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Deadliest Year Ever For Environmental Activism

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Michelle Campos holds a picture of her father, who was publicly executed for opposing mining in Mindanao, Philippines

(Q24N) Falling commodity prices are prompting land grabs by mining and forestry companies – often by force. That’s driving a disturbing trend: 2015 saw more murders of environmental activists than ever before.
A wooden cross marks the spot where the body of environmental activist Isídio Antonio Pereira da Silva was found in Maranhão, Brazil on Christmas Eve in 2015 (Photo: Lunae Parracho/Global Witness)

More than three people were killed each week on average in 2015 trying to protect the environment from industrial activities, according to a new report published Monday (June 20, 2016).

The 185 reported deaths worldwide last year represents a 59 percent increase from 2014. The deadliest countries for environmental activists were Brazil, the Philippines and Columbia, with 50, 33 and 26 deaths respectively.

Almost all of the deaths were the result of people trying to defend their land from extractors of commodities such as mining, timber and palm oil.

Billy Kyte, a campaigner with Global Witness – the organization that compiled the report – says the rise is due to increasing demand for raw materials worldwide. As commodity prices fall, companies are taking greater risks to secure larger profits, encroaching into ever more remote areas that were previously out of reach – with cooperation of governments.

“More and more countries are encroaching on previously untouched areas rich in resources,” Kyte told DW. “Projects are being increasingly built on contested land, much of it where indigenous communities reside.”

Indigenous people made up almost 40 percent of victims last year, according to the group’s figures.

Much of the extractive activity is illegal, Kyte says, done by companies who hire paramilitary groups to drive out indigenous populations. Those who resist, or who organize demonstratons against the activity, can become targets.

“The majority of these people are just ordinary citizens who become activists because they hear a chainsaw in their forest, and they ask questions about who’s doing this,” says Kyte.
Infographic murdered environmentalists 2015

Philippines: killers in the night
Philippines: killers in the night

Mining was the biggest driver of murders, resulting in 42 deaths. Many of these were in the Philippines, which is home to the largest copper and gold deposit in the world. The country is also rich in nickel and chromite.

The Mines and Geosciences Bureau has estimated that the country holds an estimated 664 billion euros worth of untapped mineral wealth.

Mining companies are increasingly moving into previously untouched indigenous lands. One of these areas is that of the Lumad people in the Mindanao region.

At around 3:00 am on September 1, 2015, killers arrived in a Lumad village that had been protesting encroachment on their land. The killers woke everyone up and forced them to gather on the basketball court. They then executed two members of the community, and told the rest of them to leave within two days or meet the same fate.

The two people killed were the father and grandfather of Filippino environmental activist Michelle Campos. They were just two of 25 Lumad people killed last year for protesting the illegal mining in Mindanao. The violence sparked a mass exodus of around 3,000 Lumad people, who fled on foot to the nearest town, 16 kilometers away.

“We get threatened, villified and killed for standing up to the mining companies on our land, and to the paramilitaries that protect them,” says Campos. “My father, grandfather and schoolteacher were just three of countless victims.”

“We know the murderers – they are still walking free in our community. We are dying and our government does nothing to help us,” Campos says.

Michelle Campos holds a picture of her father, who was publicly executed for opposing mining in Mindanao, Philippines
Michelle Campos holds a picture of her father, who was publicly executed for opposing mining in Mindanao, Philippines

The administration of Philippine President Benigno Aquino has faced criticism for increasing legal mining and looking the other way in the face of illegal mining. He is also accused of not enforcing the 1997 Indigenous Peoples Rights Act, which was meant to protect communities from these kinds of threats.

Brazil: Amazon populations terrorized

In Brazil, murders have been connected to logging activities in remote areas of the Amazon rainforest. While such activities are illegal under Brazilian law, timber companies are accused of hiring criminal gangs to intimidate local populations into ceding their land.

Thousands of illegal logging camps have sprung up across the jungle, where armed men cut down ancient hardwood trees like mahogany, ebony and teak. According to a report by London-based Chatham House, wood from Brazil makes up at least a quarter of illegal wood on global markets.

Those who resist the criminal gangs face violence – or death. One of last year’s victims was Raimundo dos Santos Rodrigues.

On August 25, 2015, he and his wife Maria were returning home along a quiet road when they were suddenly ambushed and attacked by two men. Maria survived, but her husband was killed.

Infographic murdered environmentalists 2015
Infographic murdered environmentalists 2015

His name was on a hit list of environmental activists, because he had been compaigning to defend the Gurupi Biodiversity Reserve in the province of Maranhao from logging. Following the killing, members of his community fled the area.

Other countries in Latin America with high number of murders last year include Columbia, Peru and Nicaragua. In Columbia, the violence has been exascerbated by that country’s long internal conflict, where rebels control large parts of the jungle and often finance themselves with illegal logging activities.

Blood timber in Europe

It is the global market of buyers that fuels the encroachment, and thus the violence. And much of the wood illegally harvested in the Amazon is being sold to buyers in Europe and North America.

“The murders that are going unpunished in remote mining villages or deep within rainforests are fueled by the choices consumers are making on the other side of the world,” Kyte says.

In theory, the European Union’s Timber Regulation should prevent this. It prohibits the import of wood that was illegally harvested under the laws of its country of origin.

But the problem with the law is that the EU has to take the country of origin’s word for it. And often the records do not adequately demonstrate the real origin of the wood.

“We are dealing with countries where in some places there are problems with governance and corrupotion,” said Anke Schulmeister, Senior Forest Policy Officer at campaign group WWF. “We would like to have the EU take more action on deforestation,” she told DW.
Marina Alves de Araujo mourns her husband, environmental activist Raimundo Chagas, who was assassinated in front of their 12-year-old son in Brazil’s amazon in 2010 (Photo: Lunae Parracho/Global Witness)

Marina Alves de Araujo mourns her husband, environmental activist Raimundo Chagas
Marina Alves de Araujo mourns her husband, environmental activist Raimundo Chagas

Recognizing loopholes in the existing law, the EU developed the EU Forest Law Enforcement, Governance and Trade (FLEGT) Action Plan in 2003. It is a verification mechanism in which the EU monitors logging in external countries, and comes to its own decision on whether wood has been sustainably sourced.

But progress under FLEGT has been slow. It was supposed to set up a system where countries would be awarded FLEGT licenses to import into the EU if they were found to be sustainable.

But so far only one country has this license: Indonesia. The rest of the countries still import under the timber regulation. The EU started a FLEGT action plan for South America in 2012 – but this is largely advisory.

Schulmeister says that improving EU timber import rules would help stop the demand for illegal logging. “The loopholes need to be closed, and EU member states need to have a level playing field in terms of implementation and penalties.”

Protecting activists

Kyte says that asside from addressing the increasing demand for commodities that is driving the violence, there are actions that the source nations can take to protect activists trying to defend their land.

“Companies and investors must cut ties with projects that trample over communities’ rights to their land,” he says.

Infographic map where environmental activists were killed in 29015
Infographic map where environmental activists were killed in 29015

Global Witness is also calling on governments to ramp up investigation of these murders, looking also into the corporate or political forces that may have bankrolled them. They also want governments to support activists’ right to oppose projects on their land, and insure that companies are proactively seeking their consent.

Most countries are already required to do this under international law – but Kyte says this is not happening.

Kyte points out that climate change and population growth mean that pressures on land and natural resources are set to increase. “Without urgent intervention, the numbers of deaths we’re seeing will be dwarfed by those in the future.”

 

Original article was published at Dw.com

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Family of Brit Gone Missing in Costa Rica Seek Answers Seven Years On

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Michael Dixon pictured in Costa Rica, days before his disappearance. (PRNewsFoto/David Dixon)

(QCOSTARICA via COMTEX) The family of Michael Dixon, who vanished seven years ago in Costa Rica – are still seeking answers on what happened to their loved one.

Michael's parents pictured at press conference in London. (PRNewsFoto/David Dixon) source: David Dixon
Michael’s parents pictured at press conference in London. (PRNewsFoto/David Dixon)

Tuesday (18 October) marks the 7th anniversary of Michael’s disappearance in the seaside holiday town of Tamarindo.

Evidence indicates he was the victim of violent crime.

But Costa Rican authorities and British police did little to investigate. They’ve now given up on the case, despite the family’s long-standing appeals for assistance.

“The Costa Rican authorities can still help us to get to the truth of the matter. People in Tamarindo know what happened to Michael and with the right kind of support, also from the British foreign office, we could find out what happened,” Michael’s brother, David, said.

Michael, who worked as editor of a US business magazine, walked out of his hotel one evening in Tamarindo and never came back.

Some 45,000 British people a year visit Costa Rica, considered a safe destination.

But at least 20 foreign nationals disappeared or were murdered in the country in past seven years, prompting official UK and US travel warnings.

“I will not rest until I know what happened to my son. I trust that some Costa Rican police and British diplomats also have a sense of duty,” Lynn Dixon, Michael’s mother said.

Michael Dixon pictured in Costa Rica, days before his disappearance. (PRNewsFoto/David Dixon)
Michael Dixon pictured in Costa Rica, days before his disappearance. (PRNewsFoto/David Dixon)

For more information on the Michael Dixon case, go to Help Find Michael Dixon Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/helpfindmichaeldixon/ [https://www.facebook.com/groups/helpfindmichaeldixon/]

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Central America has a Weak Economic and Human Development

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Q24N (Prensa Latina) Central America suffers a vicious circle of low levels of economic growth and human development, sustained by poor productivity and high incidence of poverty, stated a regional study today.

New viable and lasting solutions are needed to reverse the current trends, pointed out the investigation carried out by the Central American Institute for Fiscal Studies, the Friedrich Ebert Foundation and the State of the Nation program.

According to the analysis,the occupation that contributes the most to productivity and family incomes usually demand ‘more than secondary education’ but the level of education in 60 percent of the productive force is sixth grade or less.

The situation is even worse if it is taken into account that in 2014 six out of 10 youths aged 15 to 24 years old were excluded from the education system.

According to the research, the most serious cases are Guatemala and Honduras, where about two thirds of young people do not study or work, or only work.

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“Increased crime mirrors security failure in Venezuela”

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The head of the Venezuelan Violence Watch (OVV), Roberto Briceño León, said that while there is a trend to claim that violence is related to poverty, killings in Venezuela hiked during the years when the country was better off economically speaking
The head of the Venezuelan Violence Watch (OVV), Roberto Briceño León, said that while there is a trend to claim that violence is related to poverty, killings in Venezuela hiked during the years when the country was better off economically speaking

The head of the Venezuelan Violence Watch (OVV), Roberto Briceño León, blamed the country’s increased crime on failed security plans implemented by the government in recent years.

“Efficiency of a public policy is apparent in its results. Having in mind that murders, theft, kidnappings and violence in prisons have skyrocketed, we could state that the 22 plans implemented have failed,” he added.

According to a research based on official data, Briceño León estimated 118 detentions in every 100 killings in 1998 in Venezuela, and from 2006 onwards, there have been as few as eight or nine arrests. In other words, no detentions in almost 91% of murders.

His remarks came during an interview with talk show “Criterios” (Criteria) aired on private news TV channel Globovisión.

Similarly, the OVV head made reference to the ongoing situation in prisons nationwide, adding that although violence in jails has always existed, it is different from that 20 years ago. Back then, he recalled, murders were caused by spikes or any other tool made by the very inmates.

Nowadays, “the organization level inside prisons is powerful indeed,” Briceño León said, arguing that the purchase of grenades, rifles, and machine guns has given violence a new look. Add to this, the exploitation of other inmates through in-place “gang leadership.”

He noted that jails, which should be “allegedly” built to prevent crime, are places where crime is exported.

To his mind, there is a trend to claim that violence is inherent in existing poverty rate. Still, he stated that the rate of murders in Venezuela “between 2002 and 2003, towards 2010,” raised when the country was in better economic conditions.

“Venezuela is among the nations with the highest murder rate worldwide; interestingly, it was not always that way,” he pointed out.

Briceño León further warned that there is a conceptual problem regarding the implementation of prevention-driven public policies. In his view, a review of the first page of government-led Mission “A toda vida Venezuela” plan will find no use of the police in anti-crime efforts.

According to Briceño León, current security policies encourage impunity. Thus, he advised that prevention programs should contain additional measures of social control and punishment of crime.

In reference to the implementation of the People’s Liberation Operations (OLP), Briceño León said that this measure has proven to be barely effective, thus leading to “deep rejection” of police agents. Add to this, increased killings.

The expert explained that criminals become more violent when they think they will not be tried, jailed, but that they will end up dead.

Political polarization is another issue that impacts crime treatment, Briceño claimed. Current laws “are not the same for everyone.” He said to have learned from some police agents whose chiefs instruct them to free an individual they have arrested for belonging to a political group.

Source El Universal

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

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Guantanamo Recovering from Hurricane Mathew

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guantanomo-cuba

(Prensa Latina) The Cuban province of Guantanamo, especially the municipality of Baracoa, is recovering gradually from the damage caused in recent days by hurricane Mathew, according to reports today in the capital.

The newspaper Venceremos reported that after several days of hard work in Baracoa, one of the most affected areas by Mathew, life is beginning to go back to normalcy with the reestablishment of public transportation to and from the area and the continuation of the school year, starting on October 17th.

On the 17th classes will resume in 30 schools, including 21 elementary schools, four secondary schools, one high school, one special-education school and three day-care centers.

The newspaper added that thanks to the effort of 33 teams, composed of 154 men from nine provinces in the country, progress has been made with the cleaning up and sanitation of the city of Baracoa, as well as restoration of the electric and communication lines.

In the municipality of San Antonio del Sur, the recovery goes at good pace, thanks to the support of workers from other provinces the hard work of the population.

According to Municipal Defense Council President Israel Rodriguez, little by little, the damage caused by the hurricane is being left in the past.

Rodriguez asserted that businesses and agriculture have resumed operations, while the Cuban Telecommunication Company (ETECSA) has recovered the optical fiber and 90 percent of mobile telephone communications, and is also making progress in full restoration of the fixed-telephone service.

The provincial electricity company confirmed that of around 78,600 clients affected by Mathew, more than half have seen their service restored, especially in the municipalities of Yateras, San Antonio del Sur and Imias.

Article first appeared at Today Cuba, click here to go there

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Informal Employment Increase Nearly 6% in Panama

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Children in a poor Panama City neighborhood play soccer on May 14. The Panama Canal has brought rapid development to the capital in recent years, but 40 percent of the country's residents still live in poverty.
Children in a poor Panama City neighborhood play soccer. The Panama Canal has brought rapid development to the capital in recent years, but 40 percent of the country’s residents still live in poverty.

(Prensa Latina) Informal employment increased nearly 6 percent in Panama from March 2015 to the same month in 2016, and men and the construction sector are the most predisposed to this activity, according to the Comptroller General of the Republic.

The source noted that about 61.4 percent of nearly 309,735 workers in construction, mining and industry do so informally.

Among the jobs prone to this practice are bus drivers, street vendors, dressmakers at home and shoe shining.

‘Often informality is stigmatized as an almost criminal segment. However, there are 94,734 informal employees working in enterprises in the formal sector of the economy and there is a significant number of jobs with high levels of informality,’ noted René Quevedo, a specialist in the labor market and sustainable self-management.

He added that between March 2006 and 2016, about 554,560 jobs were created, 26 percent of which were in the informal economy. However, 70 percent of the increase took place in the past three years, a period when this phenomenon rose nearly three points.

The increase occurs despite the fact that economic growth in the past decade was the highest in Latin America, according to the International Monetary Fund.

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

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Argentina’s Foreign Ministry Deplores Military Exercises in Falkland Islands (Malvinas)

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Colony of southern rockhopper penguins on Saunders Island
Saunders Island with Southern Rockhopper Penguins. Photo Ben Tubby - flickr.com
Saunders Island with Southern Rockhopper Penguins. Photo Ben Tubby – flickr.com

(Q24N) Argentina’s Foreign Ministry deplored the military exercises announced by the British Government in the Falkland Islands (Malvinas in Argentina) from October 19th to 28th, including missile launches.

In a press release, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Worship said that Deputy Foreign Minister Carlos Foradori addressed a statement to the British ambassador here expressing a ‘resounding protest regarding the aforementioned military exercises’.

He is also encouraged to refrain from performing them, while stating that Secretary General of the United Nations will be informed.

‘We reject the performance of such exercises in Argentinian territory, illegally occupied by the United Kingdom, which ignores the resolutions of the United Nations and other international organizations’, said the statement.

As a British overseas territory, the Falklands have internal self-governance, and the United Kingdom takes responsibility for their defence and foreign affairs.

Maritime disputes with Argentina. The United Kingdom and Argentina both claim the Falkland Islands. The UK’s position is that the Falklanders have not indicated a desire for change, and that there are no pending issues to resolve concerning the islands.

Simmering tensions between the UK and Argentina increased during the second half of the century, when Argentine President Juan Perón asserted sovereignty over the archipelago. The sovereignty dispute intensified during the 1960s, shortly after the United Nations passed a resolution on decolonization which Argentina interpreted as favourable to its position.

Concerned at the expense of maintaining the Falkland Islands in an era of budget cuts, the UK again considered transferring sovereignty to Argentina in the early Thatcher government. Substantive sovereignty talks again ended by 1981, and the dispute escalated with passing time.[59] In April 1982, the disagreement became an armed conflict when Argentina invaded the Falklands and other British territories in the South Atlantic, briefly occupying them until a UK expeditionary force retook the territories in June.

Argentina and the UK re-established diplomatic relations in 1990; relations have since deteriorated as neither has agreed on the terms of future sovereignty discussions. In 2009, British prime minister Gordon Brown had a meeting with Argentine president Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, and said that there would be no further talks over the sovereignty of the Falklands. In March 2013, the Falkland Islands held a referendum on its political status, with 99.8% of voters favoured remaining under British rule.

Argentina does not recogniZe the Falkland Islands as a partner in negotiations; consequently, it dismissed the Falkland Islands’ sovereignty referendum.

 

Source: Prensa Latina, Wikipedia, Flickr

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Cuban medicine is available to all tourists

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Medical research and development in Cuba has produced many new medications. Now medical tourism programs promoted by CSMC make these medications available to foreigners.
Medical research and development in Cuba has produced many new medications. Now medical tourism programs promoted by CSMC make these medications available to foreigners.

(Today Cuba) The prestige and the high scientific level of Cuban medicine is available to all tourists traveling to the island, Dr. Jorge Alberto Miranda, said the president of the Cuban Medical Services Trading Company (CSMC).

Miranda was participating in the Tourism Fair, Cuba 2016, being held in the World Trade Center in Mexico City. The aim of the fair is to promote specialized assistance for foreign visitors in the country’s health centers.

In statements to Prensa Latina, Miranda stressed that progress in this branch is at the same level as developed countries and is recognized by the World Health Organization and the Pan-American Health Organization, among others.

Despite the economic, commercial and financial blockade imposed by the United States on the island, which has caused great damage to the sector, ‘our services are being demanded and thousands of collaborators for other countries have been offering their knowledge,’ he said.

The Trading Company has contracts in 22 countries and with 57 businesses. It works with more than 140 travel agencies, he said.

The company has also maintained strategic business alliances in Cuba, with the Ministry of Tourism, the BioCubaFarma business group, the National Institute of Sports, Physical Education and Recreation, the Ministry of Higher Education and the Ministry of Public Health, among others.

More than 20,000 patients have been treated in institutions nationwide, in the country’s main tourist destinations.

Source: Prensa Latina Cuba

Article first appeared at Today Cuba, click here to go there

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Electoral Process in Nicaragua Advances Faultless

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President of the Supreme Electoral Council (CSE), Roberto Rivas
President of the Supreme Electoral Council (CSE), Roberto Rivas

(Today Nicaragua) The electoral process in Nicaragua is advancing smoothly after completing the registration of the parties´ representatives to ensure the openness of the general elections on November 6th.

According to Roberto Rivas, president of the Supreme Electoral Council (CSE), the 4,308 polling stations represent the administrative units in which the country is divided, seeking to facilitate the location of citizens in the electoral roll and try to avoid confusion on the election day.

For these elections, CSE has an electoral roll of 3.8 million people, who will go to the polls to elect the president and vice president of Nicaragua, 90 Nicaraguan parliamentarians and 20 members of the Central American Parliament.

In these elections, 16 political parties will be involved, 11 of them from national constituency and five from autonomous regions of the Caribbean in Nicaragua.

All of them are organized into two electoral alliances: the Sandinista National Liberation Front and the Independent Liberal Party, as well as four national parties and one regional.

Source Prensa Latina

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Videogame on Costa Rica Indigenous Mythology

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Videogame on Indigenous Mythology
Videogame on Costa Rica Indigenous Mythology

(QCOSTARICA) Children, youth and adults in Costa Rica have a new videogame ”El camino del Usekol” (The Road of the Usekol) aimed at enriching the knowledge on the country’s indigenous mythology.

The videogame presents native Costa Ricans Tanu (female) and Siarke (male). They have to pass a road full of dangers and enemies to become Usekol, the last Talamanca chief.

During the game, users browse through magic and mythology of the Costa Rican indigenous communities settled in Talamanca, Guayabo, Delta and Diquis.

The tour shows the indigenous magic and mythology, as well as legends and beliefs of the peoples, its developers, Jonathan Marino and Nancy Camacho, explained.

14650608_317921571917805_5363057367494222479_n

The main character of the story should explore a series of locations, comply with the challenges secondary characters have, resolve different problems, collect objects and fight with legendary beings of the indigenous mythology.

The videogame was funded with contributions from the Ministry of Science, Technology and Telecommunications and the National Council for Scientific and Technological Research.

Source: The-couch.net

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No Robusta For Costa Rica

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National Coffee Congress refuses to allow the cheaper Robusta bean to be cultivated in the country.
National Coffee Congress refuses to allow the cheaper Robusta bean to be cultivated in the country.
National Coffee Congress refuses to allow the cheaper Robusta bean to be cultivated in the country. Robusta was banned in Costa Rica in 1988.

(QCOSTARICA) The Congreso Nacional Cafetalero (National Coffee Congress of Costa Rica) earlier this month ruled to maintain the ban on cultivation of the robusta coffee bean, despite needed attempts to counter falling production of Arabica.

Growers in Costa Rica are interested in reintroducing the bean that is cheaper, bitter and loaded with more caffeine, but stronger and more productive than Arabica.

However, those in disagreement with the cultivation of the Robusta bean argue that it threatens the prestige of Costa Rica coffee producers, a country that is the fourteenth coffee producer in the world, known for its high quality Arabica.

Love coffee?
Love coffee? Don’t miss the Coffee Festival in San Jose on October 22 and 23, the national stadiu. Entrance is free. More details here.

Although Robusta and Arabica are are climate sensitive, the latter is affected greater by rising temperatures and pests, as well as changes in coffee consumption increases and in market dynamics.

Costa Rica outlawed the cultivation of Robusta in 1988, promoting the production of Arabica.

The proposal to amend the decree against Robusta had support from more than half of the Congress, but did not reach the required two-thirds majority, according to Jose Manuel Hernandez, head of the Chamber of Costa Rican Coffee Roasters, and Ricardo Seevers, a former president of the Instituto del Café de Costa Rica (Icafé).

Discovered in Ethiopia and now grown largely in Latin America, Africa and Asia, the Coffea Arabica bean has long dominated production and currently is about 60 percent of the world’s coffee.

Coffee production in the country began in 1779 in the Meseta Central (Central Region) which had ideal soil and climate conditions for coffee plantations. Production in the country relies on cheap, seasonal labor: Nicaraguan immigrants are often employed on these plantations.

Costa Rican coffee beans are considered among the best in the world.

Source Icafe.cr

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Costa Rica Looks to Stave Off ‘Ratings Downgrade’ With Tax Increase

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(Bloomberg) Costa Rica President Luis Guillermo Solis called on lelgislators to approve tax increases by early next year, or face a possible ratings downgrade as his government struggles to contain a widening budget deficit.currency-costa-rica

“I don’t see why we could not get this approved, but it is also a matter of realism that we may not get it,” Solis said in an interview in South Korea, where his government is negotiating a free-trade deal. “If it doesn’t happen, we are going to be in big trouble.”

The Solis government wants to turn the sales tax into a value-added-tax and raise the rate to 15% from 13% to help narrow a fiscal deficit that is running at about 6 percent of gross domestic product, Solis said. Moody’s Investors Service already has the Central American nation’s Ba1 rating on a negative outlook and any reduction would push it below Guatemala, a country with one third the income per capita.

It’s not just Moody’s that is concerned. Fitch Inc. said in September that “relatively high deficits in Costa Rica and El Salvador” had led “to an increasing debt burden over the last decade.”

Legislators need to debate and vote on the tax bill before campaigning gets underway for the February 2018 presidential elections, Solis said.

To speed the process, the government recently presented a bill to congress to slow public wage growth, a condition that opposition lawmakers had called for before discussing new taxes. “Tensions are high” over the wage bill, Solis said, urging lawmakers and labor unions to start a dialogue, something that “has not happened yet.”

The government needs to raise taxes after efforts to cut spending and crack down on fraud to boost revenues ran their course, Solis said. “If we keep cutting, it will be detrimental to Costa Rica’s well-being,” he said.

Original article was published at Bloomberg.com

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Total Chaos But, Free and Happy. Take a walk in the park to learn more.

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ake A Walk In The Park To Learn More About The Ticos
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The lake at Parque La Sabana in San Jose.

For those of who are still undecided about living in Costa Rica, the next time you’re in San Jose, spend a few hours walking through the park on a busy Sunday afternoon between 1-3pm and think of it as intensive, crash course that will show you how the Ticos behave during their free time with their loved ones.

It’s the same as most public parks in that there are hundreds of families on the grass with picnics and their kids racing around laughing and playing.

ake A Walk In The Park To Learn More About The Ticos
Take A Walk In The Park To Learn More About The Ticos

What will be different is watching the Ticos with cars enter the park trying to find a parking space, which can be a mind expanding, Zen like “learning experience” all by itself.

You’ll discover how inventive the Tico can be as he proudly manages to park his little, red 15 year old Hyundai Excel in a place where most Americans wouldn’t dare go with their expensive 4X4.

Men with large carts on wheels – including my friend Ignacio – are selling granizados, potato chips, sodas and baseball caps..

Cycling high ...
Cycling high …

What will also be different is that you’ll also see people cooking meat and chicken on skewers to sell over hot coals nestled inside an old car wheel which has been welded into a BBQ the likes of which I certainly never saw living New York City when I used to run around Central Park.

What’s even more peligroso (dangerous) is the people cooking on a wood fire (a la leña) which they have made with sticks and branches picked up off the ground in the park and nobody – police officers included – seems to mind. Starting a fire like this in a park in any “first world” country would get you arrested in minutes.

You’ll see a cheerful woman who always wears the same wide rimmed hat selling colourful, plastic inflatable toys, there are a few old Ticos selling their beautiful hand made kites so you can see kids of all ages dashing about trying to get them off the ground.

Riding low...
Riding low…

People will be fishing by the lake, little kids will be feeding bread or corn to the ducks, there are miniature pony rides to enjoy and some frustrated father will be trying to pull their family’s soaking wet dog out of the water without getting too messy…

And of course there are dozens of different soccer games going on with people on the sidelines screaming for their sons, brothers and husbands.

AARP ranks this town in Costa Rica as one of

On the new rollerblading rink and the racetrack, there are dozens of bicycles, roller-bladers, skaters, runners, joggers and walkers plus the occasional mini-motorcycle who all tend to go around the track counter clockwise – some with their dogs running after them – and there’s always a few who don’t seem to recognize the danger of travelling fast in the opposite direction however, amidst all this complete and happy chaos, I can’t recall ever seeing an accident.

Winnie the Pooh and Tigger too.
Winnie the Pooh and Tigger too.

It’s bloody amazing really, but all of this quite naturally shows you how Costa Rica is free, happy and frequently, totally chaotic!

When I leave Costa Rica to visit family in the UK, what is glaringly obvious (like being smashed in the face with a sledge hammer) is that in the UK – where we have more surveillance cameras watching our citizens than China does – it’s certainly a very clean and extremely orderly country but, the people are totally monitored and borderline neurotic!

Living in Costa Rica is definitely not for everyone but I much prefer to live in a free, happy and chaotic place than in a police state any day of the week.

 

This article comes to us courtesy of Scott Oliver, Welovecostarica.com.

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Gaining New Perspectives By Moving Overseas

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Lake Arenal, Costa Rica

By Jason Holland, InternationalLiving.com – If you feel “stuck,” stressed out, or trapped in your current situation, I can’t say that simply moving abroad will help you. But when you make that commitment … when you make that leap … something does fundamentally change inside you. You’re forced, in a way, to change your way of life. Your day-to-day routine changes. You’re forced outside your comfort zone. You feel a deeper connection with loved ones and new friends, and with your community. And soon a “switch” goes off inside you.

Manzanillo Beach, Costa Rica
Manzanillo Beach, Costa Rica

And when you let it happen, you can change your whole world for the better.

Changes on the surface come first. The lower cost of living, top-notch healthcare, and great climate to be found in your new country can’t help but put you in a good mood. The worries that troubled you back home are lifted from your shoulders. Before we moved to Costa Rica, for instance, the lack of affordable healthcare in south Florida was a major source of stress for my family, as was the high cost of living.

You also have a chance to reinvent yourself. Nobody knows who you are in your new home. You don’t have to fall into old patterns or be the person people back home expected you to be. You’re free to take risks … to take chances. Have you always wanted to try yoga but just never felt comfortable? Never had the courage (or time) to take up painting … or writing … or whatever else? Now’s your chance.

Then there is what’s below the surface — the mental game. You get a new perspective. The world becomes a smaller place. You see things and people differently and have a new attitude. You discover that people are people, no matter what their nationality. We all have qualities that make us more alike than different. We face the same issues, no matter what our backgrounds.

As an expat, you slow down. You leave traffic, stress, and the North American consumer mentality behind. Things that used to matter — like having a late model car — don’t matter so much anymore.

So what’s on the agenda instead? It’s not as though you’re tuned out of life. You’re not “on vacation” all the time, although it can feel that way sometimes. You just notice what really matters.

You feel more connected to your immediate surroundings — to the natural world around you. You know weather patterns and seasons. In Costa Rica, the mating season of the national bird, the clay-colored thrush (called the yigüirro locally) signals the arrival of the rainy season. When I’m hiking in the rainforest, I always know to look for the wild almond tree, because its seeds are a delicious treat for sloths, monkeys, toucans, and other wildlife. You recognize (and crave) a perfectly ripe mango or pineapple (I can tell by the smell; when it’s just sweet enough, it’s ready to eat), perhaps grown in your own backyard.

When I lived on the beach, I came to appreciate the rhythm of the tides, the delights of buying fresh-caught tuna, snapper, and mahi-mahi from the local fisherman for bargain prices, and the beauty of sunset, and how it changes from multi-colored splendor during cloud-filled days to a steady orange during the dry season.

When you move overseas with your partner, kids, or extended family, you find that you spend more time with them, too … sometimes just puzzling out the unexpected joys and frustrations of adjusting to a new culture, language, and lifestyle. You learn a lot about yourself and your loved ones as an expat. You find strength, resilience, patience, and courage you didn’t know you had. You find that your relationships are the most important things in your life. In my family’s case, getting lost in the middle of the night, on winding mountain roads with no lights and no street signs, had us all working together, without panicking, to find our rental home. We made it, finally, together.

At barbecues, celebrations, and school events, you learn different cultures, different habits, and different modes of life. I count folks of all ages and countries as friends. We all automatically have something in common: We left our home countries for a new life abroad. And that experience unites us and gives us plenty to talk about…even when three or four different languages are spoken at a typical gathering.

We celebrate each other’s holidays, share foods and recipes, joke around, and listen to music. We talk about home, places we’ve been, and experiences we’ve had. And when some move away to new adventures, we stay in touch on Facebook. A global family of friends we never would have had if we’d stayed in the States. It’s only possible with traveling and living abroad.

Lake Arenal, Costa Rica
Lake Arenal, Costa Rica

From my Costa Rican friends and neighbors, I’ve learned about a culture that treasures time with family and community and embraces a laidback and patient attitude toward life.

This is known as Pura Vida. It literally means “Pure Life,” but it’s more accurate to say “life is good.” It’s a great attitude to have. It means a focus on family, friends, and community. You work hard but only enough to provide a good living — not to finance a bigger home and weekly shopping trips to the mall. You work to live, not live to work. It’s amazing how that alone can cut a huge amount of stress.

All in all, I feel more like a citizen of the world. I’m proud to be from the U.S. But since moving abroad, I have realized that there is a whole lot more out there. I’ve learned that people are helpful, kind, and generous … often when you need it most.

This article comes to us courtesy of InternationalLiving.com, the world’s leading authority on how to live, work, invest, travel, and retire better overseas, via the Huffington Post.

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Donald Trump Labeled As “The Least Bad” Brings Back Memories of the “Menos Malo” of Costa Rica

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TICO BULL by Rico – Tuning in to CNN  this morning, too depressing the local news about all the shootings in this past week, I caught CNN’s New Day co-host Chris Cuomo using “the least bad” reference to the current state of the presidential campaign, quickly reminding me of the 2010 presidential election in Costa Rica, when one of the candidates dubbed himself “el menos malo” (the least bad).

In the case of Luis Fishman in the race against Oscar Arias, the media didn’t call him “el menos malo”, it was his full media campaign with billboards, print and television advertising.

Billboard from the 2010 presidential campaing in Costa Rica
Billboard from the 2010 presidential campaign in Costa Rica

At the time, many Costa Ricans saw Laura Chinchilla as a puppet of Oscar Arias, the ‘evil’ that many Americans see today Hillary Clinton as. The strategy by Fishman, I can only speculate, was to take advantage of that sentiment, ride on a wave of change and ask the people to vote the least bad. The third player in this least bad scenario was perennial presidential candidates Otton Solis and Otto Guevara.

See also: Former “Menos Malo” Backs Johnny Araya

masmalimetro
Meme from the “menos malo” era in Costa Rican politics
In the “worst bad meter” by El Infierno en Costa Rica as per Luis Fishman “the least bad”, showed us that Otto Guevara was the “bad of the bad”, Laura Chinchilla as “mildly bad” and Otton Solis “a little bad”.

BTW, Fishman lost.

Will Donald Trump suffer the same fate? Fishman isn’t Trump. And Costa Rica is not the United States. But I can’t help wondering how politics of late has reached such lows.

After four years of getting the “medium bad”, since “el menos malo” lost, in 2014 Costa Rican voters responded by electing the candidate who rode the wave of bringing change to Costa Rica.

Luis Guillermo Solis won by a landslide after his opponent, Johnny “I am back as mayor of San Jose” Araya quit campaigning.

Two years into the Solis administration we all know how that, the change, is working out.

PS, the “bad of the bad” and the “mildly bad” are currently still acting as legislators, while the “little bad” has got herself a cushy job teaching at Georgetown University. The ‘evil’ recently decided to sit out (for now) the 2018 election, paving the way for the lesser evil that goes by the name of Maria Jose Figueres.

Share you opinion post your comments below or to our official Facebook page.

Article first appeared on TICO BULL, reposted with permission.

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US Drug Trial Could Expose Criminal Ties of Venezuela Elites

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Efraín Campo Flores, segundo de la izquierda, y Franqui Francisco Flores (cuarto de izq. a der.) al ser arrestados en Haití en noviembre. U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration Read more here: http://www.elnuevoherald.com/noticias/mundo/america-latina/venezuela-es/article107488972.html#2#storylink=cpy
Efraín Campo Flores, secondfrom left and Franqui Francisco Flores (third from right) arrest in Haití in Novemeber. Photo U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration

Today Venezuela – New evidence from a high-reaching drug trafficking trial has directly implicated immediate relatives of Venezuela’s president and his wife, in a saga that could expose the criminal ties of some of the country’s most elite figures.

Investigators in a drug case brought against Efraín Campo Flores and Franqui Francisco Flores — nephews of Venezuelan first lady Cilia Flores — have obtained key information from telephones, iPads and a computer that the suspects were carrying upon their arrest, el Nuevo Herald reported.

Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and Efraín Campo Flores
Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and Efraín Campo Flores

Some of the conversations uncovered apparently prove that family members of President Nicolás Maduro and his wife participated directly in the alleged cocaine trafficking case being prosecuted in a federal court in New York.

According to el Nuevo Herald’s sources, justice officials have summoned 18 people from Venezuela to appear in court on October 21, including immediate relatives of the presidential couple and members of the presidential security and transportation unit, the Casa Militar.

In response, lawyers for the two primary suspects reportedly wrote to the New York court asking that the summons requests be suspended, and that any evidence obtained through them be excluded from the case.

The Flores nephews were arrested in Haiti in November 2015 and are facing charges of conspiring to smuggle 800 kilograms of cocaine into the United States. Their prosecution appeared to be in some trouble only weeks ago, when it was discovered that some of the informants in the investigation were potentially unreliable.

The two defendants signed written confessions shortly after their arrests, which their legal team had also tried to exclude from evidence. However, the federal judge in the case ruled on October 12 that prosecutors could indeed submit those confessions as evidence in the trial.

Developments in the Flores case may well lengthen the list of Venezuelan elites implicated in the alleged drug trafficking scheme — including the first lady’s brother — adding weight to notions that the country is increasingly displaying the characteristics of a mafia state.

High-ranking Venezuelan officials have long been strongly suspected of playing a key role in international cocaine trafficking, and the United States has brought drug charges against some of the top figures of the Maduro government.

Furthermore, military involvement in contraband activities has been facilitated by President Maduro’s decision to put the armed forces in charge of food distribution in July 2016.

The Venezuelan state is also facing conditions that have allowed violent crime and insecurity to spiral out of control. Part of the blame for this trend lies with criminal groups closely tied to government institutions. Venezuela’s notorious colectivos — pro-government left-wing militias — so-called “mega-gangs” and corrupt police rings are thought to be behind surging rates of extortion and kidnappings, which have nearly doubled in the past year.

Another form of criminal-state collusion was recently brought to the fore by opposition politician Américo De Grazia, who said in an interview that “organized crime has become state policy” in the eastern Bolívar region. De Grazia’s statement came days after an organized criminal group — escorted by state security forces — allegedly massacred 11 people at an illegal mine in Bolívar controlled by another gang.

Such cases illustrate the Venezuelan government’s complicity in the disturbing escalation of criminality over the past few years. With the country’s economic and political crisis unlikely to improve in the near term, the permeation of Venezuelan institutions by organized crime could worsen going forward.

Source Insightcrime.org

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

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It’s A Lemon. It’s An Orange. It’s An Esrog! And Come Sukkot I Can Be Found As Far Away As Costa Rica.

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Q24N –It’s a lemon. It’s an orange. It’s an esrog! It may bear resemblance to its cousins, but the esrog is no simple citrus. Unlike its relatives, the esrog is not peeled and eaten neat. Instead, its thick white rind is cooked down in sugary bliss and enjoyed as a confection. Citrons are also used in alcoholic beverages, candles, and soaps.

But, of course, that’s all secondary. The esrog’s primary occupation is during the fall festival Sukkot, when it is united with palm, myrtle, and the-etrogwillow branches to form the Four Species. The three latter plants are combined into a heady bouquet and then shaken alongside the esrog.

It takes a lot before that little esrog is ready for prime time. Incredibly susceptible to the elements, the tree’s viability depends largely on each season’s conditions. A freezing winter will stunt its flowering, too much sun or rain will cause the fruit to wither, and then there are the bugs. “We are in a continuous war with the bugs,” sighs Nachum Luria, from his farm in Kfar Chabad, Israel.

“We need to have the proper balance of pesticides, enough to kill the bugs but not too strong to make marks on the esrogs. No one cares on an orange or another fruit, but any little blemish devalues an esrog.” Luria has been babying his citrons for decades. Unlike other produce, which can be left largely untended until harvest time, the esrog needs special care. “The whole year, all day, we take care of our esrogs,” he shares. “We protect them from the branches, from the leaves themselves, from the weather.” When harvest finally rolls around, one fruit is chosen at a time, then carefully held as the picker climbs down the tree to deposit it in its own cushioned box. Talk about individual attention.

The trees Luria lovingly tends have been growing in this Israeli village since 1966. His father-in-law Rabbi Eliyahu Rivkin, who founded Etrogei Lubavitch, was given an Italian esrog from the Lubavitcher Rebbe. He returned to his Israeli village, pulled out his nascent crop, and replanted an entire orchard from that one fruit. The Lurias like to say they grow Calabrian esrogs in Israel.

The distinction is significant. According to Chassidic lore, when G-d commanded Moshe to acquire an esrog, the faithful servant questioned where he could procure one in the desert. A cloud whisked away to Calabria and returned with the finest of the species. Since then, many Chabad and other Chassidic sects prefer these esrogs from Italy’s lowest region, the toe of the boot.

For the last 42 years, Rabbi Moshe Lazar has supervised the Italian operation. He travels 1,100 kilometers from his home in Milan to the fields of Calabria several times annually. “If we wouldn’t have to worry about grafting,” he explains fieldside, “we could make two phone calls and have an entire shipment ready instantly.”

The esrog tree’s delicate nature and shallow roots give it a significantly shorter, less stable life expectancy. Farmers, therefore, are tempted to graft the tree to one of its hardier cousins, say a lime or mandarin orange tree. But grafting makes the fruit unkosher for use in this mitzvah. Rabbinic inspectors check each tree’s roots to ensure that the fruit is genetically pure.

Since he was 14, Efrayim Keller has spent each summer inspecting row after row of esrog tree. He used to come with his father, and now he sometimes brings his own children. The fruits he picks are packed and shipped back to America with individual certificates from the Italian government. Come Sukkot, they can be found around the United States and as far away as Manchester, Bangkok, and Costa Rica.

Summers in the field are hot and hard, he says. Upwards of 20 percent of the esrogs picked are instantly discarded as unfit for the mitzvah. Even though a single kosher esrog can command 50 dollars (and some sell for hundreds of dollars), the amount of work put into each fruit does not always equal profit for the merchants. Today Keller continues a tradition his father began in 1970: when he finds a beautiful piece, he sings and dances. The farmhands, who likewise came of age in these fields, join in.

Calabria is one of the least developed regions of Italy and farmers depend on the reliability of the Jewish esrog market. When he first visited in the 1960s, Lazar recalls farms of tomatoes, grains, and citrons. Today, those little family farms have joined to produce one single, lucrative product, the esrog. Farmers who spend much of the agricultural season tending these plants, covering, spraying, and inspecting, are grateful for the income they represent come fall.

They are also interested in another aspect of the Jewish culture, their own. In recent years, many locals have begun digging into their roots, discovering Jewish blood. Entire towns and villages can trace their heritage to conversos who were forced to convert to Christianity 500 years ago. Some kept their Judaism secretly, others knew nothing of their past. Throughout the year, Lazar is invited to speak to locals across the region eager to learn more of their heritage. The Italians here hosted a candlelight march to mark The Day of Remembrance. Hundreds gathered last month to celebrate the esrog and its religious importance in the fields.

“We are here to pick the fruit,” Lazar says. “But G-d has different intentions. These Italians want to connect with the Jews and perhaps this is the real reason we are here.”

Original article can be found at Lubavitch.com

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President of Purdy Motor Opposes Exoneration For Electric Cars

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Legislators propose tax exemptions and marchamo (first five years) for electric vehicles
Legislators propose tax exemptions and marchamo (first five years) for electric vehicles
Legislators propose tax exemptions and marchamo (first five years) for electric vehicles

(QCOSTARICA) The president of Purdy Motor, Javier Quiros, said he opposes a proposed tax exemption on electric cars in the country and that it will not encourage people to buy them.

Quiros’ company is the exclusive Toyota dealer in the country.

The businessman said that the tax exemptions and other incentives to purchase electric vehicles will be insufficient given that the country lacks a nationwide system of “electrolineras” or charging stations.

Quiros made his views known on the morning radio program Nuestra Voz, in contrast to arguments by the proponents of the incentives, legislators Marcela Guerrero of the Partido Acción Ciudadana (PAC), Gerardo Vargas of the Frente Amplio and Natalia Diaz of the Movimiento Libertario.

Among the proposed incentives is a 100% exemption on import and sales tax and no payment of the “marchamo” (annual circulation permit) for the first five years.

The proposed initiative also calls for a minimum of 24 electrolineras in different points across the country.

The legislators added that the main purpose of their proposal is to “gradually change the Costa Rican culture”.

Source Ameliarueda.com

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“Costa Rica Essential” in Seoul

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Costa Rica Opens Trade Office in South Korea. Photo Casa Presidencial/Procomer
Costa Rica Opens Trade Office in South Korea. Photo Casa Presidencial/Procomer
Costa Rica Opens Trade Office in South Korea. Photo Casa Presidencial/Procomer

With an eye to opening up new business opportunities for domestic exporters, the Foreign Trade of Costa Rica (PROCOMER) inaugurated Thursday a new headquarters in the Seoul, South Korea’s capital city.

“With this new sales representation in addition to the existing ones, there are 41 offices around the world which continue to support the efforts of Costa Rican internationalization,” said the Procomer press release.

“Located in the new premises of the Embassy of Costa Rica in a very central location in the city, surrounded by commercial activity, it is expected that the office will provide a renewed drive for Costa Rican exports to this and other Asian markets and also help strengthen investment flows between the two countries,” continued the statement.

Alexander Mora, Minister of Foreign Trade and president of the Procomer board of directors, said the trade office is an opportunity promote and strengthen the position of Costa Rica goods and services in global markets.

“It is a logic of diversification and generation of new opportunities,” said Mora.

This is the 41st trade office Costa Rica has around the world.

The South Korea trade office is also a great opportunity for the country to continue promoting its Esencial Costa Rica brand around the world.

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Why are Colombia, Peru Coca Numbers Going in Opposite Directions?

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Today Colombia – Peru has eradicated more than 22,000 hectares of coca so far in 2016, suggesting yet another year of declining cultivation in the Andean nation even as the dramatic rise of coca growing in neighboring Colombia shows no sign of relenting.

In an October 10 press release, Peru’s Interior Ministry announced that the authorities have destroyed 22,072 hectares of coca during the course of 2016. The operations have also resulted in the destruction of 85 cocaine laboratories.

Peru’s eradication campaign has taken place in 16 districts scattered throughout the regions of Puno, Pasco, Huánuco, Pucallpa and Loreto. The areas with the largest amount of crop removal are Ciudad Constitución, Pasco and Irazola, Pucallpa, where eradicators have reduced cultivation by 7,000 and 2,000 hectares, respectively.

These numbers suggest Peru could register its sixth straight year of decreased coca cultivation. Peru has reduced coca cultivation by almost one-third in the last five years, according to figures from the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, and in 2015 the country registered the lowest amount of coca sown in the last 15 years.

The Interior Ministry’s data project Peru to fall short of the record amount of coca destroyed last year, but it will likely outpace the eradication figures for every year before 2014.

On a regional scale, however, these gains have been negated by the surge of coca growing seen in Colombia. Colombia experienced a major decline in cultivation during the late 2000s and early 2010s, dropping from 98,800 hectares in 2007 to just 47,100 by 2012. But in the last few years there has been a major resurgence, with total coca growth rising by over 20,000 hectares in both 2014 and 2015.

16-10-12-colombia-peru-graph

Why are the trend lines going in opposite directions for Peru and Colombia? One unavoidable answer is that illegal armed groups have control over a greater amount of the coca being grown in Colombia, which makes eradication exponentially more difficult. Left-wing guerrillas of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia – FARC) oversee up to 70 percent of the country’s coca supply, and the rebel army is believed to have encouraged farmers to increase their harvests in recent years in preparation of a FARC-government peace agreement.

The territorial presence of Peru’s Shining Path insurgent group is much more limited. The remote Apurimac, Ene and Mantaro River Valleys (VRAEM) region represents the last bastion for the group. The VRAEM also doubles as the country’s center for coca production, thanks in large part to the dangers the Shining Path poses to eradication teams. Last year, the VRAEM accounted for 44 percent of all the coca grown in Peru and cultivation remained steady compared to 2014, despite a nationwide drop of 6 percent.

High levels of community resistance to manual eradication efforts may also be a factor. Colombian coca farmers carried out over 400 blockades during the first eight months of 2016, compared to over 100 in previous years. It is too soon to tell if there is a correlation between the number of blockades and eradication, since the country’s 2016 coca figures have yet to be released. This fierce opposition is nonetheless a worrying sign that the Colombian authorities face significant challenges to reversing the current boom in coca crops.

Article originally appeared at Today Colombia. Reposted with permission.

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Canada Issues Travel Warning on Venezuela

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venezuela-travel


Today Venezuela –
Canada joined the list of countries which have recommended their citizens not to travel to Venezuela, for security purposes.

In a notice issued late Wednesday by Global Affairs Canada, the Canadian government advised against visiting the South American nation unless essential.

The advisory reads:

Venezuela – AVOID NON-ESSENTIAL TRAVEL

Global Affairs Canada advises against non-essential travel to Venezuela due to the significant level of violent crime, the unstable political and economic situations and the decline in basic living conditions, including shortages of medication, food staples and water, in the country. A nationwide state of exception (state of emergency) has been in effect since January 15, 2016.

The alert makes reference to “the significant level of violent crime, the unstable political and economic situations” Venezuelans are going through.

Add to this, “the decline in basic living conditions, including shortages of medication, food staples and water.”

In addition, Canada has issued health notice for travel to Venezuela:

Travel Health Notice – Zika virus

The Public Health Agency of Canada has issued a Travel Health Notice for the Global Update: Zika virus infection recommending that Canadians practice special health precautions while travelling in affected countries. Pregnant women and those considering becoming pregnant should avoid travel to Venezuela. See Health for more information.

Like Canada, other four nations including the United States, Germany, Spain and the Netherlands have also issued travel warnings on Venezuela.

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

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Nicaragua Expands Fertilizer Production

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Photo END
Photo END

Q24N – With the enlargement, the storage capacity in the plant making nutrition products for crops which Disagro operates in Corinto will increase from 35,000 to 55,000 metric tons.

US$4 million was invested in the expansion of the plant making nutrition products for crops.

“… ‘This is an investment that generates confidence in Nicaraguan agriculture, because agricultural production areas in the Pacific and the Caribbean are growing in size and productivity’, said Baltodano, who points out that producers will need to carry out soil analysis in order to make their crops efficient.”

Elnuevodiario.com.ni reports that “…The group of Guatemalan investors, merged with the Servicio Agrícola Gurdián, a local company dedicated to the marketing of agricultural raw materials, which opened its doors to the West in 1958 and has experience and expertise in the Nicaraguan agricultural sector.”

Source: elnuevodiario.com.ni

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Panama Records Increase In Consumption of Poultry Products

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Photo from La Prensa
Photo from La Prensa

The union of poultry farmers reported an increase of 8% in the first ten months of the year compared to the same period in 2015.

The National Association of Poultry Farmers of Panama (ANAVIP) recorded an increase in consumption of poultry meat in the country, of up to 87 pounds per person at the end of 2015. The ANAVIP figures also show increased egg consumption, which at the end of 2015 stood at 154 per person, 17 units more than in the previous year.

“… The boom in the sector, according to industry, is due to the use of good technology, the development of human talent and the use of good environmental practices and production, said Luis Carlos Castroverde, president of the National Association of Poultry Farmers in Panama (ANAVIP).”

Prensa.com reports that “…The poultry industry contributes 23.1% of gross domestic product (GDP) in the agricultural sector, with an economic value of 329.1 million dollars, followed by livestock, with 16.5% and 234.4 million dollars.”

Source: Prensa.com

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

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Government of El Salvador Has Run Out of Money

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About half of all Salvadorans live in the countryside. They are poor and don’t have electricity or running water in their homes.
About half of all Salvadorans live in the countryside. They are poor and don’t have electricity or running water in their homes.
About half of all Salvadorans live in the countryside. They are poor and don’t have electricity or running water in their homes.

Q24N – A state of emergency has been declared and pressure has been put on the Assembly to approve borrowing in the order of US$1.2 billion in order to honor short-term debts.

President Sanchez Ceren announced as a first step a declaratory emergency, so that before the close of 2016 they can ‘attend to, discuss and build the best agreements that will provide the relevant results’ on issues such as approval of bonds for $1.2 billion. With that amount the government hopes to deal with the illiquidity and respond to the state’s short – term commitments.

A statement by the Presidency notes that “… the government is willing to agree to approve the Fiscal Responsibility Law together with all political forces.’The tax package which we will agree, must include a vision that promotes economic growth in the medium and long term’.

He said that ‘the best tax measure for the coming years is to grow the economy and productivity in order to generate more and better jobs, as well as to continue the fight against tax evasion and avoidance’.

In this regard, he announced, as part of this package, a second line of the actions which seek to stimulate economic growth, productivity and employment.

“With urgency we will move forward in the process of simplification of procedures and promoting a better business climate in order to seize opportunities for both domestic and international investment.”

‘We will promote the implementation of Public – Private Partnerships, which encourage short and medium term domestic investment, employment and foreign investment’.

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Colombians march to demand Farc peace deal be revived

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Thousands of Colombians have taken part in marches to demand that a peace deal signed by the government and Farc rebels be upheld.

In Bogota, the capital and largest city in Colombia, families of victims were given white flowers by well-wishers to symbolise peace.

The agreement, reached after years of negotiation, was rejected by a slim majority in a national referendum earlier this month.

Campaigners for the “No” vote have demanded a series of changes.

Farc leader Timoleon Rodriguez, better known as  “imochenko”, said on Wednesday he was confident the deal could be revived although he said he would be reluctant to re-negotiate some elements of the accord.

In a show of support for the agreement, thousands of students, farmers and indigenous leaders congregated in front of congress in Bogota.

Thousands took part in the march in Bogota
Thousands took part in the march in Bogota

“All Colombians must work on building peace,” said Carmenza Pinto, 64, who was displaced by the war.

“We must strive for a better future and forgiveness is the best example we can give.”

Speaking earlier, Timochenko said he had held several meetings with government negotiators in the Cuban capital, Havana, to try to find a way around the impasse.

He said he was confident the deal could be resuscitated.
‘Good news soon’

“This is a conflict that has gone on for many years and opened deep wounds,” he told Caracol Radio.

“We must join forces and together apply healing balm to the wounds. We will have good news soon.”

However, he said he would be reluctant to re-negotiate one of the most contentious clauses which includes a provision for reduced jail terms for rebels who confess to human rights abuses.

Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos was awarded the Nobel Peace prize for reaching the peace agreement.

He has said he will donate the prize money to help the victims of the conflict.

This article originally appeared on BBC.com

Article originally appeared at Today Colombia. Reposted with permission.

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Countries Americans Should Visit Before Trump Becomes President

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Mexico is at the top of any list of countries Americans Should Visit Before Trump Becomes President
Mexico is at the top of any list of countries  Americans Should Visit Before Trump Becomes President
Mexico is at the top of any list of countries Americans Should Visit Before Trump Becomes President

(QTRAVEL) Though Costa Rica is not on the list, the article by Jessie Beck post on Onyourterms.com has us thinking, will American travel really suffer under a Trump administration. Without exception we can expect it so in the six countries listed in below, but what about the rest of the world? …read on.

With the presidential election fast approaching, many of us — myself included — can’t help but worry that the seemingly impossible might actually happen: Donald Trump could become president.

That scares the shit out of me and takes me back to traveling in the Bush era. A time when admitting I was American would launch foreigners into a criticism of what a terrible president the U.S. had, and how I should be ashamed to have voted in a president like that (never mind that I was too young to vote during both elections).

Then, something beautiful happened. While I was living in Malta in 2008, Obama became president. All of the sudden people in other countries were actually excited to hear that I was American. In Morocco, they gave me high fives and yelled “Obama!” In Malta, they shrugged and said “Huh, I didn’t think you guys would actually do it.” The world was excited about Obama. International sentiments towards the U.S. improved, and travel over the past 8 years has involved absolutely zero lies about my nationality.

If Trump becomes president, though, we international travelers might have to revert to the bygone days of hiding our nationality while abroad (“Yeah, uh, I’m from, uh, Vancouver…”). No more high fives from excited Moroccans. No more thumbs ups or nods of approval.

Just in case Trump becomes president, below are 6 countries you should visit before it happens:

1. Mexico

Of course you knew this would be at the top of the list. Trump led his campaign with promises to build a wall between the U.S. and Mexico and — surprise, surprise — it hasn’t exactly done much to win approval in our southern neighbor.

If Trump is to become president and builds that wall (regardless of who funds it), the time in which we can amicably visit Mexico may be short.

2. Iran

Trump’s foreign policy proposals have left many fearful that a Trump presidency could seriously damage our relationship with Iran and upset the peace and stability currently in the region.

Fox News quotes Trump as saying “We will totally dismantle Iran’s global terror network,”… “Believe me.”

In response, a senior diplomat told The Guardian, “My big concern is that he has said he will tear up the nuclear deal with Iran. That would be catastrophic,”…“It was the biggest step forward in decades towards peace and stability in the Middle East and in counter-proliferation.”

Currently, you can travel to Iran and, from what I’ve heard from Iranian friends, it’s a beautiful country. In fact, luxury adventure travel company, GeoEx, is one of the few tour operators to run trips there if you’re not comfortable going it solo.

3. Germany

German newspaper, Spiegel, ran an article last February declaring Trump “The most dangerous man in the world,” in which they pointed out fascist characteristics and potential for inflaming global tensions.

However, they’re also quick to point out that this Trump sensation is made possible by the part of our population who have bought into his rhetoric.

Fair point, Germany, and I wouldn’t blame you if you wanted to make it more difficult for radical, anti-everyone-else, Americans to visit.

4. The UK

Criticism of Trump is high in the UK. From cartoons on the front of magazines to pithy articles giving Trump emergency hair advice; it’s safe to say that Trump isn’t highly regarded in the UK.

Further, there’s real fear that his foreign policies could damage our relationship with this long-time ally. As a recent video posted by The Guardian states, “If Trump actually makes it to the White House… there’ll be a surge of what people will call anti-American-ism. People will mock the nation as dumb, vulgar, and aggressive. It’ll be like it was in the George W. Bush years, only much, much worse.”

Oh crap. London, here I come… because who knows when I’ll next be able to visit without being shamed for my passport?

5. Japan & 6. South Korea

A Trump presidency could bring an end to the military support the U.S. provides for Japan and, as a result, instability in the region. As Van Jackson said in the Diplomat last year, “Trump’s stance toward allies like Japan and South Korea would not simply wreck those alliances, but destabilize Northeast Asia’s precarious balance.”

For travelers, I guess that means we’ll have to get our ramen and bibimbap fill in sooner than later.
Countries You Should Visit if Trump Becomes President

On the flip-side, you might want to hold off on any trips to Australia or Canada. If Trump becomes president, both countries have been quoted saying they’ll happily take in American refugees fleeing a Trump presidency (and Jeff Cook will sell your home).

I hear Melbourne is quite lovely….

***

This article originally appeared on On Your Terms.

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“Tres Hermanas” Opens Boutique Butcher Store

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Photo courtesy 3H

(QBUSINESS) The restaurant chain “Tres Hermanas” has unveiled its “Carnicería Boutique” (Boutique Butcher) in Terrazs de Lindora, in Santa Ana.

At the model butcher store identified with the 3H logo, customers can buy meat cuts like Rib, Tenderloin, New York and Delmonico among others. In addition, customers can buy sausages and encased meat products and prepared foods like their BBQ Brisket Sandwich.

The company expects to open at least three more stores next year, mainly in downtown San Jose and shopping centres on the east and west of the city.

So far, the Costa Rican company only operated large restaurants, known for their traditional sculpture of a giant bull in the front of the store, the first located at the Limonal junction on the Ruta 1 (the turn off to the Tempisque bridge) and the other in La Uruca, in San Jose, next to the immigration service. Though the giant bull faces the autopista General Cañas, the entrance is by the sideroad.

Isabel Acosta, brand manager for the Tres Hermanas, said they plan to open seven new locations in the near future, and currently employ 60 people.

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Banana Workers Are Pushing Hard for Justice

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Q24N – Lawsuits filed by Latin American banana plantation workers have been upheld despite being dismissed by a number of other courts. The workers claim that they were exposed to harmful chemicals while working on the plantations.

db42031ec9adc439cec04a87ff75_grandeThe lawsuits, which were filed by hundreds of plantation workers, target major corporations like Chiquita, Dow Chemicals and Dole Foods. The farmers allege that they were exposed to dibromochloropropane (DBCP) on the job and were not given any protection. DBCP is banned in the United States for causing cancer and sterility.

A report from the Louisiana Record details the allegations:

The plaintiffs allege the vapors and chemicals would become trapped under the canopy of banana leaves and they would become trapped in its fumes, exposing them to the chemical and cutting off their ventilation.

Because of the exposure to DBCP, the banana farmers are claiming that they have suffered from infertility, cancer and problems with their renal systems and sperm.

A case recently dismissed by a Delaware court was revived by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit in an 11-0 decision. This specific battle is just a small part of a much wider struggle that has been going on since the late 70s.

Most domestic uses of DBCP were banned in 1977 but, despite strong warnings about its health impact, Dole continued to use the chemical. It even threatened to sue Dow Chemical if they stopped sending shipments of the DBCP to their banana plantations in Latin America. In 1983, six of the Occidental plant workers won a $4.9 million judgement against Dow, which paved the way for the EPA to ban all uses of the substance in the United States.

After a Texas court ruled that foreign locations could become part of such lawsuits in 1990, 1,000 Costa Rican plantation workers filed suit against Standard Fruit, which is now Dole. The corporation agreed to pay $20 million, but after legal fees the workers weren’t left with much money. Small payments were also ultimately received after a class action lawsuit in 1993 that filed by over 16,000 plantation workers against several fruit and chemical companies, including Dole, Chiquita, Del Monte.

The Nicaraguan Nemagon movement, which sought justice for the impacted workers, began in the early 90s and targeted the fruit and chemical companies. In 2002, after a legal battle led by the attorneys who worked on Erin Brockovich landmark toxicity suit, Nicaragua’s Supreme Court ordered Dow Chemical Co., Shell Chemical Co. and Dole Food Co. pay nearly $500 million in compensation to 583 Nicaraguan banana workers. Not only did the companies refuse to participate in the trial, Dow called the judgment “unenforceable” because the trial didn’t take place in a US court. They also pointed at the previous claim of law 364 being unconstitutional. One year later, a Los Angeles judge ruled that the decision couldn’t be enforced because the companies weren’t legally notified.

In 2009, Fredrik Gertten directed a documentary on the legal fight between Dole and Nicaraguan banana plantation workers called Bananas!

Source Alternet.org

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Narco Model Sentenced To Four Years in Prison

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Adriana Corella (left) In court on Wednesday during sentencing
Adriana Corella (left) in court on Wednesday during sentencing. Photo from El Nuevo Diario, Nicaragua

(QCOSTARICA) Costa Rican model Adriana Kathia Corella will be spending the next four years and six months in prison, sentenced by a Nicaraguan court for money laundering and organized crime.

The sentence was read Wednesday afternoon by judge of the Seventh Criminal Court District Trial of Managua, Octavio Rothschuh.

Adriana in court Wednesday for her sentencing, where she will be spending the next 4 years and six months in prison for money laundering and organized crime
Adriana in court Wednesday for her sentencing, where she will be spending the next 4 years and six months in prison for money laundering and organized crime

Corrella was one of the members of the “Cacique” gang that moved drugs between Costa Rica and Nicaragua. She was one of five people arrested in Nicaragua last December 4.

During the police operation, Nicaragua authorities seized 285 kilos of cocaine hidden in the fuel tanks of two tractor trailers and in the compartment of another vehicle, a pick up truck, US$871,000 in cash.

At the time, Nicaragua’s national police reported that a Costa Rican, identified as Maruo Ruiz Lopez, 40, and designated at the gang leader, escaped police, but was later found in a luxury home, where he had committed suicide.

Initially the model was also charged with international drug traffickng, however, in the trial in June last, judge Rothschuh acquitted her of that offense.

Lopez was Corella’s better half and father of the couple’s five year old daughter. The child is now in the custody of Corella’s parents in Costa Rica, released to them by the Nicaraguan child welfare agency.

At trial, Corella was described as the person who handled the money for the gang, despite vowing her innocence, and alleging she was a victim of domestic violence.

According to an AFP report, it was not clear if Corella would be spending her time in a Nicaraguan prison for women, or as in the case of other Costa Ricans sentenced in Nicaragua, would be repatriated to Costa Rica, to serve her time on Tico soil.

In the Wednesday sentencing, the other members of the gang were sentenced from 5 to 15 years in prison.

During trial, the Nicaraguan press had a field day, with headlines included “Tica Model Brings Her Closet to Prison” and “Tica Model Dazzles Court in Managua“, and photos of the sexy dress the model wore in court.

Photos are from El Nuevo Diario in Nicaragua.

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Final Phase of “Platina” Bridge Reconstruction To Begin At End of October

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The "Platina" bridge has been a nightmare for drivers for more than 7 years.
The "Platina" bridge has been a nightmare for drivers for more than 7 years.
The “Platina” bridge has been a nightmare for drivers for more than 7 years.

(QCOSTARICA) After more than 7 years, several failed repairs and millions of dollars gone to waste, the “platina” bridge of the General Cañas over the Virilla river may finally have its six lanes. I say maybe given the history of this project.

According to the Ministry of Transport (MOPT), work on the final phase of the bridge reconstruction, expanding it from the current four lanes (two each in direction) to six, is expected to begin at the end of the month and take four months to complete.

MOPT officials say it will ensure the “least possible impact” on traffic, as it moves to keeps its promise of a February completion date. The final cost of this work is estimated at more than ¢7 billion colones.

However, MOPT officials are quick to point out that their greatest challenges (that may cause delays) are the trusses and beams, respectively at 25% and 50% progress.

Illustration of the reconstructed bridge. Source MOPT
Illustration of the reconstructed bridge. Source MOPT

The bridge was dubbed “la platina” when back in 2009 noted was a 10 centimeter (4 inch gap) in one the spans. A metal sheet (platina) that remained exposed was used to repair the damage. Several ensuing repair attempts failed.

puente-platina-cerrado-noche-jueves

The bridge, a throwback from the 1960s kept showing more signs of deterioration, prompting a total surface overhaul a couple of years later. It didn’t take. Within months the concrete within the metal grate frame began to crumble, getting worse over time, once platinas were used to patch the surface.

Finally it was decided to reinforce the structure from the underneath. Repair work was halted to review the feasibility of expanding the bridge to six lanes, using the base structure. It was determined that it would be more economical, to repair and expand the existing bridge, than to build a new one. And that is where we are today.

The bridge is part of the busiest road in the country.

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Constitutional Court Endorses Bill To Punish Sex With Minors

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(QCOSTARICA) The Constitutional Court or Sala IV as it is commonly referred to has endorsed the bill that seeks to punish improper relations with minors.

According to the Court, the legislative text has no points of unconstitutionality, and may be voted in second and final debate by the Legislative Assembly.

The draft bill, approved in first debate with 40 votes in favour and three against, stipulates a prison term of up to three years for sexual relations with a minor who between 15 and under 18 years of age when the adult seven years older or more and doubled (six years) if the minor is 13 and 14 and the adult is five years or older than the minor.

The Penal Code in Costa Rica constitutes it a ‘sex crime’ if the victim is between 13 and 18 years of age, and rape if under 13, where no matter the age difference, is punishable with ten to sixteen years in prison.

The draft bill was sent to the Constitutional Court for review by a group of legislators, led by legislator Otto Guevara, to ensure the bill does not violate constitutional laws if and when in force.

Guevara said his position continues against the approval of the law and in second debate will be voting against it.

The draft bill obtained quick approval (in first debate) by the majority of legislators present in the Assembly, following the case in July of a school teacher in Perez Zeledon marrying her 15 year old student.

In Costa Rica, a minor between 15 and under 17 can legally marry with the consent of a parent or legal guardian.

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Sleep Your Way to Costa Rica

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Woman reclining in spacious seat, which converts into a fully flat bed

(QTRAVEL) If you want to begin your Costa Rican vacation in style — consider paying a little more for that upgraded, direct flight to get substantially more comfort.

British Airways, and Iberia Airlines with direct flights to and from San Jose (SJO), all offer beds in their first class cabins so passengers can stretch out and sleep through the night. Way better than trying to doze with a blow-up neck rest!

Woman reclining in spacious seat, which converts into a fully flat bed
Woman reclining in spacious seat, which converts into a fully flat bed. Photo from British Airways website.

If that sounds good to you — and why wouldn’t it? — consider some of these other benefits to first class, long haul flights:

Pull the thick curtains around the bed to enclose the area into a private sleep suite, once a steward has set up the mattress — complete with duvet and pillow!

British Airways similarly offer a flat bed with the bonus of a memory foam pillow for optimum neck support for a good night’s rest and a cozy blanket in their sleeper service. The skincare set of Elemis products ensures that your complexion won’t suffer from air cabin dehydration during the long flight.

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Spanish Cuisine”. Photo © Iberia

Iberia’s seat beds are longer than both Air France and British Airways to really stretch out your toes. The adjustable shoulder and back pillow even comes with a massage setting to ensure complete relaxation on board!

All three airlines cater for their customers’ appetites; each offering distinctly regional flavors and specialities from English afternoon tea with Earl Grey to the very French foie gras for a full stomach before bedtime.

However you arrive to Costa Rica, the sights, sounds and experiences will soon distract you from any jet lag!

Adapted from the article by Sara Ford posted at blog.vamosrentacar.com

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27 March 2026 - At The Banks - Source: BCCR