Wednesday, April 15, 2026
Home Blog Page 504

‘Machismo Is Very Strong Here’

0
Protests against child sexual abuse erupted in Asuncion, Paraguay’s capital, after the Mainumby case. Photograph: Cesar Olmedo/AP
Students at the Mbaracayú school are taught about their sexual and reproductive health. Photograph: Toby Sterling Hill
Students at the Mbaracayú school are taught about their sexual and reproductive health. Photograph: Toby Sterling Hill

(Q24N) At the end of a 20km red dirt track winding through a rainforest in eastern Paraguay, lies a secondary school for girls providing a source of hope in a country that has a notorious reputation when it comes to women’s rights.

Paraguay has one of the highest teen pregnancy rates in the region, but a rural school is teaching girls about their rights, and more radically, sex education.

“Machismo is very strong here,” says Palmira Mereles, as she scrapes the dirt from a freshly unearthed root vegetable, a manioc, in the school’s garden. “Only men have a voice. Women aren’t encouraged to have dreams or opinions.”

Now 21, Mereles was part of the first year group to study at the Mbaracayú Education Center when it opened in 2009. Built by the NGO Fundación Paraguaya, it aims to tackle precisely the problems she points to: the issues of gender equality in this small landlocked country.

It has been a year since Paraguay’s strict abortion laws were brought to international attention when a 10-year-old girl was denied a termination. The girl, known as “Mainumby”, was allegedly raped by her stepfather, but abortion in the predominantly Catholic country is only legal if the mother’s life is at risk. Amnesty International describes these laws as “draconian”, and despite repeated requests from the girl’s mother, protests within the country and across the world, the authorities refused to allow it.

This was not an isolated incident. Teen pregnancy rates are among the highest in the region. More than one in 20 girls under 20 have given birth (pdf); and in rural areas, like the Atlantic forest, a quarter of these girls are aged 14 or under. As a result, many are unable to finish their education.

“Gender discrimination is common across Paraguay,” says Celsa Acosta, the school’s founding director. “Poverty is desperate, particularly in rural areas, and girls suffer the worst consequences. We wanted to help them take control of their own lives.”

Protests against child sexual abuse erupted in Asuncion, Paraguay’s capital, after the Mainumby case. Photograph: Cesar Olmedo/AP
Protests against child sexual abuse erupted in Asuncion, Paraguay’s capital, after the Mainumby case. Photograph: Cesar Olmedo/AP

Activists have often come up against the country’s traditional Catholic background. Gloria Rubín who was Paraguay’s minister for women when the school was built, produced a sex education handbook to be distributed to Paraguayan secondary schools. But the church organised protests against it, and the book was withdrawn. When she later travelled around teaching the handbook directly to teachers across Paraguay, the church pursued her with demonstrations, she says. “We were treated like a house of witches.”

The school sits in an isolated clearing surrounded by the Mbaracayú reserve, which protects the largest surviving fragment of Atlantic forest in Paraguay (only 7% of the original forest remains). The small campus is scattered with dormitories, classrooms and thickets of lofty palms. Alongside the vegetable garden where they grow potatoes, maize, courgettes and peanuts, there’s a livestock farm, hotel rooms, and a tourist trail winding into the undergrowth.

In this richly fertile yet vulnerable area, the school aims to grow these girls into leaders of sustainable development in their communities. They are taught techniques for agribusinesses and IT skills, which is particularly unique for indigenous communities. Alongside the national curriculum, they can also study a range of vocations, including textiles, tourism and environmental management. More radically, they provide programmes on gender, self-esteem, and sex education.

Sex education across the country is “inadequate” according to Rubín. “It’s taught from the perspective of the Catholic church, which means it’s stuck in the 19th century,” she says. Yet it has a central role at the Mbaracayú school. Girls are taught about their sexual and reproductive rights on a weekly basis, in what the school describes as “orientation” classes focusing on their physical and psychological health.

“I became pregnant very young, because I lacked the information to know any better,” school founder Acosta explains. “It really marked me as a person. I decided then to make sure girls of the next generation have access to the information that I never did.

“We teach about contraception and ensure girls understand their own fertility,” she continues. “But just as important, in a macho culture, is cultivating their self-esteem. They need to know what they want and be able to assert it in their relationships.”

The school also gives a second chance to girls who previously dropped out of education. Elva Gomez, 19, lives and studies here with her four-year-old daughter.

“Before coming here, I thought I’d just stay at home and look after Romina,” she says. “But now I want to finish my studies and train to be a nurse.”

The Mbaracayú school hopes that girls will be able to better support themselves and their families with the qualifications and skills they offer. Students from indigenous communities study for free, while most Paraguayan families pay 100,000 guaraní a month (£12). And though many parents of local indigenous communities were initially sceptical about this progressive school, most are now keen for their daughters to study there after witnessing its benefits – two graduates of the 2011 class are now primary school teachers in their communities.

Students are also encouraged to apply for university scholarships, both within the country and abroad. Mereles studied agricultural sciences in Costa Rica, before returning to teach and run the vegetable garden.

“I’ve known many girls who didn’t want to continue studying,” she says. “They didn’t believe they could achieve anything. But over time their attitudes change. They become much more confident.”

With the school’s drop out rate at just 9% compared to 17% throughout the region, there is a new generation of girls from the heart of the Mbaracayú forest who are gaining the confidence to fight for their rights – and the potential for change in the rest of the country is perhaps within reach.

Original article was published at TheGuardian.com

- A word from our sponsors -

China Donates To Costa Rica Airplanes To Fight Crime and For Use in Humanitarian Aid

0
President Luis Guillermo Solis holding a model plane of the airplanes just outside donated by China
President Luis Guillermo Solis holding a model plane of the airplanes just outside donated by China
President Luis Guillermo Solis on Monday holding a model plane of the airplanes donated by China. The ceremony that included the airplanes was held at the Base 2 of the Juan Santamaria (San Jose) airport.

(QCOSTARICA) Through a donation by the government of China, Costa Rica now has two new airplanes for the transport of police for the fight against organized crime and drug trafficking, as well as ambulance and humanitarian aid.

The two planes, with the tail numbers MSP009 and MSP010, are now part of the Air Surveillance Service (Dirección del Servicio de Vigilancia Aérea – SVA) of the Ministry of Public Security (MSP).

china-donated-panes1112

The donated planes are valued at US$13.4 million dollars.

Each twin-engined (Canadian build motors) aircraft, manufactured by the Aviation Industry Corporation of China (AVIC) and can fly more than five hours continuously, at a cruise speed of 234 kilometers per hour (130 knots), at a ceiling of 23,00 feet and  can transport up to 17 people. They can also carry loads of up to 2,000 lbs and up to six stretchers  and four doctors for emergency evac operations.

china-donated-panes1115

The aircraft are new, built this year.

china-donated-panes1116

The donation ceremony that took place on Monday at the Juan Santamaria airport, Base 2, was negotiated in January 2015 during an official visit to China by President Luis Guillermo Solis.

According to the director of Air Surveillance, Juan Luis Vargas, the donation by the government of Xi Jinping, also includes two containers of spare parts and three technicians who will be in Costa Rica for up to a year to provide support, bringing the total donation to US$18 million dollars.

china-donated-panes1117

“There are only two reasons why the aircraft are here. The first is the generosity of the government of China (…). And the decision of both governments to undertake a path of strategic connection as never before had.

“The second reason, perhaps the most important as far for Costa Rica, beyond the extraordinary generosity of the people and the People’s Government of China are women and men who make up the Air Surveillance Service … because they put their life at risk every time they fly with equipment not always updated, not always safe to do so to defend the country from the clutches of international crime and they do also to assist our brothers and sisters in health problems or emergencies,” justified President Solis.

china-donated-panes1119

According to the Casa Presidencial website, four pilots and six mechanics of the SVA spent six weeks in China in training, that included flight operations, maintenance and repair of the aircraft.

china-donated-panes1118

The Minister of Security, Gustavo Mata said, “The planes will bring benefits to citizens, as they have conditions to perform work that allow us to further strengthen all actions of police to ensure security, such as operating in different parts of the country.”

china-donated-panes1113 china-donated-panes1109 china-donated-panes1114

- A word from our sponsors -

Costa Rica Among NY Times “20 Places To Travel In Your 20s”

0
ead to Frenchmen Street in New Orleans for live music. Credit Mario Tama/Getty Images
One of Costa Rica’s many rain forests, as seen from a hot-air balloon. Credit Toh Gouttenoire for The New York Times
One of Costa Rica’s many rain forests, as seen from a hot-air balloon. Credit Toh Gouttenoire for The New York Times

(QTRAVEL) Costa Rica is number 17 on the New York Times travel of “20 places to travel in your 20s”. The article, published on October 20 is part of a series aimed at helping twentysomethings navigate life’s opportunities and challenges.

 Tourists wait for the driver for a car tour around Revolution Square in central Havana. Credit Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
Tourists wait for the driver for a car tour around Revolution Square in central Havana. Credit Mauricio Lima for The New York Times

“There’s no better way to change your perception of the world — and maybe yourself — than travel.” writes Dan Saltzstein. “You’ll experience different cultures, meet new friends and make lifelong memories. But traveling in your 20s poses challenges (…),” continues the article that leaves out the obvious classic cities of New York, Paris, London.

Why Costa Rica? “Rain forests teeming with wildlife, two coasts peppered with reasonably priced eco-resorts and creative ways to get around (horseback riding and rafting, for example). Flights from the United States tend to be reasonable,” stresses Saltzstein.

In the list other destinations such as Prague (Czech Republic), Cuba, Amsterdam, Patagonia (Argentina), New Orleans, Berlin, Montreal, Vietnam, Budapest, Barcelona, Morocco appear, among others.

ead to Frenchmen Street in New Orleans for live music. Credit Mario Tama/Getty Images
Head to Frenchmen Street in New Orleans for live music. Credit Mario Tama/Getty Images

“Think of this selection of 20 places as a list to fulfill as a starter kit to travel the world,” says the newspaper.

In recent years, prestigious newspapers in Europe and America have made Costa Rica one of the most booming tourist destinations in the world.

In the Blue Lagoon outside Reykjavik, Iceland. Credit Olivier Morin/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
In the Blue Lagoon outside Reykjavik, Iceland. Credit Olivier Morin/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

The destinations on the list are (in order in the article):

  1. A national park
  2. Prague
  3. Oaxaca, Mexico
  4. Cuba
  5. Amsterdam
  6. Patagonia, Argentina
  7. New Orleans
  8. Berlin
  9. Montreal
  10. Vietnam
  11. Budapest
  12. New Zealand
  13. Iceland
  14. Barcelona
  15. California coast
  16. Morocco
  17. Costa Rica
  18. A Greek island that’s not Mykonos, Ios or Santorini
  19. Lisbon
  20. The Croatian coast
- A word from our sponsors -

Texas Tech University Breaks Ground On Costa Rica Campus

0
Ground breaking ceremony. Photo from Casa Presidencial
Ground breaking ceremony. Photo from Casa Presidencial
Ground breaking ceremony. Photo from Casa Presidencial

(QCOSTARICA) Texas Tech University (TTU) has begun construction of its first campus in Costa Rica. The construction will be in three phases, the first to be ready in December 2017, a total of 3.321 square metres (35,700 square feet).

The university expects to be inaugurating, in the first quarter of 2018, educational programs in electrical engineering, industrial engineering, computer sciences, mathematics, hotel and restaurant management, among others.

“The academic programs of high quality that will be offered on the campus of Costa Rica, directly benefit students in Central and Latin America, while simultaneously expanding the footprint and academic influence of Texas Tech on the world stage,” said Mike Galyean , rector of the University.

The campus is located in Avenida Escazu, in Escazu, next to the CIMA hospital, a private hospital affiliated with the Dallas (Texas) based Baylor University Medical Centre. The TTU  and will have a capacity for 1,300 students. Classes will be taught by professors from Texas, as well as local and students, to enroll must be fluent in English, since all programs are in that language.

As to the cost, the University explained that will be “more than the cost of American-international institutions in San Jose, but less than an enrollment abroad in US universities with accommodation and food.” However, students may also apply for a scholarship program, which is based on merit.

The university says it the investment in the campus is US$15 million dollars.

According to Casa Presidencial the decision by TTU came about following a personal visit to Texas by President Solis back in 2015.

- A word from our sponsors -

Government Gives Up On Regulating Uber

0

(QCOSTARICA) President Luis Guillermo Solis announced his government will not take action against Uber until the courts have resolved a number of issues regarding open competitition in the taxi industry.

Solis explained that the Constitutional Court and the Contentious Court (Sala Constitucional and the Tribunal Contencioso) need to resolve several filings proposing to remove the existing monopoly in the Taxi Act, that would allow open competition.

luis-guillermo
President Luis Guillermo Solis announced his government will not take action against Uber until the courts have resolved a number of issues regarding open competitition in the taxi industry. File photo.

The decision or better, the lack of action on the part of the government, has the formal taxi drivers angry. Just last week a group formal taxi drivers once again took to the streets in protest against Uber and the government for doing nothing.

Uber arrived in Costa Rica in August 2015, creating a revolution in the private transport of persons, going head-to-head with formal and informal taxi drivers who, to the complaint of users, have refused to provide a better service.

Following the arrival of Uber formal and informal taxi drivers have taken to the streets in protest. On a few occasions the protest turned violent, taxi drivers in confrontation with police. Also a number of Uber drivers report being attacked by taxi drivers.

 

Meanwhile, the government has being dallying, promising action, but doing nothing to resolve the situation. The announcement puts the issue in the deep freezer.

“The government will take all decisions it needs to take once the legal entities, the Sala IV and the Contentious Court, resolve the issue of Uber’s operation in the country,” said Solis.

The President explained that the current regulations “would indicate that Uber cannot operate,” but they (the government) cannot act on the regulation.

“We would be acting outside the law (…) The rules of the State are being overtaken by technology itself. Two people agree to a transacted service. This is unprecedented!” said the president.

The court resolutions may take up to 15 months of more, leaving the possibility that the Uber problem most likely will be passed on to a new governor in 2018.

The online ride service seems to have found a market in Costa Rica. According to Uber it has more than 5,000 drivers operating in the country, with tens of thousands of customers using their service regularly.

This has caught the attention of Uber competitors.

One of them is Cabify, announcing earlier this month its touching down in Costa Rica. Although Cabify has yet to come out in force, the app(lication) already includes San Jose in its service coverage.

- A word from our sponsors -

No Soup For You!

0

TICO BULL by Rico – After almost 20 years of Costa Rica, I came across the latest annoying and asinine thing: a hotel requiring ID (identification) to enter their parking lot. Yes, parking lot.

Let me explain.

nosoupforyou
The ‘Soup Nazi’ from Seinfeld

With the exception of a few, the majority of hotels in Costa Rica, at the entrance of the parking lot have a guard with a clipboard to write down the license plate number. Most will ask your name and reason for visiting. Not one, until now, has ever asked me to produce ID.

On Sunday, at the Villas del Rio Apartotel & Suites in Escazu visitors need ID to get past the guard.

“No soup for you,” is the first thing come to mind, memories of Seinfeld’s ‘Soup Nazi’.

It has been some time since I’ve been at this hotel, in the past only the routine questions for picking up or dropping of passengers.

This Sunday morning was different. I refused, and drop through the short distance to the reception. This is when a second guard, also with a clipboard, comes up to me and also asks for my ID.

Again I refused.

Reasoning with this person was futile, all he could say is that “it is hotel policy”, he hasn’t been to places like the Intercontinental or Sheraton, only a few blocks away, to know what the policy is there. There isn’t any. You drive into the parking lot, you reach the lobby. No one asks questions, less ID.

I tried, albeit uncessful, to explain I am here to visit one one of the guests. Not checking in (where it would then be mandatory to produce ID).

No, I needed ID.

“Do you want me to leave?”, I ask. “No, just need your ID,” the response. Repeat a few times.

I could have shown my ID, but it was a matter of principle. I am routinely at hotels, part of my professional driver services and have NEVER, EVER, been asked for ID enter a parking lot. Yet this piss off little place that calls themselves a hotel demanded ID to enter their parking lot.

Not to continue the pointless discussion, I left. Time to write my story.

But, before sitting down at the my keyboard I went over it in my mind. What had changed? I called on a couple of my drivers if they had they experienced anything this absurd. All answers came back negative.

Villas del Rio is now on my BULL radar. I could never recommend this hotel to anyone, will certainly not be bringing them any customers any time soon.

As to you, the reader, why would you want to stay there and subject your visitors to such abuse?

I have written the hotel (contact their website) for an explanation. Still waiting on a response.

Article first appeared on TICO BULL, reposted with permission.

- A word from our sponsors -

Cinchona Bus Crash Claims 14th Victim

0
ps://www.facebook.com/javier.porrasvargas
ps://www.facebook.com/javier.porrasvargas
All photos from Facebook

(QCOSTARICA) The “Cinchona bus crash” claimed another life, the fourteenth victim, Zulay Villalobos, who died in hospital this morning (Monday)

Priscilla Balmaceda, assistant medical director at the San Vicente de Paul hospital in Heredia, confirmed the death, explaining the woman died from serious injuries sustained to her abdomen and chest.

Villalobos was taken immediately following the crash Thursday morning to the San Carlos hospital and transferred to the San Vicente de Paul on Saturday.

On the social media, published are photos of some of the victims, taken by Javier Porras Vargas  of the Universidad Nacoinal (UNA) at the Las Delicias soda before the group boarded the bus that lost control while negotiating the curve known as “El Codo del Diablo” (The Devil’s Elbow).

Eleven passengers on the fatal bus died at the scene in Chinchona, near the El Angel factory. Another died in hospital on Thursday, the thirteenth victim on Saturday. Another 18 were injured in the crash, several remain in serious condition in various hospitals in Greater Metropolitan Area (GAM) of San Jose.

14729345_1251512808224221_6201134434537730592_n 14720449_1251512944890874_8401585949929623203_n 14656444_1251513291557506_6363943729125371639_n 14568148_1251515078223994_6578531667462413295_n 14708115_1251514374890731_1588301867146783567_n 14572350_1251513921557443_2350170610430250624_n 14572961_1251516038223898_1191416322064451258_n 14690892_1251513768224125_2013176649910546395_n 14720474_1251513458224156_275256871012646368_n 14666309_1251515501557285_6372444463525423123_n

- A word from our sponsors -

Canadian Island Short On People Offers Jobs and Land To Move There

0
This company located in Cape Breton island in Nova Scotia is offering jobs and land to anyone who is willing to move there. Photo from Facebook
This company located in Cape Breton island in Nova Scotia is offering jobs  and land to anyone who is willing to move there. Photo from Facebook
This company located in Cape Breton island in Nova Scotia is offering jobs and land to anyone who is willing to move there. Photo from Facebook

(QCOSTARICA) Many expats in Costa Rica swear they’re moving away from the country. Too expensive, too much corruption, too much of this, that and not enough of the other are some of the comments posted on the social media and heard spoken in conversations in local bars and gathering places.

Moving to another country is a daunting process, one that many have already done by coming to Costa Rica, but a company in Canada may have the solution to expats in Costa Rica and anyone else fed up with their current lifestyle.

Not a Costa Rica beach. Photo from Facebook
Not a Costa Rica beach. Photo from Facebook

Putting the immigration process aside, the company has the solution to the logistics of finding a job and a place to live. In fact, they will not only pay you to work for them and a place to live on free land that becomes yours.

The company is the  Farmer’s Daughter Country Market in Cape Brenton island, in Nova Scotia, on the Canadian side of the United States. Farmer’s Daughter is offering a job and 2 acres of land for anyone willing to move there and work for them.

Definitely not in Costa Rica. Photo from Facebook
Definitely not in Costa Rica. Photo from Facebook

And after hiring everyone qualified to work for them that they could, the turned to the social media (Facebook) to make the enticing offer. “We are an established business in the heart of Cape Breton, rich in jobs, land, and potential, but no people,” the ad says.

“We are an established business in the heart of Cape Breton, rich in jobs, land, and potential, but no people,” says the Facebook page.

14117867_1144338112305428_8392652926799956618_n

“Are you someone who is looking to live a simpler life, close to nature, in an area that still believes in community meals and weekly jam sessions? We can’t give you big money, but we can give you an awesome life,” continues the ad.

The only catch, as we said earlier, you have to work for the company for at least five years before being given legal ownership of the land.

14191930_1144338185638754_2267211830476550148_n

The bonus of working and living in Canada is free healthcare. And although Costa Rica’s are the happiest people on the planet, Canadians are described as a “more jovial” people, that come included in the Farmer’s Daughter’s offer.

Interested? Just fill out the application.

- A word from our sponsors -

An Industrial Policy for Nicaragua

0
A woman prepares tobacco leaves at a cigar factory in Esteli, 140 km north of Managua
A woman prepares tobacco leaves at a cigar factory in Esteli, 140 km north of Managua

(Today Nicaragua) A strategy focused on increasing competitiveness by reducing production costs and facilitating the creation of added value is what industrial enterprises have asked for.

Improving training in the use of new tools and technology and giving more value to final production are two of the main challenges faced by companies in the industrial sector. The union that brings them together is aware that the potential of the country in this sector can not be maximized if aspects affecting global competitiveness are not improved.

In the case of use and access to technology, explained Miguel Duarte, representing the Bread union in Cadin, lack of awareness on the part of small businesses prevents them, for example, from benefiting from tax exemptions. “… ‘To give you an example: In order to access the list of products in the baking sector that are exempt from taxes you have to, as well as accessing a web site, submit an annual business plan. Previously this used to be done by hand and reported to the Mific, but now it is electronic and many people find it difficult to do this,” said Duarte.” This leads to a lot of people “… losing access to purchase of raw materials duty free, ‘and that raises the cost, price and takes us out of the market after competing with businesses that are more profitable.’”

Generating added value is another of the aspects that in the opinion of the Chamber of Industries of Nicaragua (Cadin) should be considered in the development and implementation of an industrial policy. Juan Carlos Amador, director of Cadin, told Laprensa.com.ni: “… “We have done studies to determine not only the demands of the sector, but also measures that we can implement to make any line of business that is part of the small or large industry more profitable at the national level’.”

Source Centralamericandata.com

- A word from our sponsors -

Plane Crash Off Costa Rica’s Pacific Coast Halts Production Of ‘Made In Chelsea’

0
Photo Andres Garita / La Nacion

(QCOSTARICA) Made in Chelsea has been cancelled after four members of the crew filming in Costa Rica, were in a plane that crashed in the Pacific ocean Wednesday afternoon.

Bad weather is being blamed for the crash, as the plane, a Cessna 210 with the call TI-AUJ and registered to the local charter airline CarmonAir, was making its approach to land in Tambor. Authorities said the plane crashed some 400 metres from the landing strip.

Photo Andres Garita / La Nacion
Photo Andres Garita / La Nacion

The show was due to begin filming at a luxury resort.

No-one was killed in the crash.

The Servicio Nacional de Guardacostas (SNG) – Costa Rica Coast Guard –  was able to reach the downed plane, pulling the passengers and pilot before the plane sank some 2 kilometres (about 1.5 miles) from shore, aboard the rescue boat.

Photo Andres Garita / La Nacion
Photo Andres Garita / La Nacion

The plane, built in 1977, had left the Juan Santamaria (San Jose) airport 25 minutes earlier.

operativo-nicoya-guardacostas-ministerio-seguridad_lncima20161019_0151_1

The cast members and the rest of the crew were flying separately.

An E4 spokesperson said: “Four of our production team on Made in Chelsea, produced by Monkey Kingdom, were involved in a plane crash earlier today (UK time) in a resort in Costa Rica. We can confirm that all four people and the pilot are safe and unhurt. No cast were on board.

“We are grateful to the emergency services in Costa Rica for their assistance in this serious incident. We have taken immediate steps to ensure those involved have every support locally and our priority is to return all cast and crew home.

“We ask that the privacy of everyone involved in Made in Chelsea, both on and off-screen, is respected over the coming days.”

made-in-chelsea-nyc-final-group

Made in Chelsea (abbreviated MIC) is a BAFTA award-winning, structured-reality television series broadcast by E4 in the United Kingdom, chronicling the lives of affluent young people in the West London areas of Belgravia, Kings Road, and Knightsbridge as well as their travels to other locations including Dubai, Finland, Marrakech, Verbier, Saint-Tropez, Venice, New York City, Barbados, Los Angeles, Las Vegas and the South of France.

- A word from our sponsors -

With Broomstick Unforgiving Waitress Fights Off Armed Robbers in Guanacaste

0

broostick-attack1083
(QCOSTARICA) One man armed, the other with his face covered, entered the Pollolandia restaurant in Philadelphia, Carrillo, in Guanacaste after closing to rob the place. But they got a surprise, an unforgiving waitress attacks them with her broom she was using for clean up.

broostick-attack1087

In the video released by the OIJ, we see two men roll up the steel curtain, entering the restaurant after closing.

broostick-attack1084

The armed man threatens the employees, while the masked man head straight for the cash register. Wham, the waitress smacks the man from behind, over his back so hard that the broomstick broke.
broostick-attack1082

The robbers frightened by the response of the waitress, ran off. However, they got away with ¢80,000 colones in cash.

The robbery occurred on September 15. The OIJ released the video on October 11 to help find the attackers.

Watch the video.

- A word from our sponsors -

“I live in the streets because I went jobless”

0
Ramón, a Caracas resident, claimed his economic situation changed when he lost his job as a worker in dwelling construction led by a government social program
Ramón, a Caracas resident, claimed his economic situation changed when he lost his job as a worker in dwelling construction led by a government social program

(Today Venezuela) “Thanks to what I can get from the river Guaire I make money to eat,” said Ramón -pseudonym to protect his identity- in reference to his daily routine since he became homeless.

Ramón dives into the polluted waters of Caracas major watercourse in search of any sort of metals he may later sell. “I got used to living this way. Some days are good, some are not so good, but I still am here. At least, this way I hurt nobody,” he added.

He claimed his economic situation changed when he lost his job as a worker in a construction run by the Great Mission Housing Venezuela. “I used to work as a bricklayer, but the works came to a halt and I ran out of options to make a living.”

Ramón has not had troubles with authorities so far. “Sometimes, police officers approach me claiming this (Ramón’s situation) is something dangerous. Still, they know we do not steal. We do it (living in streets) because everything now is very difficult.”

He is not afraid of diseases, having in mind he has been “healthy so far.” “Nothing has happened to me, yet life in the streets is hard indeed.”

Having gathered some screws and metal lumps, a smiling Ramón said: “With this I secure a bit of rice and sardines for lunch.”

Source Eluniversal.com

Article originally appeared at Today Venezuela Click here to go there!

- A word from our sponsors -

Venezuelan economic aid to Nicaragua down 10.9% first half 2016

0
The president of Venezuela, Nicolas Maduro (left) and Daniel Ortega (right) of Nicaragua
The president of Venezuela, Nicolas Maduro (left) and Daniel Ortega (right) of Nicaragua

(Today Nicaragua) Venezuela’s oil loan-centered cooperation with its traditional ally Nicaragua fell by 10.9% during the first half of 2016 as compared to the same period last year, reported Monday the Central Bank of Nicaragua (BCN).

Such drop followed a 43.8% decrease in 2015 from 2014, when Venezuelan cooperation hit USD 661.9 million, according to official numbers, Efe informed.

Funding totalled USD 172.1 million, below USD 193.3 million during the first half of 2015.

Venezuelan cooperation funds, which amount to USD 4.65 billion since Nicaraguan President running for re-election Daniel Ortega took office in January 2007, are administered on the sidelines of the law on domestic budget, a move deplored by several sectors.

Venezuelan aid during the first half of this year included oil loans (USD 108.3 million) and direct foreign investment (USD 63.8 million), the Central Bank of Venezuela (BCV) broke down in a communiqué on foreign official cooperation.

Within the framework of oil cooperation agreement, loans still derive from a policy on concessionary lending with a 25-year deadline, including a two-year’s grace period, and a 2% annual interest rate. These loans are to be paid by the private sector through investments in socio-productive projects, the BCV spelled out.

In words of the Nicaraguan state, Venezuelan cooperation has been used this year, among others, to fund energy subsidy (USD 25.7 million), financial outlay (USD 5.6 million), industry (USD 5.2 million), fair trade development (USD 4.7 million), business development (USD 3.7 million), farming production and forestry (USD 3.6 million), and housing (USD 2.3 million).

Venezuelan cooperation is channelled through joint oil venture Alba of Nicaragua (Albanisa), responsible for oil supply.

Ortega is the main political and economic ally in Central America of President Nicolás Maduro and of late Head of State Hugo Chávez.

Source El Universal

- A word from our sponsors -

Widespread Corruption in Venezuela Backfires on President Maduro

0
Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro speaks during a demonstration against corruption in Caracas, Venezuela
Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro speaks during a demonstration against corruption in Caracas, Venezuela

(Today Venezuela) A congressional commission in Venezuela says that a staggering US$70 billion dollars has been siphoned off from public institutions, a sign that widespread corruption may further destabilize the country’s precarious political situation given its crumbling economy.

The vice president of the National Assembly’s Comptroller’s Commission, Ismael García, said their investigations indicate that Venezuela has lost $70 billion — nearly 16 percent of its 2013 gross domestic product (GDP) based on World Bank data — due to corruption within its public institutions, institutions, reported RunRun.es.

García stated that one of the most corrupt entities was the state-owned oil company Petroleum of Venezuela, S.A. (PdVSA), which accounts for roughly 95 percent of Venezuela’s export revenues and 25 percent of the country’s GDP. The commission’s president, Freddy Guevara, said on October 19 that US$11 billion in PdVSA funds went missing between 2004 and 2014.

García mentioned the names of two former PdVSA executives currently detained in the United States, Roberto Rincón and Francisco Illaramendi, arguing that their guilty pleas had shed light on more than $1.5 billion in bribes to PdVSA. He also said that Rafael Ramírez, a former minister and PdVSA executive, is implicated in the fraud but immune to prosecution due to his current function as Venezuela’s Permanent Representative to the United Nations.

This is not the first time that García has publicly accused government officials of corruption. In July, he demanded that the Attorney General’s Office investigate Gen. Carlos Osario, the former head of the Nutrition Ministry, for allegedly embezzling $27 billion worth of imported food, according to El Nacional.

Meanwhile, on October 17, RunRun.es reported that the former head of Venezuela’s anti-narcotics agency and current Interior Minister, Néstor Luis Reverol Torres, appointed his mother-in-law, Susana Coromoto Acosta de Márquez, as director general of the institution responsible for the administration of seized criminal assets. President Nicolás Maduro appointed Reverol as the new Interior Minister on August 2, one day after he was formally charged by the US on drug charges.

Also on October 17, a low-ranking officer was accused by the Attorney General’s Office of stealing 2.5 tons of government-owned food along with three other suspects. Venezuela is suffering from widespread shortages of basic goods as the result of a deepening economic crisis.

Although the staggering $70 billion figure comes from the opposition-controlled National Assembly and no methodology was furnished to back up the estimate, García may not be too far off the mark. Indeed, judging from previous estimates by former government officials and independent analysts, $70 billion may even underestimate the true scale of corruption in the country.

Héctor Navarro, the former minister of electrical energy from 2012 to 2013 during Hugo Chávez’s presidency, claimed that corruption hascost Venezuela no less than $300 billion while testifying in front of the Comptroller’s Commission in April 2016. And in March, a Peruvian specialist said that $350 billion have been siphoned off from government coffers, 3.5 times more than any other country in the world.

Along with the combined weight of the country’s deteriorating economic and security situation, corruption is loosening — and may yet break — Maduro’s already precarious hold on power.

It is difficult for any country to pin down the extent of corruption by attaching a dollar figure to it. But the wide range reflected in the estimates for Venezuela underscores the lack of government transparency. This secrecy extends beyond corruption to other government sectors, including crime data. Official statistics on major crimes like homicide are rarely reported, and high-level officials have in the past admitted to refraining from publishing damaging crime figures.

Some of the same failed policies that have helped send Venezuela into an economic crisis are facilitating and exacerbating corruption. One of the most common corruption schemes can be traced back to former President Chávez’s decision to control the amount of foreign currency flowing into the country, in particular the US dollar, by artificially fixing the exchange rate.

Due to the scarcity of US dollars in Venezuela and the huge disparity between the government-controlled exchange rates and those on the black market, importers frequently inflate the price of their invoices in order to obtain as many dollars as they can. But to earn the right to trade at the government’s rock-bottom exchange rates, importers have to grease the palms of the officials in charge of doling out the dollars. One economic consulting firm cited in a 2015 report by the New York Times estimated that $69.5 billion was stolen solely through import fraud between 2002 and 2013.

While corruption on a mass scale was happening long before Maduro took office, the country’s worsening economic situation has made it much more noticeable. Food shelves lay bare and hospitals are running out of medicines. A recent Wall Street Journal investigation found that Venezuela’s infant mortality rate now exceeds that of Syria.

On top of the economic crisis is a looming political battle between Maduro and the National Assembly. Amid falling approval ratings, Maduro has stymied the opposition’s attempts to set up a recall referendum that could see the president’s term in office end prematurely.

With the ongoing turmoil, it has become politically vital for Maduro — who unlike his charismatic predecessor has never been in the military — to preserve the military’s support. To that end, the president has appointed high-ranking military officers, such as Reverol, to important posts within the government, and has recently given the army complete control of food distribution, as well as the administration of the ports. But the reputation of Venezuela’s armed forces has been tainted by accusations of criminal activities and the existence of drug trafficking groups within its ranks.

Endemic corruption is just one of the interlocking crises that are sending Venezuela into a downward spiral. Along with the combined weight of the country’s deteriorating economic and security situation, corruption is loosening — and may yet break — Maduro’s already precarious hold on power.

Source Insightcrime.org

Article originally appeared at Today Venezuela Click here to go there!

- A word from our sponsors -

Woman Is 13th Victim of Thursday’s Cinchona Bus Crash

0
Carranaza from Facebook profile

(QCOSTARICA) Miriam Lilliana Carranza Soto is the 13th victim of the Cinchona bus crash on Thursday. The 58 year-old woman died in hospital this early morning (Saturday).

Carranaza from Facebook profile
Miriam Lilliana Carranaza from Facebook profile

Hospital Mexico spokesperson Susana Saravia, confirmed the woman lost her battle at 3:20am.

Carranza was one of the 31 passengers travelling on the bus that lost control in the area of Cinchona on Thursday, plunging off the side of the road, down an almost 30 metre (100 foot) cliff.

Saravia also confirmed that another seven passengers continue at the medical centre in delicate condition, four of which were airlifted from the scene of the accident on Thursday. The rest of the injured are in different hospitals.

The 18 injured were in luck, so to speak, given that the Hospital Mexico had planned a training session the same morning of the crash. The training program brought together medical staff, including doctors, nurses, transport that included having three helicopters on hand for the exercise. When news of the crash came, the training session was terminated and medical staff and the helicopters went into action for the real thing.

The Hospital Mexico's trauma centre had scheduled a training session
The Hospital Mexico’s trauma centre had scheduled a training session, that included having three helicopters on hand, for the morning for the crash. This contributed to a quick response and quick transfer of the injured to medical centres.

Witness accounts say the driver, who was among the now 13 victims, tried to gear down but had trouble with the gear box, swerving to the left in an attempt to stop or slow down the bus by the side of the mountain, then swerving to the right to avoid oncoming traffic, losing control and over the edge.

Edwin Espinoza Araya, 56 years of age, told La Nacion that he couldn’t near what the driver was saying over the noise, but understood that something wrong was happening and covered his head and face with the seat ahead of him, which says probably saved him from more serious injuries.

Edwin Espinoza (izq.) ingresó al Hospital de San Carlos luego del accidente. La noche de este jueves fue dado de alta y el lunes deberá someterse a una cirugía. Le acompaña su hijo Miguel Espinoza. (Rafael Murillo)
Edwin Espinoza (left ) with his son Miguel. Edwin was one of 17 that surived the bus crash. Photo Rafael Murillo, La Nacion

Espinoza, sitting in the middle of the bus, said he noticed the bus going faster until falling over the edge. He said he doesn’t recall much of the fall, but remembers the screams and engine noise prior to the fall.

“I was unconscious for a few moments, I was trapped between the metal and seat, I tried to get out and I could not. I was trapped for some time. I heard (the paramedics) asking if people were dead and asked them to get me out, it felt like an eternity,” Espinoza told La Nacion.

Espinoza was taken to the hospital in San Carlos, but did manage to call his wife to tell her what had happened and that he was alive. He was one of three in stable condition, while the other 15 suffered severe injuries.

The bus had left the Heredia post office around 6:00am.

The following diagram from La Nacion shows what happened. Weather conditions were clear, no rain in the area that morning.

accidente-bus-cinchona_1

- A word from our sponsors -

8 Years After Indictment, US Sentences Colombia Crime Boss

0
Maximilian Orozco Bonilla, alias
Maximilian Orozco Bonilla, alias “Valenciano,”

(Today Colombia) A US court has sentenced a top Colombian drug trafficker years after he negotiated his way back to criminal life in Colombia, in a case that highlights weaknesses in the justice system of both countries.

Maximilian Orozco Bonilla, alias “Valenciano,” formerly one of the leaders of the Oficina de Envigado criminal organization, was sentenced to 20 years behind bars on drug trafficking-related charges, Reuters reported.

The ruling by a New York court comes eight years after he first made contact with US authorities regarding his criminal charges, and five years after he was arrested and extradited.

According to El Colombiano, the length of his sentence was at least partly due to the fact that he deceived the US judicial system years prior. In 2008, Bonilla was indicted by US authorities and secretly negotiated a plea bargain in exchange for a reduced sentence.

“When he arrived with his lawyer, he offered us the entire Zetas organization in Mexico,” El Colombiano quoted prosecutor Bonnie Klapper as saying. Klapper was responsible for securing the deal with Bonilla.

“With that information, we decided that it was worth letting him go, because he could turn over the bosses of that cartel to us.”

Once Bonilla returned to Colombia, however, he continued his operations in the transnational cocaine trade.

After his mentor and top Oficina leader Diego Murillo, alias “Don Berna,” was unexpectedly extradited to the United States in 2008, a bloody battle for succession raged in Medellín. One faction was headed by Bonilla — who had secured control of the Oficina’s drug trafficking activities — and the other by Erickson Vargas Cárdenas, alias “Sebastián,” who had more influence over the city’s street gangs.

An international hunt for Bonilla forced him to flee to Venezuela, and Vargas eventually gained the upper hand. With a $5 million price tag on his head, Bonilla was arrested in Venezuela in November 2011.

According to US investigators, by 2008 Bonilla was considered to be one of the world’s main cocaine traffickers, moving drugs from Colombia’s Atlantic Coast for a range of illegal armed groups, from Colombia’s National Liberation Army (Ejército de Liberación Nacional – ELN) to Mexico’s Zetas.

Despite his crime profile, according to El Colombiano authorities in Colombia only have one case against Bonilla, for criminal association.

Bonilla’s case lays bare long-running flaws in the Colombian and US justice systems. The trafficker’s manipulation of US authorities illustrates the changing relationship between US justice and wanted men: once feared, submitting to the United States is increasingly being perceived as the more lenient option for criminals. In the past few years, Colombian lawbreakers have traded prosecution at home for near impunity in the United States. As well as striking deals for surprisingly light sentences, defendants and their families have also been allowed to remain in US territory once their jail time is up.

At the same time, the fact that Colombian authorities have apparently not built any criminal cases against Bonilla despite decades of underworld activity points to the judicial system’s continuing weaknesses and dependency on US institutions.

Bonilla’s exit from Colombia has also marked a key shift in the local crime scene.

After the fratricidal war and the arrest of its leaders, the fracturing of the Oficina was irrevocable. Today, the organization operates as a far more horizontal system than in years past. Numerous Oficina bosses have been captured, making drug capos like Don Berna a thing of the past.

Source Insightcrime.org

Article originally appeared at Today Colombia. Reposted with permission.

- A word from our sponsors -

Panama Reports More than 400 Cases of The Zika Virus

0

zika-300x192(Prensa Latina) Since the zika virus appeared in November 2015, the public health authorities confirmed a total of 461 cases in Panama, of which 422 correspond to the present year.

Among the most affected regions, there are the capital (174 cases) and the region of Guna Yala (136).

The Panamanian Public Health Ministry (MINSA) reported that up to Thursday, the doctors examined 103 pregnant women under suspicion to be infected with the virus, most of them in the last quarter of their pregnancy. Only 27, were tested positive, one of them from abroad.

The public health authorities said that up to the month of October, four neurological complications were registered as linked with the zika virus, three of them with the Guillain-Barre Syndrome.

At the start of February this year, the government of Panama destined a fund of 10 million dollars to fight zika, because of the increase of cases in the entire country.

The zika is a disease that still has no vaccine to be cured. There are no medications to treat the disease, or prevent its proliferation.

Studies made by experts said four out of each five people infected, may not to present any symptom, and that is why the struggle against this disease, is not so simple.

Article originally appeared at Today Panama. Click here to go there!

- A word from our sponsors -

WINGO: Low-Cost Airline From Costa Rica To Panama Takes To The Skies Dec. 1

0
Wingo that starts operation on December 1 will offer low-cost flights from Costa Rica's San Jose airport to Panama and Guatemala
Wingo that starts operation on December 1 will offer low-cost flights between Costa Rica’s San Jose airport to Panama and Guatemala

(QCOSTARICA) Wingo is the name of the new low-cost airline that will connect Costa Rica with Guatemala and Panama starting on December 1, 2016.

The announcement by the airline owned by Copa Holdings which also owns Copa Airlines was made on Friday, with the start of ticket sales on its website Wingo.com. (The website is only in Spanish).

Bogota (Colombia) based Wingo will take over all of Copa Colombia’s routes except its flights to and from Panama City. Wingo, led by former JetBlue Airways and Avianca executive Catalina Breton, will have its own dedicated management team, says Copa chief executive Pedro Heilbron. Breton says the two airlines (Copa and Wingo) are 100% independent.

Price war. A round trip (one adult) between San Jose and Panama leaving December 5 and returning December 8 is US$142.75 with all taxes and surcharges in. Return between San Jose and Guatemala City (GUA) is US$155.72.

wingo-sanjose-panama
Caveat. Adding luggage (other than carry-on), fast check-in and preferred seating adds US$71.31 for a total cost on the above ticket to US$214.06. In according with the airline’s terms and condition, the airline will drop the charges if traveller only has carry on, will take assigned seating and is willing to wait in line at the airport counter. Copa and Avianca, on the other hand, do not charge extra for these items, but, do not offer reductions either.

The airline flies between San Jose’s Juan Santamaria international airport (SJO) and Panama’s Panama Pacifico international airport (BLB), previously known as Howard Air Force Base, in the heart of Panama City on Sundays, Wednesdays, Thursday, Fridays and Saturdays. There are no scheduled flights on Mondays and Tuesdays.

The same dates on Copa Airlines is US$432.53, meanwhile, Avianca, the Colombian airline, is giving Wingo competition, offering a return fare for the same dates for US$158.48. (see screenshots below)

Both Copa and Avianca operate flights out of the Tocumen international airport (PTY), a 30 minute drive from downtown Panama.

Wingo destinations. From Costa Rica, the only flights from the San Jose airport are to Panama City and Guatemana City. From Panama, Wingo offers destinations to the Colombian cities of Cartagena, Medellin, Bogota and Cali and international flights that include Aruba, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Mexico and Venezuela.

The airline will start with a fleet of 4 aircraft models Boeing -737 to 700, with a capacity for 142 people.

For travel to and from Costa Rica and Guatemala, starting next month (November) Air Costa Rica takes to the skies with charter service between San Jose (SJO) and Guatemala City (GUA). Competition for the route include scheduled carriers Avianca, Copa, Veca Airlines and Aeroméxico.

copa-sanjose-panama avianca-sanjose-panamaAir

- A word from our sponsors -

Half Of The Internet Was Down Friday, Here’s Why

0

ziozx5sz4a6qyaqtji9s

 

(QTECH) If it seemed like half the internet was down on Friday…it pretty much was. William Turton at Gizmodo explains it all in his article This Is Why Half the Internet Shut Down Today.

Dyn reported “resolved Oct 21, 2016 – 22:17 UTC” the DDoS Attack Against Dyn Managed DNS.

From Gizmodo:

Twitter, Spotify and Reddit, and a huge swath of other websites were down or screwed up this morning. This was happening as hackers unleashed a large distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack on the servers of Dyn, a major DNS host. It’s probably safe to assume that the two situations are related.

Update 4:22 PM EST: Looks like this is probably going to get even worse before it gets any better. Dyn says they are being hit with a third wave of attacks. Dyn told CNBC the attack is “well planned and executed, coming from tens of millions IP addresses at same time.”

Update 12:28 PM EST: Dyn says it is investigating yet another attack, causing the same massive outages experienced this morning. Based on emails from Gizmodo readers, this new wave of attacks seems to be affecting the West Coast of the United States and Europe. It’s so far unclear how the two attacks are related, but the outages are very similar.

In order to understand how one DDoS attack could take out so many websites, you have to understand how Domain Name Servers (DNS) work. Basically, they act as the Internet’s phone book and facilitate your request to go to a certain webpage and make sure you are taken to the right place. If the DNS provider that handles requests for Twitter is down, well, good luck getting to Twitter. Some websites are coming back for some users, but it doesn’t look like the problem is fully resolved.

Dyn posted this update on its website: “Starting at 11:10 UTC on October 21th-Friday 2016 we began monitoring and mitigating a DDoS attack against our Dyn Managed DNS infrastructure. Some customers may experience increased DNS query latency and delayed zone propagation during this time. Updates will be posted as information becomes available.”

Here’s a list of websites that readers have told us they are having trouble accessing:

  • ActBlue
  • Basecamp
  • Big cartel
  • Box
  • Business Insider
  • CNN
  • Cleveland.com
  • Etsy
  • Github
  • Grubhub
  • Guardian.co.uk
  • HBO Now
  • Iheart.com (iHeartRadio)
  • Imgur
  • Intercom
  • Intercom.com
  • Okta
  • PayPal
  • People.com
  • Pinterest
  • Playstation Network
  • Recode
  • Reddit
  • Seamless
  • Spotify
  • Squarespace Customer Sites
  • Starbucks rewards/gift cards
  • Storify.com
  • The Verge
  • Twillo
  • Twitter
  • Urbandictionary.com (lol)
  • Weebly
  • Wired.com
  • Wix Customer Sites
  • Yammer
  • Yelp
  • Zendesk.com
  • Zoho CRM
  • Credit Karma
  • Eventbrite
  • Netflix
  • NHL.com
  • Fox News
  • Disqus
  • Shopify
  • Soundcloud
  • Atom.io
  • Ancersty.com
  • ConstantContact
  • Indeed.com
  • New York Times
  • Weather.com
  • WSJ.com
  • time.com
  • xbox.com
  • dailynews.com
  • Wikia
  • donorschoose.org
  • Wufoo.com
  • Genonebiology.com
  • BBC
  • Elder Scrolls Online
  • Eve Online
  • PagerDuty
  • Kayak
  • youneedabudget.com
  • Speed Test
  • Freshbooks
  • Braintree
  • Blue Host
  • Qualtrics
  • SBNation
  • Salsify.com
  • Zillow.com
  • nimbleschedule.com
  • Vox.com
  • Livestream.com
  • IndieGoGo
  • Fortune
  • CNBC.com
  • FT.com
  • Survey Monkey
  • Paragon Game
  • Runescape

Here’s an internet outage map from DownDetector as of 12:46 PM EST:

r3qcxzrd8kxyiissfj4f

- A word from our sponsors -

Café Con Cuerpo Hit By Criticism

0
The waitresses at Cafe con cuerpo on Thursday.
The waitresses at Cafe con cuerpo on Thursday. In my opinion, “sexy but not vulgar!”

TICO BULL by RICO (Not a review, but something like it) The newly opened cafeteria “Cafe con cuerpo” in San Jose has sparked a debate between those who support and those who criticize the place for their “sexy dressed waitresses“.

However, Marcela Negrini, co-founder and manager of the cafeteria sees nothing wrong with the way her girls (waitresses) are dressed, much less vulgar. “There’s nothing wrong with a sexy uniform,” said the model turned restaurateur.

I visited the cafeteria on Thursday and it was packed. The crow was all male, under 40. My friend and I were the “old fogies” in the place. The parking lot was filled with late-model high-end vehicles that included brands like BMW, Mercedes and Porsche, among others.

From the outside the place doesn’t say much. The location, two blocks from Paseo Colon, south of Quiznos, the area is quiet and no pedestrian traffic.

Inside the decor is “acogedor” (cozy), the staff very attentive. The menu is varied and reasonably priced. One can only hope they will stay that way. Since the place opens at 7:00am, the menu includes breakfast, but I think lunch is their specialty judging from the early days of opening. Closing time is 5:00pm, I asked Marcela if there are plans to open later, dinner maybe. “It all depends on our clients,” she said, not closing the door to the possibility.

For breakfast ” pancakes; for lunch the “bigly” (sorry, that word stuck with me after taking in the third presidential debate the night before) hamburger, a favourite for Thursday’s lunch crowd.

Marcela took the time for a phot op with me. No, the camera did not break!
Marcela (the good looking one on the right) took the time for a photo-op with me. No, the camera did not break.

Some of the critics say they will not go because of the girl’s uniforms. In my opinion, they are nothing more or less than the uniforms worn by girls at Hooters.

Reading the comments on Facebook and other social media, many were expecting “modelos” (models), a term sometimes used in Costa Rica for “high end hookers”. They were disappointed, and their comments reflected their failed expectations.

The girls, in my opinion, are there to do a job, like any other waitress in any other restaurant in any other place in the world. Nothing more, nothing less.

Surprisingly, a number of the negative comments on the dress style of the girls came from women. “Que asco” (revolting) says a poster, denigrating Marcela for being “a woman who sells women and their image as a sexual object”.

What do these critics do when they go to the beach? Have they ever been to Jaco or Puntarenas or the pool at their friend’s condo? WTF? If they are “ashamed” as one poster put it, they must be putting their head in the sand at the beach, or what? They don’t go to Mutiplaza? Or moreso the Paseo de las Flores or Mall San Pedro?

Have they never been to a bar in San Jose, or Heredia or Alajuela or Cartago, where not the waitresses, but the women customers are dressed slutttier than any of the girls at Marcela’s place.

Jumping on the bandwagon of criticism, although not directly at the new cafeteria, but all businesses in general that use beautiful women to promote their services or products is the Instituto Nacional de la Mujer (Inamu), questioning these business for promoting “machismo”.

In different countries, many bars and chain restaurants have girls and guys in provocative uniforms. Costa Rica is no exception.

Beautiful women are everywhere in Costa Rica.If you don’t want to see any, stay home, close the blinds, don’t turn on the television. And especially stay off the internet.

A great place! Great food! Highly recommended.

Article first appeared on TICO BULL, reposted with permission.

- A word from our sponsors -

Two Women Dead, Five Others Injured In Eearly Morning Traffic Accident

0

660827_940

(QCOSTARICA) Two women lost their lives this morning and five others, travelling in the same vehicle, are in hospital when the driver lost control, slammed into a concrete abutment and flipped on its side in the early hours of Friday morning. In such situations, you can consult experienced defense and injury attorneys in Fayetteville, who can help claim the compensation for the injury caused.

The crash occurred minutes before 5:00am in front of the Scotiabank branch in Curridabat, adjacent to Plaza del Sol.

660823_940

Four of the passengers, four women, were thrown from the vehicle to the middle of the road, unfortunately, two of them died there, the other two taken to hospital in delicate condition.

Of the other three passengers of the Honda vehicle with a maximum occupancy of five, two were also taken hospital, the Calderon Guardia and Mexico where they remain in delicate condition, one of them is stable at the San Juan de Dios.

The impact of the crash was such that roof of the vehicle opened like a tin can, Bomberos (firefighters) did not need to use their hydraulic equipment to free the three trapped passengers.

According to paramedics all were under 30 years of age.

The Organismo de Investigacion Judicial (OIJ) are investigating the cause. Witnesses in the early morning crash told investigators the vehicle, in the San Pedro to Curridabat direction was travelling at a high speed, crossed the median and swerved to avoid a head on collision with a bus.

No other vehicles were involved in the accident.

On Thursday, in Cinchona, Alajuela – east of the Poas volcano – a bus driver lost control plunking over a cliff, resulting in the death of 12 people (including the driver) and 18 more injured.

Photos from La Nacion.

accidente-transito-curridabat_lncima20161021_0066_5 accidente-transito-curridabat_lncima20161021_0065_5 accidente-transito-curridabat_lncima20161021_0064_5 accidente-transito-curridabat_lncima20161021_0063_5

- A word from our sponsors -

Costa Rica Hotels Losing War On Holiday Rentals

0
Offers on Airbnb in Costa Rica start as little as ¢5.600
Sacred Geome-Tree House es uno de los hospedajes que ofrece AIRBNB en el país
Sacred Geome-Tree House is one of the almost 11,000 offers through Airbnb in Costa Rica. Photo Elfinancierocr.com

(QCOSTARICA)The number of bed and breakfasts, cabins or houses for tourism continues to grow strongly in Costa Rica, especially those that are linked to technology platforms, such as Airbnb.

According to the Cámara Costarricense de Hoteleros (hoteliers association), some 11,000 units are offering tourist rental accommodation through Aribnb, an equivalent to 21% of the 48,819 hotel rooms in the country.

Besides Airbnb that started operations in Costa Rica five years and doubled its inventory between 2015 and 2016, hotels face competition from other platforms, such as Homeaway.com with 4,540 units; vrbo.com with 4,462; and 240 by Wimdu.com, according to a count by ElFinancierocr.com.

Offers on Airbnb in Costa Rica start as little as ¢5.600
Offers on Airbnb in Costa Rica start as little as ¢5.600 colones (US$10) a night. Photo Elfinancierocr.com

Gustavo Araya, president of the hoteliers association, says the growth of the platforms could affect the hotel sector, especially for the low rates charged. The hotel industry claims that competition with these new platforms is not being developed on an equal footing.

Araya told Elfinanciero: “… ‘We have no objection to the platform(s) operating in the country, but we have to operate under the same conditions’.”

One of the benefits like Aribnb offers tourists access to much more information than a hotel provides. For owners of private accommodations, the platforms allow them access to many more customers that simply word of mouth.

According Jasmine Mora, press secretary for Airbnb Central America, Mexico and the Caribbean, Santa Cruz de Guanacaste is the preferred location for tourists who use the service.

Although the growth of the platforms can not be stopped, the hotel industry still accounts for 65% occupancy per year.

For hosts using platforms like Airbnb, it allows them to rent out a room of the full house or a beach condo, for example, while they are not using it.

Several hosts interviewed by ElFinancierocr.com say uses are looking for a different experience and don’t want to feel like a “tourist”. In many cases, renting an entire house or condo can be more economical for than renting multiple hotel rooms.

In tax terms, hosts using Airbnb and other platforms have only to declare income tax. In addition, they have to pay Airbnb 3% of the amount of the reserve as a service fee. The hotel sector, meanwhile, pays income tax and sales tax.

 

- A word from our sponsors -

Drones Will Deliver Medicine To Remote Areas of Costa Rica

0
Image for illustrative purposes

(QCOSTARICA) Eight remote towns in Talamanca and  Valle La Estrella starting in 2017 will receive drugs via drones, thanks to a new government

Image for illustrative purposes
Image for illustrative purposes

program by the Ministry of Health.

Operated by the Caja Costarricense de Seguro Social (CCSS), clinics (Ebais)  in the remote communities will receive the medication, reducing the waiting time to less than an hour from order.

The communities are  Sepecue, Amubri, Katsi, Cahuita, Margarita and Bambú in the in Huetar Atlántica region and Valle Las Rosas and Penshurt in the Talamanca region.

Currently, it can take from several hours to days for patients in remote communities to receive the medicines. Despite the use of all-terrain vehicles, motorcycles or boats for deliveries to remote areas, the waiting time in isolated areas, in particular indigenous areas of the Talamanca region, the waiting time increases.

“We’re talking about patients that need to travel for hours in difficult conditions to reach medical care. They live in adverse economic conditions and can’t travel repeatedly”, says Esteban Vega, the national coordinator of pharmaceutical services for the CCSS.

On average, each month the program seeks to deliver 13,200 medical packages using the pilotless aerial vehicles.

- A word from our sponsors -

Does Killing Drug Dealers Work?

0
960x540_347325
Could the policy in place in the Phillipines be applied in Latin America?

(EURONEWS) President Duterte of the Philippines interprets the term “war on drugs” literally. “We will not stop until the last drug lord […] and the last pusher have surrendered or are put either behind bars or below the ground,” he declares. Between July and September, his policy resulted in around 2,400 killings by police and vigilantes.

Setting aside the obvious human rights implications, is killing drug dealers even an effective policy on its own terms?

Duterte is attacking supply. With no drug dealers, the logic goes, supply will run out and users, unable to feed their habits will “clean up”. Ann Fordham, Executive Director of the International Drug Policy Consortium (IDPC) disputes this thinking:

“Governments spend at least $100 billion globally in efforts to reduce the global drug trade. This has no impact on the scale of the market, which is stable, growing and diversifying”.

Fordham argues that the drugs market adheres to the basic laws of economics, with supply always rising to meet demand. In other words, killing a drug dealer, rather than removing a problem, will tend to create an attractive opening for a new drug dealer.

Balloon effect

Thailand’s 2003 war on drugs, in which approximately 2,800 people were killed in the first three months alone, provides a precedent for Duterte. Initially that policy seemed to have reduced drug production and use. In 2002-03, 90% of the country’s opium was destroyed before harvesting, and consumption of yaa baa, a mixture of methamphetamine and caffeine, declined in the face of rising prices.

Later, however, Thailand experienced what Fordham describes as a “balloon effect”, with a supply squeeze in one area, simply resulting in an inflation in another. Unable to afford yaa baa, Thai users turned to crystallized methamphetamine. UN Office on Drugs and Crime data shows that the number of meth labs in Thailand grew from 2 in 2008-10, to 193 in 2011-12. In 2013, Thailand accounted for 44% of reported methamphetamine tablet seizures in Asia and the Pacific.

Instead of focusing exclusively on supply, many experts support a demand-focused health, social and human-rights-based approach. “This is about reducing the harms associated with drug use rather than the level of drug use itself,” Fordham explains.

Instructive here is Portugal’s 2001 decriminalisation of drug use, as a result of which drugs remain illegal, but users face no criminal sanctions, instead receiving tailored health and social care. By 2015 Portugal had just 3 drug overdose deaths per million people, compared to an EU average of 17.3, and data collected by Transform shows an 87% decrease in overall drug-induced deaths between 2001 and 2012. Similarly, HIV infection rates amongst drug-injecting users have declined since 2001. If problematic drug use has decreased, there is, however, no evidence to suggest a statistically-significant reduction in overall drug use since the change in the law.

Ultimately, the broader question is whether eliminating drug use is an objective in itself, or whether eliminating the damage caused to individuals and society is the ultimate goal.

Original article was published at Euronews.com

- A word from our sponsors -

Costa Rica With 16% Consumption of Contraband Cigarettes: Study Reveals

0
illegal-cigarettes
Contraband cigarettes.

(Q24N) Revealing figures from a detailed analysis of studies paint a panoramic picture of a surging global trade in illicit cigarettes funding groups as varied as Hezbollah and Hamas to the Central American cartel of Los Zetas.

The study titled “From Ant Smuggling to an Elephant in the Market” was conducted by CID Gallup for the Costa Rican-American Chamber of Commerce (AmCham), an organization that continues to support entities involved in fighting the trade of illicit cigarettes as it threatens economies, institutions the and the security of Central American countries.


Related: Contraband Smokes Big Business in Costa Rica


Due to the complexity and alarming growth of the illicit trade in cigarettes, AmCham urges more inter-governmental efforts and public-private alliances to identify approaches leading to the development of a holistic strategy. Solutions must include a review of current regulations to fight smuggling, the use of technology as an ally of security forces, raising the penalties for those committing this crime, allocation of more financial and human resources to fight this activity, and awareness campaigns.

The scope of the problem to Central American economies is significant with $113.6 million USD lost due to regional taxes evaded by criminal networks. Costa Rica lost an estimated $26 million USD with Panama losing an estimated US$41 million.

Another key finding of the study was further confirmation that the money from the illicit trade of cigarettes, due to its high profitability, is used to fund regional crime organizations, such as “Maras” in El Salvador and drug cartels such as Zetas and Xinaloa in Belize, which have become protagonists in trafficking and distribution of this product.


Related: Cigarette Smuggling In Costa Rica Skyrockets


The U.S. Department of State clearly defined the illicit trade in tobacco as a threat to national security and ratified the link existing between terrorism and illicit trade of cigarettes, stating that this illegal activity constitutes a National Threat.

In Central America, consumption of illicit cigarettes varies with Panama has the highest rate of illicit incidence of non-domestic brands, 67%, after the current law regulating trade of this product came into force. Panama is followed by El Salvador with 31%, Guatemala with 21%, Honduras with 20%, Costa Rica with 16%, and Nicaragua with 5% .

Dennis Whitelaw, AmCham President said, “It is highly important to us, as a multi sector Chamber, to have on hand this type of information that shows a full view of the situation because, through this, we can generate much better recommendations and provide more comprehensive support to the State in its fight to prevent the development and entry of these products on our society”, said Whitelaw.

Esteban Álvarez, CID Gallup Manager, commented, “We are aware that the illicit trade of cigarettes is a phenomenon that knows no borders; thus, in recent years, this type of trade has become one of the main sources to fund criminal organizations in Central America. It is essential to review the current regulations to fight smuggling, as well as to raise awareness among the population. Additionally, it is necessary to allocate more resources and make a better use of them, especially of technological ones” mentioned Alvarez.

International expert Emanuele Ottolenghi, member of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies of Washington, D.C., said, “Drug trafficking, trade-based money laundering, contraband and terror financing in Latin America have merged as a single threat: drug cartels, smugglers, counterfeiters, insurgent groups, and terrorist organizations have coalesced, sometimes against local authorities and sometimes with their active complicity and support, for their mutual benefit. The result is a toxic mix that is undermining society itself in Latin America while posing a threat to the United States and Europe as well.”

Efforts made by AmCham Costa Rica along with the Finance Ministry to develop a web-app involving the population in the process of reporting illicit trade through mercadoilegal.com were highlighted as an example of Private-Public sectors involved in the fight of illicit trade. Also, a replica of this web-app operates in El Salvador through radarilegal.com and in Guatemala through comercioilegal.gt

Just like the other efforts made in this field, this study is part of the actions that are led by AmCham to help authorities obtain more tools to fight the different forms of illegal trade, such as counterfeit, piracy and under invoicing, which attempt against public safety, health and national economy.

To view the original version on PR Newswire, visit:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/illicit-cigarettes-fueling-organized-crime-and-connections-to-terrorism-in-costa-rica-and-central-america-300347819.html

SOURCE Costa Rican-American Chamber of Commerce

- A word from our sponsors -

12 Dead, 18 Injured As Bus Goes Over Cliff In Cariblanco

0

659943_940

Twelve people died and 16 others suffere serious injury after the bus they were travelling fell more almost 30 metres over a cliff on the road to Nueva Cinchona, Alajuela.

Among the fatalities, five men and seven women, was the driver of the bus, identified by his last name Mora Vargas.

full-201016-accidente-nueva-cinchona-bus

First responders said 11 of the victims died at the scene, while the twelfth, a woman died in the San Carlos hospital. Of the injured, 15 were in delicate condition at various hospitals, and three stable.

bus-cinchona

The accident occurred shortly after 9:00am this morning (Thursday) in the area of Cariblanco, on the road from the Poas volcano to Cinchona, that goes by the well known tourist spot, La Paz waterfall.

bus-cayo-guindo-metros-cinchona_lncima20161020_0053_5

The Universidad Nacional (UNA) confirmed that among the passengers of the bus were a group of pensioners from their school, the University of Costa Rica (UCR) and of the National Technological University (TEC), headed to Guatuso, to a potluck in the Maleku indigenous reserve (Reserva Indígena Maleku).

660123_940

President Luis Guillermo Solis declared three days of mourning and flags at Casa Presidencial and other federal buildings to be flown at half mast.

What Happened?

The cause of the accident is yet unknown. Witness accounts told paramedics that moments before the crash, the driver was not able to engage engine compression to slow down the bus as it went down the steep hill, veered onto the oncoming lane and to avoid a head-on of collision lost control whe he swerved back to the right, and falling over the edge. Others added that the driver hit a storm drain, losing control before falling over.

659876_940

The transit police reported the vehicle (plate number SJB12503) had its registration and vehicular inspection (Riteve) in order.

312869_cf5d385a76a146868df5f34ed18226d3

Investigators of the Organismo de Investigacion Judicial (OIJ) are theorizing the bus lost its steering system or a balljoing (rotula) breaking. A skid mark of approximately 100 metres (300 feet) was evidence of braking action, however, Yerson Acuña, the traffic official at the scene said many drivers find themselves with overheated brake pads in that section of the road, with their vehicle losing stopping ability.

The emergency response

accidente-ocurrio-pasadas-jueves-cinchona_lncima20161020_0071_5

The death toll could have been much higher if it hadn’t been for luck the accident occurring on the same day that the Hospital Mexico, one of the main trauma centres in the Central Valley, was getting underway with a training program to deal with such emergencies.

The helicopter was one of three that had been hired by the Hospital Mexico for a training progam that ended up being a live emergency situation
The helicopter was one of three that had been hired by the Hospital Mexico for a training progam that ended up being a live emergency situation

Taking part in the program were doctors, nurses and medical transport, among others, including the three helicopters hired for the training day, that immediately cut the training to attend to the real emergency.

accidente-ocurrio-pasadas-jueves-cinchona_lncima20161020_0085_5

This section of road126 that leades from Cariblanco (east of the Poas volcano), past the Laz Paz waterfalls to Cinchona is winding, steep and lots of  sharp curves.
This section of road126 that leades from Cariblanco (east of the Poas volcano), past the Laz Paz waterfalls to Cinchona is winding, steep and lots of sharp curves.

Sources: La Nacion, Teletica, Diario Extra (one photo)

- A word from our sponsors -

Panama Bureaucracy Complicates Exports

0

registro-caida-exportaciones-primer-semestre_lprima20160820_0151_26The union of exporters claims that business opportunities are being lost due to the slow pace of processing and issue of permits and certificates for export.

Juan Bulnes, president of the Asociación Panameña de Exportadores (APEX) – Panamanian Association of Exporters, told Prensa.com that “… ‘For exporters, the National Customs Authority (ANA) and the Ministry of Health (MoH) are a thorn in their side’.”

“… Delays in getting signatures for issuing a certificate from the Department of Food Protection (DEPA) recently cut short the sending of a shipment of fresh fish to Europe. The recipients were one established client and one potential customer. Now, this Panamanian exporter is negotiating the second one in order to keep the business relationship. ”

Exporters have denounced not only problems and delays in issuing documents such as certificates for plants or sanitation records, but also customs border points, mainly in Paso Canoas, “… for the paperwork that has to be submitted and controls that are done there.”

Prensa.com adds that “…The Ministry of Trade and Industry (MITI) said it is aware of the need to streamline processes in the issuance of these documents, especially those required of the export sector. ” In order to resolve the problems, the VUCE platform has been created which is currently in the “… first stage of implementation”.

Source: Prensa.com

Article originally appeared at Today Panama. Click here to go there!

- A word from our sponsors -

“Green” Alert Issued Due To Heavy Rains

0
Photo Jorge Calderón, La Nacion
Photo Jorge Calderón, La Nacion

(QCOSTARICA) The Comisión Nacional de Emergencias (CNE) – National Emergency Commission – on Tuesday declared a “green” alert for the entire country, as a precautionary measure due to the heavy rains this weekend.

Today (Wednesday) is the fourth day of constant, from moderate to heavy, rains in many parts of the country causing flooding and landslides in many areas.

Walter Fonseca, head of operations of the CNE, said the decision was made after reviewing the report of the national weather service, the Instituto Meteorológico Nacional (IMN), which includes a tropical wave affecting the country since yesterday and a low pressure system that will continue until Thursday.

658427_940

“Wet conditions will be presented throughout the country, added to saturation of the soil by the rains of previous days and because we have had incidents in all provinces,” said Fonseca.

Declaring green alert is for public awareness, staying informed of the situation and watchful of the conditions occurring in communities.

Click here for local weather conditions.

- A word from our sponsors -

Ivette Cepeda to Celebrate Cuba’s Cultural Week in Costa Rica

0
Ivette Cepeda
Ivette Cepeda
Ivette Cepeda

(QCOSTARICA) Cuban singer Ivette Cepeda will perform in San Jose and in Puntarenas as part of the celebrations for the Cuban Culture, which started Tuesday in Costa Rica.

The renowned singer arrived Sunday in San Jose accompanied by the musical group Reflexion. She will be responsible for the opening of the week of celebrations with a concert at the University of Costa Rica.

After that, she will sing along with the group Reflexion and the Costa Rican group Son de Tikizia. Then, she will sing at the House of Culture in Puntarenas.

The members of the musical group Reflexion are its director Jose Luis Beltran (acoustic and electric guitars), Aramis Castellanos (keyboards), Lino A. Pedroso (Cuban percussion) and William Rivero (bass).

ivtcolor2

During the week will be offered a conference on Cuban culture by Professor Jose Arias Carral. Also the public will enjoy the exhibition ‘De Cuba creando con aserrin’, by the artist Jorge Zaldivar.

In addition, Habanastation, directed by the late Daniel Diaz Torres, will be screened at the theater of the museum Juan Santamaria.

- A word from our sponsors -

No Real Estate License Required Here.

0
Not a "rip-off' but definitely not a literate Realto
Not a "rip-off' but definitely not a literate Realto
Not a “rip-off’ but definitely not a literate Realto

Did you know that in Costa Rica you do not need any qualifications, training or experience whatsoever to call yourself a Realtor?

If you do not want to lose your shirt buying real estate in Costa Rica, please remember these four crucially important points:

  1. Contrary to what some people might tell you, there is no single, official Multiple Listing Service to speak of so trying to establish even a rough idea of what a property is worth is difficult. Take a look on the internet and you will often find the exact same property listed by different ‘Realtors’ at dramatically different prices.
  2. Half the population call themselves ‘Realtors’ because in Costa Rica you do not need any qualifications, training or experience whatsoever to call yourself a ‘broker.’ and… There is an organization of ‘brokers’ involved with real estate, however, very few people who call themselves ‘brokers’ have even heard of it never mind belong to it … And nobody is regulating or watching over these people!
  3. And you know the legal system is based on Napoleonic Laws and not Common Laws as they are in the US & Canada right? How much do any of us know about the Napoleonic legal system?
  4. Although many people speak some English, Costa Rica is a Spanish speaking country and all legal documents will be in Spanish. If you can’t read Spanish well then understanding contracts for example will be very difficult.

This means that when it comes to buying real estate which may be one of the biggest investments of your life…

More than likely, you will be listening to ‘expert’ advice coming from someone with zero qualifications or training in real estate, who is trying very hard to earn a sales commission selling you a property that could be dramatically overpriced…

Sounds like a recipe for disaster and it can be!

There are a few excellent Costa Rica real estate professionals but finding them is a challenge so what can you do? How do you ensure that you’re not going to ‘lose your shirt’ or get ripped off when you buy property here?

Knowing a few simple facts about buying real estate in Costa Rica could save you a fortune and prevent a lot of headaches.

Continue reading this article by Scott Oliver published at Welovecostarica.com

 

- A word from our sponsors -

Who Won The Taxi War?

0

(QBLOGS) The father of modern management, Dr. Peter F. Drucker in one of my lectures said, “The informal organization will always win over the formal organization which is the perfect case of Uber vs. red taxi (legal) and pirate taxis (informal or illegal).

Legal taxis in Costa Rica are red. (The orange taxis are exclusive to the international airport)
Legal taxis in Costa Rica are red. (The orange taxis are exclusive to the international airport)

Clients have no idea what to use since two of the rides are illegal and one is legal but customer unfriendly.

The informal (pirate or piratas in Spanish) taxis have been declared illegal. But, almost all of us locals have called or just picked up one available to meet our immediate needs.

We have been warned that any one of the piratas might be criminals willing to rob and kill. However, except on a very limited basis, this has not been the case.

The beauty of the pirate taxi is that you ask, “How much from point A to point B?” then your decision to use the government approved red taxi service or a pirata.

Trust the red taxi?

The customer depends on honest or rigged meters, traffic jams, the routes chosen to enhance passenger cost and most important the mood as well as attitude of the approved driver. Not to mention the physical condition of the cars of which many are one stop away from the bouncing, dirty buses.

Those of us who live here more than a few years know how to manage this “turkey dance.” But those 2 million or more persons arriving as tourist simply pay more than is required and more than is, in fact legal.

And along came this company named Uber and that all changed things overnight.

While Uber has been declared a daemon by the government, it continues its operations with a wink of an eye and founded on the argument that to restrict this car service would also restrict public access to the Internet. This argument certainly appeals to our profound sense of freedom of the Net, but also Uber said it will invest US$3.2 million in customer services and that makes (Costa Rica President) Solís happy.

The infallible government of Costa has, while, officially declaring Uber illegal, but at the same time proposing the red taxis to adopt similar Internet customer friendly payment, a big ass change in driver attitudes and even an improvement of the cars.

Who won the taxi war? We did! (So far)

- A word from our sponsors -

President Solis “Fell In Love With airplanes …”

0
Asamblea Legislativa Reunion extraordinaria de la comision Legislativa de asuntos hacendarios para ver mocion de reduccion del presupuesto presentes entre otros los Diputados Otton Solis Fallas ,Victor Morales Zapata,Rolando Gonzalez,Rosibel Ramos y Olivier Jimenez Fotografia Mario Rojas/La Nacion 27 Sept 2014
Asamblea Legislativa Reunion extraordinaria de la comision Legislativa de asuntos hacendarios para ver mocion de reduccion del presupuesto presentes entre otros los Diputados Otton Solis Fallas ,Victor Morales Zapata,Rolando Gonzalez,Rosibel Ramos y Olivier Jimenez      Fotografia Mario Rojas/La Nacion 27 Sept 2014
Legislator Otton Solis ( blue vest) strongly criticized the travels of Prsident Luis Guillermo Solis during a sesssion of the Legislative Financial Affairs Committee. Photo taken last September.

(QCOSTARICA) President Luis Guillermo Solis, “fell in love with airplanes and just goes around flying on an airplane,” says the legislator and founder of the Partido Acción Ciudadana (PAC), Ottón Solís.

The legislator raised the strong criticism in a speech made Tuesday during a session of the Legislative Financial Affairs Committee, where he proposed to cut ¢17 billion colones from the 2017 national budget.

Legislator Solis (no relation to President Solis) filed 12 motions to the draft budget looking to reduce spending in areas like consulting, propaganda and publicity, was well as travel.

Solis, in defence of his cost cutting motions, said that half of the travel abroad (by the President) are “a pasear” (to go on vacation).

“One in six days he goes on a trip and only half are valid, like the trip to the United Nations…but not stay for the entire week…accompanying (Juan Manuel) Santos (President of Colombia) in signing the peace agreement, but not to spend three days there (in Colombia),” added the legislator.

To the astonishment of legislators, advisors and audience, the founder of the PAC also said that “only a fanatic” could deny that President Solis travels a lot and that was exactly what he denounced of the previous governments of the Liberación Nacional (PLN) and Unidad Social Cristiana (PUSC) parties.

Source La Nacion

- A word from our sponsors -
th>

¢461.96 BUY

¢466.89 SELL

/
27 March 2026 - At The Banks - Source: BCCR