the industrial market, while attracting multinational manufacturing companies to the free zone. But work at a regional level remains to be done in order to be successful.

Experts say the advancement of Guanacaste’s market would be more tangible if local governments would work more quickly to provide infrastructure and services across the region . Repairing and finishing roads is one part of that equation.

Recent investigations by The Voice of Guanacaste also show that companies seek bilingual employees with at least a high school education , something that remains a challenge here .
Another incessant critical issue is water availability , a glaring concern in light of new megaprojects. While communities fight to protect water sources already available, the market seeks new sources and alternatives .

Despite challenges that remain, the general mood in the province’s real estate sector is positive. And it appears that the tumultuous economic crisis has begun to subside, at least for Guanacaste’s market – which not only might recover, but just might flourish.

Article originally appeared on Vozdeguanacaste.com, reposted with permission.

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How Will Trump’s Pick for U.S. Homeland Security Chief Impact Latin America?

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President-elect Donald Trump met with retired Marine Corps Gen. John Kelly. Photo from Washington Post
President-elect Donald Trump met with retired Marine Corps Gen. John Kelly. Photo from Washington Post
President-elect Donald Trump met with retired Marine Corps Gen. John Kelly. Photo from Wall Street Journal

(Q24N) – Insightcrime.org – United States President-elect Donald Trump has chosen retired Marine Gen. John Kelly to lead the US Department of Homeland Security. InSight Crime analyzes what positive and negative effects his appointment may have on the region.

President-elect Trump will nominate Marine veteran John Kelly to take charge of the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS), people close to the presidential transition team confirmed to the Associated Press on December 7. The Senate would have to vote to confirm Kelly’s appointment.

Kelly’s possible future position would have a key role in executing US national security decisions that directly affect Latin America. It is fitting that his last military post — which he held from November 2012 until he retired in January 2016 — was head of the US Southern Command (SOUTHCOM), which leads US operations in Latin America.

As head of the DHS, Kelly would be responsible for counter-terrorism and national security, border management, enforcing immigration laws, and reacting to cyber threats and natural disasters. Among the department’s many branches are Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), Customs and Border Protection (CBP), the Coast Guard and the Secret Service.

InSight Crime Analysis

Kelly’s lead role in US national security could — especially given the president-elect’s emphasis on the threat posed by United States’ southern neighbors — significantly impact the US approach to the region. Firstly, Kelly would have a big say in implementing one of Trump’s signature campaign promises: cracking down on unauthorized migration to the United States.

Trump has pledged to combat this issue by building a wall on the US-Mexico border and deporting large numbers of “criminals” residing in the country without proper documentation. The mass deportation of immigrants could have dangerous consequences if executed, exacerbating security risks and damaging economic stability in the migrants’ home countries. Many undocumented migrants in the United States have fled gang-related violence in Central America’s Northern Triangle countries (El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras). Today, 10 to 18 percent of these countries’ gross domestic product depends on remittances. A sharp reduction in these transfers could worsen the socio-economic conditions that make these countries fertile ground for criminal groups.

But Kelly has until now adopted a somewhat different stance to the national threat posed by the influx of migrants, placing more importance on the economic development of Latin American countries over toughening border security.

In his address to the Senate Armed Services Committee in March 2015 (pdf), Kelly said he was convinced that “homeland defense does not begin at the ‘one yard line’ of our Southwest border.” Regarding Trump’s proposed security policies, he has stressed that a wall alone is not a sufficient solution.

“If the countries where these migrants come from have reasonable levels of violence and reasonable levels of economic opportunity, then the people won’t leave to come here,” Kelly told the Military Times earlier this year. Indeed, when discussing his priorities in fighting organized crime in the Northern Triangle in 2015, he stated: “95 percent of my efforts are not military. It’s economic development.”

Senior Associate at the Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA) Adam Isacson told InSight Crime that “Kelly understands that violence is a big driver of migration,” and that he doubts the retired general will share Trump’s support for aggressive deportation.

Kerry’s stance therefore suggests that he would be keener to tackle root causes of migration than aggressively tackle its consequences. Now that he has Trump’s ear, he could try to moderate the future president’s approach to regional migration. Alternatively, he may clash with Trump along with numerous other hardliners set to occupy top government positions.

Nevertheless, Kelly’s opinion on other matters may be a cause for concern. The retired general has warned on multiple occasions that Latin America could be a gateway for terrorists to infiltrate the United States.

“I am also troubled by the financial and operational overlap between criminal and terrorist networks in the region,” Kerry told the Senate in 2015. While recognizing that the extent of this crime-terrorism nexus is “unclear,” he warned that terrorist groups — like the Lebanese Hezbollah — are involved in criminal activities in Latin America.

Furthermore, Kelly explained that given the “relative ease with which human smugglers” bring thousands of people to the country’s southern border, terrorist organizations could use the same routes to move in dangerous operators “or even bring weapons of mass destruction into the United States.”

But Kelly has been accused of overhyping a terrorist threat that has little foundation in reality. As InSight Crime has pointed out in the past, claims of terrorist-crime nexuses in Latin America are often based on one-off cases of criminal cooperation, and do not represent working relationships between such groups.

Conflating terrorism and organized crime based on dubious theories is a potentially dangerous political tool that could be used to justify budget requests or controversial policy decisions — such as who can or cannot enter the country — while overlooking the real security risks facing Latin America.

Other key policy decisions that could be swayed by Kelly’s appointment include funding for the region. There are worries that Trump’s “America First” rhetoric will mean handing out less foreign aid. This could have a significant impact on the Northern Triangle and on Colombia, which is currently preparing to set in motion a number of costly “post-conflict” projects in the wake of a peace deal with its largest guerrilla organization.

However, Kelly’s views on regional development and his gleaming praise of Colombia’s “phenomenal” security turnaround suggest he will continue to advocate for financial support to Latin America. Kelly strongly endorsed a $750 million aid package to Central America approved in December 2015, and told the Senate last year that “We must sustain US support throughout [the Colombian peace] process and during the post-conflict phase as our closest partner works to end a decades-long insurgency.”

Isacson agreed that the retired general may exert some positive influence in this regard. “If Kelly hears concerns about Trump from defense and military colleagues in countries he admires (like Colombia), the result could be some moderation of the Trump administration’s overall approach to the region,” he said.

From Insightcrime.org, a foundation dedicated to the study of the principal threat to national and citizen security in Latin America and the Caribbean: organized crime.

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More Bureaucracy For Costa Rica Tourism

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A proposed bill would see the Insitute of Tourism (ICT) and the Ministry of Tourism work side by side
A proposed bill would see the Insitute of Tourism (ICT) and the Ministry of Tourism work side by side
A proposed bill would see the creation of the Ministry of Tourism to work along side the Insitute of Tourism (ICT)

Q COSTA RICA NEWS – Arguing that they would “give muscle” to the state in managing the sector, a bill, presented by several legislators, aims to create the Ministry of Tourism. The proposal around the suspicion of the private sector that would lead to more bureaucracy in the tourism sector.

Costa Rica’s tourism sector is managed by the  Instituto Costarricense de Turismo (ICT), often referred to as the ministry of tourism. However, the ICT is a government agency funded with a direct tax on tourism.

The private sector is concerned that the proposed bill to create a Ministry of Tourism to operate alongside the current ICT, will mean that State funds that are used to promote the country as a tourist destination will be diverted.

The initiative furthermore suggests creating a Tourism Advisory Council (Consejo Consultivo de Turismo in Spanish), which would include private and public participation, and a Joint Advisory Council of Small and Medium Enterprises Consejo Asesor Mixto de la Pequeña y Mediana Empresa (Consejo Asesor Pyme) and various ministries and business chambers, and integrating the Minister of Tourism into the Governing Council of the Development Banking System  (Ministro de Turismo en el Consejo Rector del Sistema de Banca para el Desarrollo ‘SBD’ in Spanish).

According to Partido Unidad Social Cristiana (PUSC) legislator and chairman of the Special Permanent Committee on Tourism, Luis Vasquez, told La Nacion that the proposal is to give the tourism sector muscle, explaining that other ministries would have the obligation to check with Tourism on things. Currently no other ministries have such an obligation.

“What is sought it is to give muscle to the public sector of tourism, as currently other ministries have no obligation to check some things. This was said yesterday by the Christian Socialist deputy and chairman of the Special Permanent Committee on Tourism, Luis Vasquez,” reported Nacion.com.

The ICT is currently funded with a 5% tax on airline tickets sold in Costa Rica and a US$15 tax on arrivals by air through tickets purchased abroad, the latter replacing the 3% sales tourism tax (in addition to the 13% sales tax) on hotel rooms.

The head of the ICT, referred to the Minister of Tourism, Mauricio Ventura, said: “The bill for the creation of a Ministry of Tourism has not been officially presented (to the legislature) or consulted to the ICT, so we can not refer to it.”

Source La Nacion

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Hard Struggle for Costa Rica’s Commercial Sector

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Commercial activity grew in 2016 driven by subsectors such as automobiles, although brakes were still encountered such as growing informality, smuggling and bureaucracy in health and safety records.

Centros_de_Servicios-Cinde-Bacardi-Cargill-Emerson-Western_Union-Procter_-_Gamble_ELFIMA20150320_0017_16At the end of the year, the commercial sector has maintained its relevance for the country ‘s economy and has become the main generator of employment, with 15% of the total laboUr force, according to the balance complied by the Chamber of Commerce of Costa Rica (Camara de comercio de Costa Rica).

However, the union warns of the effect of growth of informality and the negative effect of smuggling. In a statement the Chamber explained that the country loses up to US$100 million annually in tax revenues because of smuggling, that delays in (both new and renewal) health and safety registrations involve costs for companies, on average, of US$40,000 per month, and in the last three years difficulties have increased in reaping the benefits of the FTA, because of errors in substance.

From a statement issued by the Chamber of Commerce of Costa Rica:

The commercial sector in 2016 shows significant economic growth and has become the main generator of new jobs.

“It remains the cause of the most jobs created, with 248,890 workers, representing 15% of the total workforce. It contributes 19% to social security, making it the main contributor. It is very dynamic and significant in the economy, it contributes 9.1% to gross domestic product,” said Yolanda Fernandez, President of the Chamber of Commerce of Costa Rica.

Source Centralamericandata.com

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It’s A Wonderful Life… Without Fidel Castro

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Fidel Castro, Cuba’s communist revolutionary, died on November 25, 2016, at age 90.

TODAY CUBA – As Fidel Castro was laid to rest in Cuba this week, according to Huffington Post’s WorldPost, critics claimed that it gave the Cuban people a chance to experience a Christmas with less fear than they had known in decades. Supporters insist that he was a good man, and no one could have done better under the circumstances.

Who is right?

Ironically a classic Christmas movie, “It’s a Wonderful Life,” provides the perfect idea to settle this debate. Just as George Bailey, played by Jimmy Stewart, wishes he had never been born as a means of making things better, one can similarly wonder what if Fidel Castro had never lived.

Actually, we can do more than just wonder. We can look at a pair of countries, in a similar situation, with some similar characteristics, to see whether one leader made a difference, compared to another ruler. When Nelson Mandela passed away, I compared all of his great accomplishments to what happened in nearby Zimbabwe with their tyrant, Robert Mugabe. With such a comparison, one can see how valuable Mandela was to South Africa, and the world.

Was Fidel Castro a force for good, or against it? To answer this, I looked at another small Central American/Caribbean country where a social democratic revolution took place after World War II. I am comparing Castro’s Cuba to Costa Rica, where a revolutionary regime emerged that applied some tenets of socialism while resisting the urges of authoritarianism.

Typically, geographers and political scientists rate islands* as being more conducive for political and economic development. But that’s not the case in this comparison. Cuba’s GDP per capita is us$5,382.82, ranking nearly 100th in the world for that category, according to NationMaster. It’s a much better situation in Costa Rica, where the GDP per capita is US$9.396.45, good enough for 63rd in the world, according to NationMaster*Important to note that Costa Rica is NOT an island.

Both countries actually rank pretty well among their counterparts in Latin America and the Caribbean when it comes to social development. Costa Rica is among the best in the region for life expectancy, according to NationMaster. Cuba leads equatorial countries in literacy rates and fares well in the number of physicians per patient and a number of spending measures. But it also ranks high in the world in spending on tanks and warplanes, as NationMaster notes. Costa Rica, meanwhile, eliminated the military after their revolution, and has little government coercive power outside of law enforcement and a river patrol on their borders.

But the real difference, the key to understanding Castro’s legacy, comes from the country’s politics. In 2007, at the end of Fidel’s total control, Cuba received the worst freedom rating ever, with civil liberties and political rights each netting a score of 7, the lowest you can get, according to the human rights group Freedom House. Even under Fidel’s brother (Raul) the island is considered “Not Free” by Freedom House in their most recent analysis.

Meanwhile, Costa Rica garnered freedom, civil liberty and political rights scores of “one” for each, the highest that you can receive from Freedom House. That’s not just good for a Third World country; that’s better than a number of First World countries.

No wonder people in Cuba still have to look over their shoulder, even after Fidel perished, while the people of Costa Rica have earned their recognition as the “happiest people in the world” award according to the Happiest Planet Index. Having taught in Costa Rica for two summers, I can vouch for this. The people of Cuba, if they are allowed to even study Costa Rica’s success, could only wish that Fidel Castro had never been born, and that their leadership had chosen the path Costa Rica elected to follow after their own post-World War II revolution.

John A. Tures is a professor of political science at LaGrange College in LaGrange, Ga. He can be reached at jtures@lagrange.edu.
Article originally appeared on Huffingtonpost.com

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

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Costa Rica’s Big Movie Dreams

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Abrázame como antes, Cine Magaly, Dec. 10
Abrázame como antes,(Costa Rica)

COSTA RICA EXTRA – Costa Rica may be best known for its dense rain forests and a competitive soccer team, but recent efforts suggest that its filmmaking could join those ranks sometime in the near future..

A little over two years ago, Costa Rica’s film industry was driven by big dreams — a stable film commission, production funds to encourage local filmmakers, tax incentives — that are looking more realistic by the day. By mid-2015, shortly after the election of President Luis Guillermo Solis, the new administration appointed a film commissioner who will assume full-time duties by 2017.

Watch the trailer (in Spanish) “Abrazame como antes” Costa Rica’s entry to the Costa Rica International Film Festival.

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G4-MtcZ0jPU]

At the same time, it launched plans to build a new National Cinematheque, and assembled proposals for a series of laws to stimulate further production. The current headquarters for the Film Commission in the Costa Rican capital San Jose, called the Centro De Cine, added a screening room that now projects some 120 films from around world each year for thousands of audiences.

In short, not too shabby for a Central American country of five million people serviced by just 150 theaters, most of which emphasize the usual multiplex fare over local productions or international cinema.

The 2016 edition of the Costa Rica International Film Festival runs December 8 – 17.

For Fernando Rodriguez, director of the Costa Rican Ministry of Culture, the work has just begun. “The country needs to understand the audiovisual sector as an industry,” he said in an interview this week. “The most important thing is to strengthen the association with that sector to help producers, distributors, and exhibitors establish themselves.”

Of course, new resources can only go so far without sufficient efforts to draw attention to them. That’s where the Costa Rica International Film Festival comes into play.

The red turtle
The Red Turtle  (France)

The five-year-old venture, which this year contains 72 films from around the world in addition to works in progress from Central American filmmakers, receives 20% of the Film Commission’s annual budget for its operations. Announcing the latest edition, artistic director Marcelo Quesada described an interest in “approaching the idea of artistic diversity.” As a result, the lineup includes both festival favorites like “Toni Erdmann” and “Certain Women” (alongside a career tribute for director Kelly Reichardt) while providing a platform for a young but growing local film community.

For the industry section of the festival, 16 Central American films in various stages of production were selected, in addition to seven films screening as works in progress. The Costa Rican films will be eligible for a prize of 3.6 million colones (roughly $8,600) to assist with post-production needs, while an additional prize for the same amount will be awarded to a film’s art design.

La región salvaje (Germany, Denmark, France, Mexico, Norway, Switzerland)
La región salvaje (Germany, Denmark, France, Mexico, Norway, Switzerland)

The festival will also showcase six films from Central America in its official competition section, which is described in the festival programming guide as designed “to capture the pulse of local and regional production.” Notably, most of the filmmakers in the section are presenting their first features.

 Like crazy Italia 2016 Cine Magaly
Like Crazy  (Italy)
“Our intention is to strengthen the promotion of Costa Rica as a destination for international producers,” Rodriguez said, singling out the diverse backdrop, which includes rain forests and glimmering beaches alike. He hoped an increase in quality Costa Rican films would help instigate interest abroad, adding, “much has changed in the last two years.”

That’s to say nothing of the last few decades. While the Centro de Cine was founded in 1973, it remained stagnant for decades, and few filmmakers managed to develop national recognition for their work. Others left the country. Even as the number of films produced in Costa Rica increased — the British production “Paddington” was shot there in 2013 — they failed to move the needle on its profile.

“That really affected our capacity for growth,” Rodriguez explained. “We’re working on the modernization of our work so that the projects we’re implementing can survive in the long term.”

El despertar de las hormigas: niñez Sinopsis:
El despertar de las hormigas: niñez (Costa Rica)

In other words, the developing Film Commission is following the philosophy that if you build it, they’ll stick around — and it’s off to a good start. The 2015 developments included the launching of a production fund called El Fauno, which received a $1 million endowment for the production of 17 indigenous projects that range from narrative features to documentaries and television series. “We’re in negotiations to develop our private and public alliances to feed the fund,” Rodriguez added, expressing a desire to support other audiovisual projects such as video games and transmedia work.

While the Film Commission is currently housed in the foreign trade promotion agency Procomer, it will move to the National Cinematheque with its construction in 2018. The building will include three new screening rooms and educational programs supported in part by partnerships with the French Cinematheque and the Association for Meetings of Latin American Cinemas in Toulouse (otherwise known as ARCALT).

La sombra del naranjo Sinopsis:
La sombra del naranjo  (Costa Rica)

Overall, the new center will allow the Film Commission to focus its efforts in a single location, rather than grasping for resources spread across the country or waiting each year for the film festival come around. “There will be spaces for the incubation of ideas that will allow for the development of more projects,” Rodriguez said. “Our networking rooms and common spaces will join the past, present and future of cinema.”

In 2015, distribution executive Luis Carcheri of Costa Rica’s Romaly Distribution told Variety that if the film production fund came together, it would need to “not only help local filmmakers produce their movies, but send them to workshops to hone their craft.” Now that two-pronged approach has come together, and the future is not so far away.

“Festivals are turning their eyes toward Central America,” Rodriguez said.

The post Costa Rica’s Big Movie Dreams appeared first on Costa Rica Extra Magazine!.

Article originally appeared on Costa Rica Extra and is republished here with permission.

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Staying Safe In Central America

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Getty images
Getty images
Getty images

Q TRAVEL – As the cold begins to grip the northern hemisphere, many start thinking about southern climates, be it for a week’s vacation in one country or extended stays that may include travel to various countries around Central America.

Although can’t agree with all that Robert Loesener writes in his article posted on Assolution.com , it pretty clear that Costa Rica and Nicaragua and pretty safe bets, while the other parts of Central America can be unnerving for some.

Here is the article:

Shortly after opening up our San Pedro branch to provide EP services in Honduras, we wrote about the potential security risks associated with traveling to or living in the area.

We think it’s important to revisit not only Honduras, but the rest of Central America as well. The region—or at least certain parts of it—still represents a serious security threat for unprepared travelers and expats.

Security threats and risks in Central America: what to expect?

Many of the security risks that apply to Honduras also plague the rest of Central America:

  • Kidnapping
  • Gang activity and drug-related crimes
  • Extortion
  • Burglary and petty theft
  • Dangerous roads due to poor conditions and carjackings

Expats and business travelers are more prone to be targeted than locals, since they’re perceived as more likely to carry valuable goods (smartphones, laptops, and so on) or more likely to have their ransom paid.

The reasons for most of the risks associated with Honduras and Central America are unfortunately all-too-common and not easy to fix any time soon. High levels of poverty and inequality, gang activities, drug trade and corrupt officials all contribute to the security situation.

The drug trade is huge. Central America is the major transportation route for cocaine and heroin headed for the U.S., a huge and apparently insatiable market. Roughly 80-90% of cocaine found in the U.S. has passed through the Mexico-Central America region. This is a massive market for gangs, and they’re hellbent on controlling it.

The actual risks vary by country and area

Before you swear off all of Central America, it’s important to put things in perspective and understand the wide range of regional differences.

Nicaragua and Costa Rica have vibrant tourism industries. They also have national homicide rates close to that of Kansas City. While that doesn’t make them safe per se, it does make them generally safer than their neighbors. It also means that you’re more likely to encounter theft in tourist areas rather than outright gun violence.

According to statistics from the Central American and Caribbean Commission of Police Chiefs, Honduras has over 30,000 active gang members while Nicaragua, Costa Rica and Panama each have less than 5,000. And these numbers are all fairly low estimates—various sources disagree wildly on the exact count.

A country like Guatemala is still reeling from the after-effects of its long civil war (with two-hundred thousand civilian casualties), while Honduras suffers from a militarized—and often corrupt—police force struggling to contain the country’s gang problem and civilians openly carrying weapons.

In some cases, justice has a hard time doing its job. The impression that crime is running wild in countries that make up the so-called “Northern Triangle” (Honduras, Guatemala, El Salvador) is strengthened by the relative impunity criminals enjoy there. As many as 95% of the crimes committed are not processed or dealt with in any concrete manner due to weak judicial systems, corruption and overcrowded prisons.

What does this mean for travelers?

You can’t paint Central America with a broad stroke, and risks change significantly from area to area. Any plan to head to one of these countries means you’ll need to rely on local intel and up-to-date info not only about the country, but the specific city or place you’re headed to. We give some general information below, but do be sure to stay up to date on current risks wherever you travel.

Central America: Major security risks in 2016 and early 2017

Belize: The main security risks in Belize are related to drug trafficking and gangs. Political violence, while possible, is not currently a major concern. The country continues to have a high murder rate per capita, which has significantly increased over the past five years. Travelers are relatively safe in the popular tourist areas (such as the Mayan ruins), but should be extra careful when heading out into rural areas.

Additionally, several parts of Belize City should be entirely avoided.

Costa Rica: Like Belize, crime is on the rise in Costa Rica—particularly when it comes to theft, credit card fraud and muggings. As mentioned previously, homicide is unlikely to be an issue, and armed assaults rarely affect tourists—but they remain a possibility. Tourist areas are relatively safe, but do be mindful of wandering alone at night. As for politics, Costa Rica is considered politically stable—so no worries there.

El Salvador: The country has massive issues with crime, as is unfortunately expected from one of the three countries in the “Northern Triangle”. Homicide rates are among the highest in the world and still rising. Gang- and cartel-related violence, muggings, carjackings and extortion are all real concerns. Although the country understandably doesn’t have much of a tourism industry, 38 U.S. travelers have been murdered there since 2010, and almost 500 have had their passports stolen. Extreme caution is required.

Guatemala: With 91 murders per week in 2015, our recommendations for El Salvador apply here, too. While travel to Guatemala is certainly possible and thousands of tourists go unharmed each year, extreme caution is still justified.

Honduras: We’ve already written about Honduras, which with El Salvador and Guatemala shares the unenviable reputation as one third of the extremely dangerous Norther Triangle. We recommend you take a look at our blog post on San Pedro Sula. Unfortunately, the vast majority of what we wrote then remains relevant now.

Nicaragua: Though one of the Central American countries with the lowest reported crime rates, Nicaragua is by no means entirely safe. In 2015, U.S. citizens’ most reported crimes were robberies, vehicle thefts and sexual assaults.

Panama: Political unrest is somewhat of a concern in Panama, and demonstrations and protests are not uncommon. Crime overall has dropped over the past couple of years—but it remains high compared to most of what you’d find in the U.S. If you’re headed to Panama City, avoid lower-income areas, which often have a little presence from law enforcement. As for Colon, the entire city is considered to be a “high crime” zone, so strong caution is recommended.

Be prepared, be street-smart, and don’t take unnecessary risks

Central America has its security challenges, but it is also a deservedly popular tourist destination. Low labor costs and proximity to the U.S. make it an attractive choice for manufacturing facilities. So what are travelers to do? Here are a few tips that will serve you well in this region:

Find local intelligence and support: If you intend to venture out of the tourist areas, or plan to walk around after dark, don’t go it alone. Understand the area. Do some research. Tap local sources to learn what the risks are and how to mitigate them. Red areas after 8pm are a no-go, period.

Be extremely careful on roads at night, especially rural ones: Expect bad road conditions, very poor lighting and the risk of carjackings in some regions.

If you do hit the road in the most dangerous regions, be prepared: We’re talking armored vehicles and even using follow-up vehicles if needed. Know the roads ahead of time. Patrol vehicles and solid intel will make all the difference.

Know how to spot gang signs: Keep your eyes open for tattoos, men and teenagers in groups, and the most obvious sign of all: weapons. Even if you feel like you’re in a “safe” place, there is no reason to risk it. Walk away immediately—whatever is going on may not target you directly, but you can’t be sure whether the situation is dangerous or not.

As usual, travel alerts are your friends: The U.S. Department of State’s website and the U.K. equivalent is frequently updated and will help you determine what to expect ahead of time. For example, Nicaragua held its presidential election in early November, and this caused some concern for foreign travelers—academics, journalists, NGOs, etc.

Don’t forget the basics: Don’t flash expensive jewelry or tech devices. Carry certified copies of your ID when moving around. Cheap local cell phones could be a good idea. Bottled water is a must, and so are up-to-date vaccines.

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Where Expats Are Met with Open Arms

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The world through expat eyes
The world through expat eyes

Q COSTA RICA – Even if all the other factors — healthcare, work-life balance, international schools, etc. — are excellent, if expats and their families don’t feel at home, a stay abroad is unlikely to be a success.

In the Ease of Settling In Index, of the Expat Insider 2016 survery, expats were asked about the friendliness of the local population, the ease of making friends, how welcome they feel, and how easy and important it is to learn the local language.

Read more: The Best Places To Be An Expat: Costa Rica Is Sixth In The World

The Expat Insider 2016 report gives us a glimpse of where expats are met with open arms. For the third year in a row, Expat Insider — one of the largest expat surveys worldwide — offers an in-depth analysis of everyday expat life in more than 60 countries across the globe. More than 14,000 respondents representing 174 nationalities and 191 countries or territories took part and had their say on moving, living, and working abroad.

At least 50 respondents were needed for a country to feature in the Ease of Settling In Index, with 67 countries meeting this requirement.

Click on image to enlarge
Click on image to enlarge

Mexico Just Can’t Be Beat

Mexico ranks first in the Ease of Settling In Index for the third year in a row! It has risen up from second to first place in the Finding Friends subcategory. It also made gains in the Feeling Welcome subcategory, where it now comes in second place (compared to third in 2015 and fifth in 2014). Mexico dropped slightly in the Friendliness and Language subcategories, but not enough to cost it its spot at the top of the podium.

It just doesn’t get any better than Mexico for the ease of finding local friends. Whereas globally only 12% of expats completely agree that it’s easy to make local friends, in Mexico this percentage is nearly one-third (32%). Nearly eight in ten expats in Mexico (79%) find it easy to make new friends in general, while globally only six in ten feel the same.

Over double the global average of 16% completely agree that it is easy to settle down in Mexico (33%). Although it only comes in fourth place this year in the Friendliness subcategory, 93% of expats are still happy with the general friendliness of the population. Only this year’s newcomer Taiwan beats Mexico in terms of friendliness towards foreign residents. Half of the expats in Mexico are extremely happy in this regard, over twice the global average of 24%. However, it’s a good thing that learning Spanish is generally considered easy by 63% of expats, as 43% find life in Mexico difficult without speaking it — slightly above the global average of 40%.

Costa Rica Claims Silver

After two years at sixth place, Costa Rica now ranks second for the ease of settling in. This is largely due to gains in the Language subcategory (21st to 12th place), although there was also a large jump in the Feeling Welcome subcategory (12th to 4th place). Nearly eight in ten expats (79%) feel “at home” in the local culture and four in ten (41%) are even completely satisfied in this regard, over double the global average of 18%.

Almost nine out of ten expats (89%) are pleased with the general friendliness of the population, with close to three-fifths (59%) even considering it very good. Globally, only 26% are completely satisfied with this factor. Befriending the local population is considered easy when compared to the global average, with 28% even agreeing that making local friends is very easy (global average: 12%).

Friendly Uganda Joins the Podium

Uganda made a considerable jump this year from tenth to third place. The country either stayed the same or made gains in each subcategory of the Ease of Settling In Index. It is its excellent ratings in the Friendliness subcategory — where it is only surpassed by the newcomer Taiwan — that pushes Uganda to third place this year.

Uganda’s 2nd place in this subcategory is particularly notable as in 2015 it came in 13th place and in 2014 it was only at 25th place! So what changed? No other country beat Uganda when it comes to the general friendliness of the population. Not only do 57% of the expats in Uganda give this factor the best possible rating (compared to a global average of 26%), but not a single person rates it negatively (global average: 15%)! The survey respondents are also lucky when it comes to finding friends. About eight in ten expats (81%) find it easy to make new friends in general.

The most difficult aspect of settling in in Uganda is getting used to the local culture, with only 64% generally agreeing that this is easy. Its rank of 22nd in the Feeling Welcome subcategory is rather mediocre compared to its other high results in the Ease of Settling In Index.

What Happened to New Zealand and Ecuador?

In Expat Insider 2015, Mexico, New Zealand, and Ecuador claimed the top three places in the Ease of Settling In Index. Whereas Mexico has kept its title for the third year running, New Zealand and Ecuador fell down the ranks a bit. At fifth place, New Zealand is three places lower in 2016. Why? It seems that expats in New Zealand are finding it a bit harder to make local friends. In 2015, only 18% generally did not agree that it’s easy to make local friends. This year, a full one-quarter of expats are of this opinion.

Ecuador took a slightly larger fall, from third place to eighth. In 2015, Ecuador came in first place in the Finding Friends and Feeling Welcome subcategories, now it comes in sixth and seventh place, respectively.

The bottom three countries have remained fairly consistent over the past three years. Kuwait has always come in last, followed by Saudi Arabia. This year, Denmark is third from the bottom (it was fourth from the bottom in 2015 and 2014).

The Biggest Winners: Gains in Friendliness

Who are this year’s biggest winners and losers? Let’s start with the winners. Greece has risen from the 41st to the 27th spot in the Ease of Settling In Index. The country has made huge gains in terms of the ease of finding friends, jumping from 45th to 18th place. The percentage of expatriates in Greece who are generally satisfied with making new friends rose by 16 percentage points, 70% compared to 54%. This year’s survey respondents feel that foreign residents are more welcomed in Greece now, with only 10% of expats considering the attitude towards foreign residents negatively, compared to 19% in 2015.

Cyprus also made large gains overall in this index (from 25th to 14th place) and especially in terms of friendliness, climbing from 40th to 24th place in this subcategory. Here as well, the attitude towards foreign residents lies at the heart of this improvement. Whereas in 2015, only 18% agreed that Cypriots’ friendly sentiments towards their foreign neighbors were very good, this year nearly four in ten (39%) are of this opinion.

And finally, Spain has newly entered the top ten in the Ease of Settling In Index, coming in at ninth place. Continuing the trend, this is due to the positive results in the Friendliness subcategory, and more specifically the attitude towards foreigners. In 2015 only about one-quarter of expats (24%) found Spaniards to be very friendly towards foreign residents, while this year it’s 35%.

The Biggest Losers: A Cold Reception

The biggest loser in the Ease of Settling In Index for 2016 is Mozambique, dropping from 33rd to 47th place. The survey respondents are not impressed with the friendliness of the local population, either in general or towards foreign residents in particular. While not one respondent rated the general friendliness of the population negatively in 2015, 12% did so in 2016. Similarly, expats in Mozambique are having more difficulties finding friends this year, causing the country to fall from 14th to 40th place in this subcategory.

Hong Kong also suffered big losses in this index. With its 37th place in 2015, it was already in the bottom half, but has now dropped farther to 48th place. Reasons for this are difficulties finding friends and not finding it as easy to settle down in the country.

Kenya and Portugal have both dropped out of the top ten. Kenya was at 8th place and now only holds 19th. While in 2015, 34% considered the general friendliness of the population very good, less than one-quarter (24%) are of the same opinion in 2016. Portugal fell from 5th place to 16th. It seems expats are finding it harder to make local friends, among other things. In 2015, 19% generally disagreed that it is easy to make local friends there. This rose to 28% in 2016.

Source Internations.org

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Why Can’t The Traffic Police Stop The Nightly Street Racing?

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During the emergency, Monday night around 11:00pm, on the ruta 27, in Rio Oro de Santa Ana
During the emergency, Monday night around 11:00pm, on the ruta 27, in Rio Oro de Santa Ana

TICO BULL by Rico – Am I missing something here? Most of us who live in Santa Ana know well what goes on most nights on the stretch of road between the tolls and the cruce, two kilometres of the Ruta 27 where it is pretty much a straight-away and a maximum speed of 100 km/h, which means legally cars can go 119 before being ticketed.

puente5

For those of us who live here and especially close to the ruta (I still can’t bring myself to calling it a highway) can hear, starting usually after 10:00pm, on most nights, the roar of engines and screeching tires.

Tuesday morning
Tuesday morning

These are vehicles participating in street racing. For the most part they are motorcycles, young men having their “macho moment”. Sometimes the roar is different, I can tell when its more than motorcycles.

And at other times, like Monday night, there is a total different sound: sirens racing to or from somewhere, the loud roar of the trucks.

puente

It wasn’t until the 6:00am television news that I learned what had really happened, and less than a kilometre away.

The young driver of a pick up truck had lost control of his vehicle, according to witnesses he had swerved to avoid a collision with two vehicles allegedly involved in street racing, on the east bound

Cristopher Ramirez
Cristopher Ramirez

lanes, hitting violently against the pedestrian overpass, landing on the side road to Rio Oro, against the mound of dirt.

Cristopher Ramírez was only 20 years old was taken to the San Juan de Dios hospital in critical condition.

The impact of the pick up truck against two columns of the pedestrian was great that it caused structural damage, on Tuesday work crews having to erect supports to make the bridge safe for pedestrians and avoid it from collapsing all together.

Now, if I and my neighbours can hear what goes on here on most nights, why can’t the traffic police? With their delegation a short distance away, by the Red Cross in Santa Ana? Are they that deaf to what is going or is it that they just don’t care, unless there is a mortal victim.

There have already been one too many. Now there is one more.

This morning, Wednesday, Christopher lost his struggle for life and is now in the judicial morgue.

puente1

How many more like Christopher must die before something is done? The “picones” on this stretch of road are not occasional, only sometimes, but several times a week. We can hear them, why (authorities) cannot?

See the television news report of the accident.

puente7

puente4

Article originally appeared on Tico Bull and is republished here with permission.

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Please, Please Drive Careful This Holiday Season.

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Q HUMOUR – Please, please this December drive safely. Remember that there are those waiting for you.  Accidents like this can affect many.

choque-roble2

More than 700 bottles of beer were spilled in Robles de Puntarenas, on Saturday (Dec. 3), by a ‘ceverceria’ truck making deliveries.

choque-roble1

According to Jose Luis Jimenez, regional chief of the Policia de Transito (traffic police), the accident occurred around 9:00am, causing the closure of the El Roble – Caldera road for more than an hour. The cause of the accident was not known.

choque-roble3

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The Spirit of the Season in “Chepe”

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Getting into the holiday spirit in “Chepe” (San Jose).

This photo is going viral on the social media in Costa Rica.

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Turrialba Blew Its Stack This Morning After 5 Days Of No Activity

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The Turrialba volcano Wednesday morning
The Turrialba volcano Wednesday morning
The Turrialba volcano Wednesday morning photo from the Ovsicori

Q COSTA RICA NEWS – Following days of none and weeks of little activity, this Wednesday morning (Dec. 7), the Turrialba volcano made its presence felt again. The Volcanological and Seismological Observatory of Costa Rica (Ovsicori) reported ash fall in the some areas of the Central Valley, such as Guadalupe and San Pedro.

The morning activity was described as “weak but constant” by Ovsicori experts, who confirmed the winds blowing west towards the most populated area of the country.

From the Ovsicori
From the Ovsicori

The San Jose airport (SJO) did not report any presence of ash, the airport manager, Aeris, confirmed airport operations as being normal.

The volcano entered a “passive” phase of eruption on Tuesday, after five days of no activity. The eruptions reactivated in the early hours of Wednesday morning, a plume of ash and gas reaching 500 metres above the crater of the volcano.

The Ovsicori said it recorded some ash fall and the smell of sulfur in downtown San Jose, Tibás, Guadalupe, Coronado, Montes de Oca and San Francisco de Dos Ríos.

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The Best Places To Be An Expat: Costa Rica Is Sixth In The World

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Costa Rica is ranked 6th
Costa Rica is ranked 6th by Expat Insider of the Best & Worst Places for Expats in 2016
Costa Rica is ranked 6th by Expat Insider of the Best & Worst Places for Expats in 2016

Q COSTA RICA – Due to certain recent news in the United States (the election of Donald Trump), a large numbers of Americans have expressed interest in the idea of migration. Canada? Mexico? Costa Rica? Where could they go? How would they live?

The Expat Insider survey by Inter Nations – in its third consecutive year – is in-depth analysis of everyday expat life in more than 60 countries across the globe. More than 14,000 respondents representing 174 nationalities and 191 countries or territories took part and had their say on moving, living, and working abroad.

The winner of the Best & Worst Places for Expats in 2016 is newcomer Taiwan, followed by an aspiring Malta, Ecuador Mexico, New Zealand, Costa Rica, Australia, Austria, Luxemburg and Czech Republic, rounding out the top 10.

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Click on image to enlarge.

Kuwait, Greece, and Nigeria remain at the bottom of the pack.

The questions ranged in scope like Quality of Life, Ease of Settling In, Working Abroad, Family Life, Personal Finance, Cost of living, Work-life Balance, among other categories that help identify the good from the bad.

Our obvious focus is on Costa Rica, the land of Pura Vida, home of Salsa Lizano and the happiest people on the planet.

Costa Rica ranked high in the Quality of Life and Work-life Balance categories of the Expat Insider survey. The Pura Vida lifestyle is a big draw for many outsiders, but that doesn’t necessarily make it an easy place to live. Most of the work resides in the Central Valley’s Greater Metropolitan Area of San Jose (GAM). For beach lovers, the closest beaches, Playa Jaco and Puntarenas are an hour away, Manuel Antonio 90 minutes to two hours, and the Guanacaste beaches 3 hours or more. On the Caribbean side, Puerto Viejo de Limon can take up to 4 hours to reach.

But there is more to Costa Rica than just beaches: the rain forest, mountains, small towns, volcanoes and everything in between.

Costa Rica has two seasons, wet and dry. More politically the seasons are called “green” season that usually last six months, from May to November (though the rains have continued into December this year) and the “summer” from December to May, for most of the country, on the Caribbean side there is some variance in the months of the seasons.

Here is what InterNations has to say about Costa Rica. and how you can connect with like-minded  Canadian, American, German, Brits, French (among others) in expatriates in Costa Rica.

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Living Healthier in Costa Rica

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Q LIVING – One comment that I often receive from those who visit Costa Rica is that they feel healthier when they are here.

I think there are a number of factors that contribute to that feeling, but have no doubt that the number one reason people feel healthier is because they EAT healthier.

9021fThe Costa Rica diet focuses on many tropical fruits, legumes, seafood, and vegetables.

Most importantly those ingredients are almost always found fresh and people usually stay away from processed foods because they’re normally more expensive, they rarely taste as good no matter how many ‘food engineers’ are involved and they are less healthy.

Fortunately for me, my wife loves to cook, and perhaps more importantly our lifestyle provides time for her to cook.  While the fresh, delicious ingredients found in Costa Rica is key, it does little good if you are caught up with frantic pace typical of most in North America.

Part of living the Costa Rica lifestyle is not only taking the time to cook, but to sit down and enjoy your meals.  I remember scarfing down my lunches in 15 minutes so I could get back to work, or rushing to just grab a quick bite in the morning before hitting commuter traffic.

Needless to say that I’m happy that those days are gone for me.

And naturally, when you eat better, you feel better.  You sleep better, ailments start disappearing, you have more energy, its no wonder people feel healthier in Costa Rica.

So if you are looking for a change, let’s talk to see how we can help you start living this wonderful Costa Rica lifestyle.

Original article by David Karr appeared on Welovecostarica.com

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Costa Rica Legal Firm Offers Legal Services Online For Entrepreneurs

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offers legal services online for entrepreneurs
Among the online services offered , after making  making payment, getting a call back from a lawyer on civil, commercial and labour law issues
Among the online services offered , after making making payment, getting a call back from a lawyer on civil, commercial and labour law issues. Photo from the Legaloop website.

Q COSTA RICA – The Costa Rica legal firm Pacheco Coto is changing the way small to medium business entrepreneurs uses legal services and interacts with legal counsel, through its Legaloop digital platform.

By way of a computer of mobile device (smartphone or tablet, for example), after registering and completing basic personal data, the use can access forms and contracts, register a corporation, a trademark, obtain permits and licenses, and grant a power of attorney, among other services.

The services offered are divided into three types: for immediate delivery, such as in contracts and forms; deferred delivery, such as in incorporation, registrations and licenses that require the interaction with a lawyer; and quote for service, for items such as registering a trademark.

The costs for the immediate and most deferred delivery are established and paid for up front. To register a company, for example, the cost is US$500,  as a tax payer US$90. An employment contract is US$100, Power of Attorney, US$225. Quoted services include registration of intellectual property or trademark, where legal fees are based on complexity.

Need to talk to a lawyer? The user can request a 15 or 30 minute call. Once the request and payment has been made (up front US$40 for 15 minutes or US$75 for 30 minutes), the request is sent and the user will get a call back from a lawyer within 12 hours.

The website also offers an online chat where users can communicate with a customer service representatives (during working hours), in order to ask questions about the services.

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Doña Dona: The Small Business That Started With One Store And Now Has 17

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Q COSTA RICA – At only 24 years of age, Javier Becerra Kriebel, with the financial support of a silent partner, acquired Doña Dona, a small donut business founded in 1997 and at the time with only one store, in Multiplaza Escazu.

The year was 2004. Becerra wondered how a product “so good” only had one store. “We decided to take the reins of the business, seeing the potential of the product and the market and the acceptance it could have,” said Becerra.

Javier Becerra is the owner of this SME, which has around 43 employees.
Javier Becerra is the owner of Doña Dona, a small to medium business venture (PYMES the acronym in Spanish) which has 43 employees at its 17 stores around the San Jose area and its production plant in Lindora, Santa Ana

Little by little more stores were opened, mainly in shopping centres, the second store opened that year in 2004, in Mall Paseo de las Flores. The Heredia store opening was followed up with stores in the International Mall of Alajuela, Centro Comercial del Sur, Multicentro Desamparados and Plaza Rohrmoser.

Today, 12 years later, there are 17 Doña Dona locations, including two in the Parque de Diversiones.

With the opening of its newest store in Curridabat last month, Doña Dona is working with a new business model.

“We want to improve the customer experience, that the customer can choose different types of donuts, that have many combinations. We have an area of tables and chairs, and children play area,” said Becerra.

Becerra told ElFinancierocr.com that if the Curridabat model is a hit, it would be replicated in existing premises and in future openings.

Today, Doña Dona offers, apart from its main product of selling donuts, salty baked goods, cheese crab cakes, meat pies, chicken patties and iced coffee, among other items.

Doña Dona donuts also come in varying sizes and shapes and flavours, such as the Nutella filled chocolate donuts. “Our mission is to spread smiles, make people happy. We all deserve to be happy, (the purpose is) to get a smile on people when they bite into a donut,” said Becerra.

This PYMES (small and medium business venture) employs around 43 people in stores and the Lindora, Santa Ana production plant. Becerra said that he is analyzing venturing into other markets in Central America through franchising.

Source ElFinancierocr.com

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Costa Rica Deregulates Fixed Internet, International Calling

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327_001Q COSTA RICA NEWS – Costa Rica’s Superintendencia de Telecomunicaciones (Sutel) -Superintendency of Telecommunications – has confirmed that it will be removing all price regulations in four markets: international telephony, fixed internet, international roaming and telecommunications transit markets, because its intervention is no longer necessary due to effective competition.

The price deregulation is effective once the Sutel notice is published in La Gaceta, the official government newsletter, expected before the end of the month.

The Sutel said it will continue to act as a watchdog in the markets, overseeing the quality of services and intervening if any anti-competitive practices are detected. The regulator added that it will examine the possibility of eliminating price regulations in the postpaid mobile market in the first quarter of 2017.

The regulator explained that for competing markets, operators must maintain separate cost accounts for each service and make publicly available the information that it requests, in order to keep users informed about market rates.

In Costa Rica, there is a price cap model, which is why operators have requested that the freedom of competition be declared.

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The Legacy of Fidel Castro: A Millionaire Military Caste in Perpetual Power

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Fidel Castro died at 90 years of age on November 25, 2016

TODAY CUBA By Dr. Hilda Molina – Fidel Castro has died at 90 years of age. He ruled Cuba until his last breath. Since his false retirement, he continued to dominate Cuba’s political life. His brother Raúl never dared to make an important decision without consulting him. Fidel Castro passes on, leaving Cuba literally destroyed; and XXI Century Socialism, his dangerous creation,   has swept across much of Latin America.

I believe that he partially achieved his goals, but not all of them, since he had dreamed of dominating the world since adolescence. He destroyed, sowed hatred and subversion, led all the resentful the world; and thus achieved some of his essential aspirations: power, money, and the illusion of the true revolutionary who never really was.

And in this hour of reckoning, some observations on his legacy:

In 1958 Cuba welcomed with open arms people who emigrated from all continents and came to our beautiful island in search of a better life.

Fidel Castro, despite his socialist ideology, accumulated a massive fortune estimated at US$900 million (Flickr).

Today we are more than four million who make up the Cuban diaspora. Today we are more than four million Cubans who, far from the land that gave birth to us, try to survive spread throughout all regions of the world, while we remember our island with fond nostalgia.

In 1958 the intelligent and creative Cuban people dedicated their talents to create, to produce, to constantly improve, yearning to leave to its descendants a better Cuba.

Today Cubans are primarily occupied with basic survival, or finding a way to escape the nightmare that the country has suffered for more than half a century.

In 1958 the skilled hands of the Cubans, workers, peasants, professionals, and artists, worked diligently to produce prosperity and happiness.

Today, the Cuban people have been turned into beggars by the Castro dictatorship; we stand with our hands outstretched in a gesture of supplication, waiting for help that will be sent to us by some family member living abroad. And waiting to receive the gifts of foreigners, or suffer at the hands of unscrupulous tourists who amuse themselves at the expense of the humble Cuban people: when they distribute candy in the streets to the poor children of my country; when they seek sexual services from our children, adolescents, and young people; when they give hotel soap to the humble Cuban workers.

In 1958 the Cubans were prepared to die as Christian. Cubans planned to be buried next to the remains of our ancestors, on our dreamy island, that island of the generously fertile earth, that island of the whitest sands, that island of the bluest sky, and the most crystalline sea.

For almost fifty-eight years, thousands of Cubans have died like my mother, in distant countries that welcomed them as children, but far from the land that gave birth to them, and with the infinite longing for the homeland that Castro stole from them.

In 1958 Cubans were respected throughout the world.

Today, the international media, with few exceptions, and the free citizens of the civilized world, congratulate us when the fifty-year Castro dictatorship “gives” us the least bit of freedom. Like the supposed freedom to emigrated. They forget that we Cubans are legitimate children of the human family and as such we are entitled not to handouts or crumbs, but to all the rights and freedoms inherent to the human condition.

In 1958 the Cuban people were a people of faith, intelligence, generosity, forgiveness, and industriousness, devoted to their families and happy.

Today, almost fifty-eight years after the establishment of one of the longest and cruelest dictatorships in contemporary history, the Cuban people continue to suffer the dehumanizing effects of that dictatorship; violent rips and tears in the social fabric of society which ultimately is characterized by depersonalization: loss of self-esteem, horror, despair, disinterest, depletion, ethical moral and spiritual precariousness; the absence of ideals and a means for personal advancement.

Today, almost fifty-eight years after the arrival of Fidel Castro to power, our values have been erased. Castro destroyed the institution of the family. He abolished freedoms. He used hatred and fear as instruments of government. He tried to transform the generosity and natural call to service of the Cuban people, into servility to his sick regime.

Today, almost fifty-eight years after Fidel Castro’s arrival in power, the Cubans who dedicate our lives to working for a better Cuba weep as we see our childrens’ dreams reduced to rubble. We cry because this regime, legitimized by hypocrites on the left and right, has converted my country into a Cuba for the Castro dynasty and its generals; and also for foreigners.

We weep because after more than five decades of hardships and sacrifices, the end result is a country plunged into the most utter moral, ethical, civic, spiritual, economic, anthropological, and environmental destruction … The end result is a Cuba where vice and corruption have seeped into the regime at the highest levels; and where socio-economic inequalities, which reward crime and not merit, deeply wound the soul of the country.

I am convinced that very little will change in Cuba in terms of freedoms, human rights, values, and ethics. The regime has long prepared a carefully designed plan to perpetuate itself on the island and to expand its ideas and influence throughout Latin America. A multimillionaire military caste and members of the Castro Dynasty control all realms of Cuba: the government, the military, society, and the dollarized economy.

And that caste will vigorously defend the legacy of Fidel Castro: a symbiotic concoction in which wild military state capitalism and a Stalinist military dynastic dictatorship coexist. They will defend the status quo with force to guarantee the longevity of their power, and the enjoyment of the enormous fortunes that they have amassed, paid for by the blood and misery of the Cuban people.

However, I am also convinced that despite the massive damage they have inflicted upon us, good Cubans will continue to struggle because we will not forget the glorious history of our Nation. We will continue to fight because we will not forget the thousands of victims of Fidel Castro and his regime.

We will continue to struggle because we will not forget that we are legitimate children of the human family and therefore, we have the right to enjoy all rights and freedoms thereof. We will continue fighting; and despite the fifty-year dictatorship aided and abetted by foreign accomplices, with the help of God we will be able to restore dignity to our country.

Dr. Hilda Molina is a Doctor of Neurosurgery, and an advocate in defense of human rights.

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

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United States Presses Sale of Panamanian Newspapers

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TODAY PANAMA –  The pressures by the U.S. government on two Panamanian newspapers to sell their shares to third parties as the only way to remove extraterritorial sanctions have been revealed here today by the press.

‘The U.S. government has repeatedly explained the circumstances behind the administrative designation of the Waked Money Laundering Organization by the OFAC and the fact that there is a legal route to remove a company from the Clinton List’, a statement from the U.S. embassy said in the capital.

The document mentions the examples of three other companies owned by Abdul Waked, main shareholder of the newspapers La Estrella de Panama and El Siglo (GESE), which have been sold to third parties or have been in the process of doing so, as a solution to the restrictions on Waked imposed by the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC).

The note, spread by the local press, quoted President Juan Carlos Varela, who stated that the future of the mentioned newspapers is in the hands of its owner, and recalled the fate of two other entities that decided to sell.

GESA management warned yesterday of the possible disappearance of the media, including the oldest publication La Estrella (1853), and reiterated the decision of not selling to third parties.

The publishing corporation has so far worked under OFAC temporary licenses, the last of which will expire on January 6, and keeps in uncertainty about 250 employees of the organization, and the danger of losing an emblematic newspaper considered a heritage of the nation.

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

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Cargo Robberies in Northern Triangle Hamper Regional Commerce

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Image for illustrative purposes
Image for illustrative purposes
Image for illustrative purposes

Q24N – Criminal groups are stealing commercial shipments transiting Central America’s Northern Triangle, illustrating how insecurity in the region is negatively impacting regional trade.

A recent report from Nicaraguan news outlet El Nuevo Diario delves into the issue of highway robberies in the Northern Triangle countries of El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras, focusing particularly on the plight of Nicaraguan workers in the commercial transport sector.

Marvin Altamirano, the president of the Association of Nicaraguan Transporters (Asociación Nicaragüense de Transportistas – ANT), told El Nuevo Diario that half of the Nicaraguan drivers have refused to take cargo through the Northern Triangle due to concerns about insecurity, resulting in up to $5 million per month in lost revenue.

According to Altamirano, 67 Nicaraguan drivers have been murdered during highway robberies over the past six years.

One Nicaraguan driver who has refused to travel to the Northern Triangle said he was held up by alleged gang members in El Salvador. The suspects forced the driver out of the truck at gunpoint and made off with a shipment of sesame seeds he had been carrying.

Altamirano said that the costs of insecurity stem not only from the losses incurred when shipments are stolen but also from the extra security measures transport companies have had to adopt.

The president of the ANT said that security devices and monitoring systems have cost the transport industry tens of millions of dollars over the past decade, and that costs for security guards to accompany drivers can range from $100 to $1,500 per trip.

Increased security controls at the borders of the Northern Triangle countries have also imposed an added burden on shipping companies, Altamirano said.

In addition to contributing to the extremely high levels of violence seen in El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras, criminal activity in the Northern Triangle has also negatively affected these countries’ economies. Crime groups in the region, particularly gangs, are estimated to extract tens of millions of dollars each year from extorting a wide range of businesses — including transportation companies — often with the complicity or active involvement of corrupt security officials and, at times, the employees.

The theft of commercial shipments represents yet another lucrative source of revenue for crime groups with damaging economic consequences. And it is not only shipments into, out of or within the Northern Triangle that are affected. Transport vehicles simply passing through the region have also been targeted. According to El Nuevo Diario, Guatemalan authorities recently discovered evidence of a robbery of a truck carrying school supplies from Mexico to Nicaragua.

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Drug War Makes Mexico World’s Third Most Dangerous Country

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Q24N – Mexico was ranked the third most dangerous country in the world recently due to the violence created by drug-related organized crime.

The Crime Rate Index for 2016 was released this month by consulting firm Verisk Maplecroft, listing Afghanistan as the most dangerous country in the world, followed by Guatemala, Mexico, Iraq and Syria, among others. Venezuela, El Salvador, Somalia and Pakistan appeared lower on the list.
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Mexico placed higher than seven countries currently at war.

The report said violence in Mexico is generated by drug cartels, which regularly commit crimes like kidnapping, robbery, extortion and murder. To make matters worse, Mexico is not a strong constitutional country, the report said.

“In Mexico and Central America, Verisk Maplecroft identified the prevalence of drug trafficking organizations as the principal engine of crime, which it estimates will cost the country USD $200 billion per year. The widespread presence of drug cartels has stimulated some high levels of drug transportation routes to consumers of more developed countries,” the report said.

Violence in Mexico is sustained by an institutional crisis that can be defined by a weak rule of law. Criminal groups have taken advantage of institutional weakness to further their interests.

mexico-acapulco-drug-war

“The overwhelming proportion of crime in Mexico is focused within the highly lucrative drugs trade, which has also had serious consequences for the rule of law, due to the coercion of the government, the judiciary and local police forces by the powerful drug trafficking organizations,” the report said.

For consulting analyst Grant Sunderland, the advances made by President Peña Nieto on security policy have begun to recede as murder rates are on the rise again.

The scene where a man was killed on a street of Acapulco, Guerrero State, Mexico is seen on April 15, 2016. Guerrero is one of Mexico's poorest and most violent states, where a lucrative drug trade exists.  / AFP / Pedro Pardo        (Photo credit should read PEDRO PARDO/AFP/Getty Images)
The scene where a man was killed on a street of Acapulco, Guerrero State, Mexico is seen on April 15, 2016. Guerrero is one of Mexico’s poorest and most violent states, where a lucrative drug trade exists. / AFP / Pedro Pardo (Photo credit should read PEDRO PARDO/AFP/Getty Images)

The list also classifies El Salvador, Colombia and Venezuela as countries under “extreme risk.” That makes Latin America the most dangerous region on the planet when it comes to violent crimes.

Source: The Huffington Post México

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Despite a Week of Ceremony in Cuba, Dislike for Fidel Castro Still Shines Through

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Many have stayed quiet over the death of the Cuban dictator.

Many have stayed quiet over the death of the Cuban dictator.

TODAY CUBA – Despite that Cuba has said goodbye to Fidel Castro, paying tributes for an entire week with millions showing their remorse for the fallen leader of the island, some experts say the sadness is not so widespread.

According to political scientist Armando Chaguaceda, those who are really mourning are a small minority of older citizens, though an important group nonetheless.

“It always happens that people mourn when a charismatic leader is lost,” he said. “Even in the decline of his life and work.”

The political scientist also explained that the Cuban government will try to take advantage of the dictator’s death to consolidate further power on the island, as happened when Hugo Chavez died in Venezuela in 2013.

“The intention to create a metaphysical cult to prevail for the regime in power was a strategy for Chavismo in 2013 when Venezuela used the slogan, ‘I am Chavez,’ a slogan that is now repeated with Fidel’s name.”

Those that don’t feel that mourning are fragmented and hidden,” Chaguaceda said. “But there are surely more of them.”

Member of the opposition Joanna Columbié said mobilizations have been as expected.

“One part attends to fulfill an obligation and the other does it out of respect and solidarity.”

“In the long run Fidel is a very controversial politician who leaves a multifaceted legacy with errors as well as achievements,” said Pavel Gómez, a member of the group Cuba Possible. “At the time of his death I think that many people try not to forget the social transformation that he produced in Cuba and the advances on this front. He is a symbol for many Cubans, despite his failures.”

Opposition organizations like the Patriotic Union of Cuba have already denounced attacks by extremists acting out against those who have refused to pay tribute to the dictator.

“A lot of people have been living their entire lives in a state of confront,” said human rights activist Claudio Fuentes. “There is a gratitude in the masses as a kind of conformity — a kind of stockholm syndrome at its worst.”

Source: La Nación.

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

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Caracas Named the World’s Most Violent City. Again.

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TODAY VENEZUELA – Yet another report has named Caracas, Venezuela the world’s most dangerous city.

Caracas, the capital of Venezuela, outranked San Pedro Sula in Honduras as the world’s most violent city in 2015. (El Confidencial)
Caracas, the capital of Venezuela, outranked San Pedro Sula in Honduras as the world’s most violent city in 2015. (El Confidencial)

The Mexican NGO Citizen’s Council for Public Security and Criminal Justice recently released a list of 50 cities from across the world that are the most dangerous, and Caracas topped the list, with 42 others appearing on the list beside two from the United States and two from Africa.

The list did not feature a single city from Europe, as the number of homicides does not compare with that of cities in Latin America.

The CCSPJP’s investigation revealed that since 2015, Caracas has been the most dangerous, with 120 deaths per every 100,000 residents. Second on the list is San Pedro de Sula, Honduras. Following these were San Salvador, Acapulco, Maturín (Venezuela), Distrito Central, Honduras, Valencia and Palmira, Colombia.

Brazil had the most “violent cities” on the list, with 21. Venezuela has eight, though they weren’t just considered “violent,” but also “dangerous.”

In the United States, St. Louis was name the most violent in the country, following by Baltimore and New Orleans. Additionally, the study showed that in 2015, homicides increased at an alarming rate in Milwaukee and Washington.

Europe did not appear in these classifications due to the low number of homicides. Instead, the region was evaluated by level of security. The city of Rostov,  Russia topped the list as the most dangerous followed by Italia, Bari, Turin and Naples. After these were Masella and Lille in France and Conventry in Great Britain.

More than 50 percent of the world population lives in these 50 cities, the report said. One hundred and sixteen years ago only 10 percent of the total population lives in urban areas. The migration from rural to urban centers has increased each year, and is expected to reach 55 percent by 2050, according to the London School of Economics.

Source: El País

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

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French Government Corrects Minister: Cuba is not a Democracy

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france-castro-funeral-1The French government was forced to clarify controversial comments made by Ségolène Royal, Minister of Ecology, who, on December 5, while representing France at Fidel Castro‘s funeral, stated that there are no political prisoners in Cuba.

TODAY CUBA – French government spokesman Stéphane Le Foll stressed that “Cuba is not a democracy and there have been problems related to various freedoms for a long time.”

The statement directly contradicts the Minister of Ecology, who also represented the Socialist Party in French presidential elections.

The French government spokesman did not mince his words, noting, “There is no democracy in Cuba, there never has been,” Le Foll said in an interview with France Info when queried about Royal’s suggestion, which generated significant controversy and condemnation in France.

During the tribute to Castro, Royal said that in Cuba “when the international community requests a list of political prisoners, there are none.”

Additionally, the second in command of the French government, Prime Minister Manuel Valls, argued that “there is a lot of misinformation” about the Cuban regime, before pointing out that it will be up to historians to evaluate Castro’s legacy and recognize that the “problem” of human rights must be solved.

Le Foll framed Ségolène Royal’s comments in the context of “pain” caused by the late leader’s passing, but he did not spare the opportunity to criticize Royal as well, arguing that “she could have waited.”

The government spokesman made an effort to reiterate the French position that “Cuba has begun a fragile and timid transition” and that French President François Hollande has expressed his willingness to “accompany and support this process” .

François Bayrou, president of the center-right party Modem, also criticized the Royal’s statement, deeming it “worse than a political mistake.”

For his part, a reformist ecologist member of Parliament, François de Rugy, asked the “President of the Republic to condemn these statements about Cuba” which he has come to consider “contrary to the values of France.”

François Bayrou, also added that it was an even ore serious matter because Royal was speaking “in the name of France.”

Sources: Martí Noticias; Hispan TV.

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

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Billionaire Carlos Slim Sees Big Potential for Mexico in Trump Era

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For Carlos Slim, Donald Trump could be a blessing for Mexico’s economy. (Periódico Divergente)
For Carlos Slim, Donald Trump could be a blessing for Mexico’s economy. (Periódico Divergente)
For Carlos Slim, Donald Trump could be a blessing for Mexico’s economy. (Periódico Divergente)

Q24N – Mexico business magnate and President of Grupo Carso, Carlos Slim, said he sees good opportunities for revitalizing Mexico’s economy in President-elect Donald Trump’s campaign promises.

The businessman made the comments during his appearance at a Bloomberg forum focused on Mexico in 2017, during which he said, “Mexico must turn to look toward Mexico. It’s necessary to address the internal market first.”

With regards to the victory of Donald Trump in the United States, he said it could be good news for Mexico if he were successful in carrying out his campaign promises.

“If (the United States) really grows four percent, lowers taxes on the middle class, it would be fantastic for Mexico, so the United States population would have more capacity for consuming goods and services that Mexico exports to the country.”

Silm said Mexico could see growth as large as five percent, but for this to happen, it requires internal investment of US $250 billion, which can be achieved through partnership between the public and private sector.

“It would be more worrying for the President-elect of the United States Donald Trump, if it were Americans in place of Mexicans.”

The multimillionaire said he doesn’t expect changes in the value of the country’s assets in the United States during Trump’s adminstration, which will begin January 20. He added that he likes Trump’s infrastructure plans overall.

Slim, also the Head of telecommunication company America Movil, assured everyone he will not be President of Mexico, and that corruption should be one of the central topics of the next election.

Source: El Economista.

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