Hurricane Matthew strengthened to a rare Category 5 late Friday evening, before weakening to a strong Category 4 hurricane overnight
(QCOSTARICA) The National Emergency Commission (Comisión Nacional de Emergencias – CNE) issued a “green alert” for the province of Limon and the South Pacific for possible high waves and heavy rains, as a result of a indirect impact of Hurricane Matthew.
According to a press released by the CNE, the alert is preventative. The University of Costa Rica (UCR) forecast waves up to 3 metres high for today (Saturday) and 2.7 metres on Sunday.
Hurricane Matthew strengthened to a rare Category 5 late Friday evening, before weakening to a strong Category 4 hurricane overnight. Matthew is the first Category 5 hurricane since Hurricane Felix in 2007.
The storm poses a danger to Jamaica, parts of Hispañola, eastern Cuba and the Bahamas early next week. Its potential U.S. impact later next week still remains unclear. Impacts are possible in Florida during the middle of next week.
In Costa Rica, the hurricane could affect the Caribbean coast ans areas in the South Pacific, including Corredores, Osa, Coto Brus, Golfito, Buenos Aires and Perez Zeledon.
The end of November is likely to be a good time to buy dollars, specifically if you take into account the value of the currency last October.
(Q24N) In the first nine months of the year the Bank of Guatemala has intervened in the exchange market with $1 billion in order to keep the Quetzal from appreciating further.
The increasing flows of remittances coming into the country are the main reason behind the appreciation of the Quetzal against the Dollar. So far this year the Bank of Guatemala has had to intervene by acquiring more than us$1 billion, thus increasing monetary reserves.
Prensalibre.com explains that “…Actions taken during the year by the Banguat duplicate the operations carried out in the past five years and represent a strong emission of quetzales into the economy. ”
Economist Érick Coyoy said that “… the Monetary Board must review the exchange rate policy, ‘because there is an accumulation of monetary reserves and increased issuance of unbacked quetzales. It gives the impression that the interventions in the foreign exchange market are not causing the desired effect, because they are injecting more quetzales into the economy, which are absorbed by rising prices, ie higher inflation.'”
he 4th edition of Oktober Beerfest will take place October 15-16
(QCOSTARICA) As craft beer tourism continues to grow as one of the most popular trends, Costa Rica has become the go-to spot for those looking to savor the many options of brews. With over 40 microbreweries, this small country has become one of the hottest places in Latin America to grab a cold, refreshing glass.
The 4th edition of Oktober Beerfest in Costa Rica will take place on October 15-16 at the Parque Viva in Alajuela
In an effort to find a singular “tico” flavor, the Costa Rica Craft Brewers Association began a local movement that forever changed the country’s beer culture. Since 2011, the popularity of microbreweries has taken over the nation, making San Jose the center of this movement.
In celebration of Costa Rica’s craft beer revolution, local and international companies will come together to celebrate Oktober Beerfest in a tropical setting. For the last four years, the festival has become one of the largest platforms for small and established breweries to showcase their unique offerings.
Oktober Beerfest 2015 from Facebook
“We are expecting to set a new record for the festival’s 4th edition with over 2,000 more attendees than last year,” said Pablo Formal, coordinator of Oktober Beerfest. “We want this event to continue to bring family and friends together, as well as to bring awareness of Costa Rica’s artisanal craft beer scene.”
Oktober Beerfest 2015 from Facebook
With an expected attendance of 14,000 people, the event will feature authentic German fare including brezels (Bavarian-style pretzels) and sausages, live music from national and international artists, as well as an impressive selection of more than 200 beers.
The event will begin Saturday, Oct. 15 from 11 a.m. to midnight and continue on Sunday, Oct. 16 from noon to 10 p.m. at Parque Viva (Viva Park) in Alajuela.
From Google Maps.
Entrance starts at ¢12.000 for general admisstion to ¢20.000 for Oktoberfan . Tickets available at Boleteria.cr or Call Center: 2247-5050.
Now, I’m not the lightest packer out there (I take a hairdryer, for crying out loud!) but even I found that all I needed to live happily was some clothes, some toiletries and yep, my laptop. Those stylish dressed-up shoes, my collection of books and even my guitar — all things I left behind and did not miss.
As Tyler Durden said, “The things you own end up owning you.”
The freedom of being able to just pack up your life and move it one day is unparalleled.
2. I like myself (and so do other people).
Back in my old life, I was distracted by my own mundane existence, forever rushing from one place to another and yet somehow still doing nothing. In hindsight, I was pretty damn stressed out from sustaining a life I did not enjoy, which made me into somebody I did not particularly like.
On the road though, I was free from the weight of expectation and this in turn freed me up to be myself. I discovered (or remembered) that actually I can be funny, eloquent, and interesting. It also seemed that other people agreed, as I found myself charming bus loads of locals, making tons of new friends, and attracting scores of lovers.
More importantly though, was the approval in my own eyes. “Actually, I’m a pretty OK guy.”
3. There is no such thing as time.
In the west, we are obsessed with time and punctuality. If the train is late we are annoyed and if we are then late for work our boss is very annoyed.
In Backpakistan, though, things are different. Entire nations somehow function in spite of public transport that is seldom on time.
As a traveler I went entire days without having any idea what time it was and whole weeks without knowing what day it was. I ate when I was hungry, slept when I was tired and awoke only when the hostel manager banged my door down to inform me it was check-out time and I had to leave.
I came to realize that time as we know it is a western construct which the rest of the world doesn’t really have much time for.
4. It’s OK to be vulnerable.
Backpacking in a strange land minimizes your control, leaving you as vulnerable as a babe. There were times when I found myself lost and alone and times when I was the only foreign face on a bus where nobody spoke my language.
On countless occasions, I truly felt my own frailty. But whether being sick with malaria in Nepal, or being drugged in Bogota, I learned it’s OK to be scared, and it’s fine to be vulnerable because ultimately…
5. I can survive anything.
While I still have the scars from my blackout in Bogota and a Doctor’s bill from my Nepalese blood tests, I came through.
6. (Almost) everybody loves the British.
Wherever I went, I found that my passport opened borders and my accent opened hearts, arms, and sometimes legs. The Nepali immigration saluted my arrival into their country and within minutes of arriving in Israel, I had a girls phone number simply because she liked my accent.
People love our music, our pubs, the design of our flag, and our reputed sense of fair play. Of course, our standing did tumble a bit following the Brexit vote…
7. Stereotypes are kinda true.
On my travels I found that Italian’s were stylish, Latinos very sexual, and by God, the French really DO love cheese!
As for my own nation’s stereotypes, while I personally am not the biggest tea drinker I do usually carry an umbrella.
8. How it feels to be a girl.
Guys, have you ever been in a club and worked up the nerve to approach a girl only to find she cuts you off before you can even say hi? Well, now I kind of understand why.
You see, your approach was not the first or even second approach she had that night from guys who were after one thing and one thing only.
It’s exactly the same for all travelers in countries like India where I was hounded by rickshaw drivers, shop-keepers and beggars all after one thing; my money. Politely declining these advances became very tiring so I got into the habit of just completely ignoring them.
The more astute peddlers devised more subtle ways to engage punters and instead of simply bellowing “I give you good price!” would pay a compliment. One even correctly guessed “You’re English right?” which I admit did stop me in my tracks until I worked that he probably said that to the last 5 white guys walking by so had to be correct at least once.
It’s the same with approaching girls guys, if you want to engage them then you have to come up with something that bypass’ their defenses, stops them in their tracks and is a bit more original than “You’re beautiful!”
9. How to say no.
To deal with the aforementioned attention I had to learn to say “No” authoritatively.
I also had to learn to say “No” to myself. In Colombia, for example, there were constant excesses and temptations on offer and it would have been very easy to spend my time there partying my budget away.
10. Home will always be waiting.
When I returned home from my first big trip I had changed; I was happier, healthier and better.
Life at home hadn’t changed one bit though and had remained exactly the same.
I therefore decided to use home as the yardstick and bar-o-meter by which to measure my own personal growth and I will continue to do so. I will check back in here after each trip and compare the unchanging Yorkshire landscape against my ever changing internal landscape.
From Freeborn Aiden, Scopolamine spiking’s or (“Devils Breath” to use its sinister, headline friendly street name) are apparently at pandemic level in Colombia with some sources even claiming that 1 in 5 casualty admissions in Bogotá are now owing to the drug (although a closer look qualifies this as, at most, 1 in 5 poisoning cases rather than 1 in 5 of all cases).
The “most dangerous drug in the world” purportedly renders its victim conscious but utterly suggestable effectively turning them into “Zombies” who will do whatever they are told. Common stories involve drugged tourists handing over their pin numbers, affected householders physically helping criminals clear out their homes (and even helping them to disassemble Ikea furniture) and most harrowingly, spiked women giving up their own children to human traffickers.
Before I travelled to Colombia I heard these stories and cautionary tales from the internet, from TV documentaries and even from my concerned Grandmother. Frankly some of the tales seemed purely fantastical and plain ridiculous (been drugged through your fingertips via a laced newspaper or spiked by a women’s cleavage?!Come on…) but the ones about spiked drinks, cigarettes and bags of a certain famous illegal Colombian export were far more plausible.
Therefore whilst I did try to heed due caution I wasn’t overtly troubled or paranoid because put simply you hear these stories but you never really think it will happen to you and besides that I felt that the real dangers awaiting me in Bogotá would be pneumonia from its endless rain and its legendarily chaotic traffic. I would soon learn.
At the time it happened I had been in Colombia nearly 3 months with the only incidents of concern been the occasional run in with the Police and a certain incident that had occurred in the antioquian jungle two weeks earlier. I had therefore grown pretty confident; I felt like something of a veteran and that the warnings only applied to fresh faced Gringo’s straight off the plane. Maybe this was my undoing or maybe it was just that my luck ran out.
It was Saturday night and I was in the mood for dancing, chancing and a bit of romancing but like any good Englishman I would firstly need to get very drunk. I was staying at a hostel in the North side of town near the “Zona Rosa” and decided to head out with a Brazilian traveller who was sharing my dormitory. It was still too early to hit the bars and clubs so we agreed to visit the Falabella supermarket, buy a few beers and a (cheeky?) bottle of tequila which we could drink in the city square whilst watching the traffic of life roll by.
Spiked in Bogota – Graffiti
Street Art in Zona Rosa.
We were on maybe our second drink when we were joined by 2 locals who like us were also hanging in the square. They had just finished work in some God awful sounding call centre and were still dressed in their drab, cheap looking suits. They had evidently been drinking substantially longer than we had and they passed a large, round, half empty bottle of bottom shelf whiskey back and forth between them.
Somehow I wasn’t sure about them but my better nature, liberal tendency to challenge one’s own prejudices and above all my inherent British politeness urged me to give them a chance.
As our discussions progressed it became apparent that they were here drowning sorrows, they were cousins and the younger of the 2 had had his heart broken on New Year’s Eve when he had learned that his fiancé was sleeping with another cousin. His eyes welled up and tears streamed down his face as he told the tale; his anguish seemed almost tangible. The bigger and older of the two was just plain angry, raging against the female species, assuring his cousin that all women were the same and advising that what he needed to do now was go and find himself a hooker.
I offered my commiserations. We drank to male solidarity and broken hearts as we shared our bottle of tequila with them. After maybe 30 minutes I decided it was time to leave, the night was fast cooling, we had other places to be and besides that I still wasn’t too sure about these guys. We stood up to leave but my companion struggled to keep his balance, swaying everywhere and slurring his words.
“My God” I thought to myself “He’s only had a few drinks, what a lightweight!” There was no way he could stay out in such a condition especially in a place with a reputation like Bogotá. I hailed him a taxi, put him in, handed the driver the address of the hostel and paid him considerably more than he would need to carry him the short distance home. Maybe I should have gone with him.
By this time I was ready to head to Armando Records. The 2 new comers on the other hand were now imploring me to come with them to find some “chicas” by which I think they meant come and find a brothel. After careful consideration I declined their temping offer, thanked them for their time and bid them farewell before heading off in the opposite direction to them towards Armando Records. That’s the last thing I remember from that night.
…And then…
…I awoke with a fitful start. I was in a strange room in a strange bed. Beside me was a familiar woman, my friend Maffe who I had last seen a month earlier in Cartagena when we had agreed not to see each other anymore. Despite my complete confusion I knew exactly what had happened and that I had been spiked; drugged with Scopolamine by the 2 guys from Falabella. I asked Maffe what had happened and how I came to be here.
Apparently she had received a phone call from my phone at around midnight some kind hearted reveller had found me outside Armando Records in a confused state and bleeding from above my left eye. He had taken my phone from out of my pocket and rather than stealing it, he called the only local number in my phonebook. Maffe had of course answered the call and came to get me.
Apparently we had first returned to my hostel. She then took me to a hospital which refused to treat me without proof of insurance before returning to hers where she cleaned and fastened my wound herself using an old folk method (which worked fine and saved me a $500 medical insurance claim).
I had absolutely no memory of any of it.
It was 2 in the afternoon and I had lost 12 – 16 hours. I got out of bed and checked my pants. My phone, my wallet and my cash was all still there. Wow. That night I stayed at Maffe’s house and ended up sleeping all the next day. My memory of those first aftermath days is still a little patchy and for the next week I was tired, had little appetite and vomited quite a few times. My eye however healed up very nicely.
As for my Brazilian roommate, despite my pretty clear instructions to the cab driver he ended up at the arse end of the city some 40 blocks from where he should have been and was eventually picked up by the police in a confused state. His iPhone had been taken but we will never know for certain whether it was by our 2 amigos, the taxi driver or even the police. We compared notes and tried to figure out how exactly they had dosed us, they must have slipped it into our bottle of tequila after we passed it along to them (that’s what you get for sharing…).
It scares me to think what might have happened to me that night alone and drugged in Colombia (In Bogotá the traffic alone is dangerous enough.) I thank the kindness of strangers and the good grace of the guy who found me and called Maffe.
I thank Maffe who dropped everything to come and get me despite the terms we had last parted on. I also thank that other indefinable, unquantifiable factor that some call luck or fortune, others serendipity or circumstance and others God. Most victims of Scopolamine spiking’s wake up in gutters, hospitals or police cells minus their phones, credit cards and cash. I however woke up safe and warm in bed with a beautiful woman, a situation I would most definitely have tried but most probably failed to engineer that evening had I remained compos mentis!
I then spent the next week (my last week in Colombia) with Maffe and had an incredible time with her. Therefore in a twisted roundabout bay I’m grateful for the experience and if nothing else it has given me something else to write about which will no doubt generate at least 2 Facebook likes or Twitter shares which is pretty much all I have to live for these days back in England.
Spiked in Bogota – borachero
Pretty flowers eh?
Scopolamine; facts, fiction and opinion.
Scolpomine is made from the white, seductive flowers of the Borachero (get you drunk) tree which is very common in the forests and even gardens of Colombia. It’s grinded into a powder which is then discreetly administered to victims.
As Scopolamine is a powerful amnesiac victims can never clearly recall precisely how it was administered to them or just what happened when under its influence. This has led to a plethora of urban myths as well as some unsettling and some frankly odd victim accounts. One very popular myth is that it can simply be blown into a victims face rendering them immediately under its influence.
However this is extremely dubious as (1) most of the dose would be lost in the air (or blown back at the assailant…) rendering it ineffective and (2) if a stranger blew a mysterious powder into your face you’d get the hell away from them immediately rather than hang around for the 5 or so minutes it takes for the drug to take effect.
The substance has found favour with criminals firstly because it apparently erodes free will making victims very suggestable and therefore easy to rob, or in some cases, rape. Indeed there are stories of victims freely handing over their bank cards and pin codes to bandits or even helping them clear out their homes (but of course few of the victims can actually firmly verify this). Secondly the victims are then generally unable to remember anything that has happened making it very hard to prosecute (or seek redress themselves which is not uncommon in Colombia).
Some reports say that the chemical acts as a hallucinogenic and a euphoric although again its uncertain as to how the hell anybody can actually know this.
I’m not entirely sure my experience (which I can’t remember) tallies with any of these. Firstly the criminals clearly failed in any attempt to rob me, I mean they didn’t even get my phone let alone my pin number! Perhaps the cut on my eye suggests a scuffle took place which would contradict the agreeability theory.
Maffe said that whilst under its influence I was at times very emotional and vulnerable but at others downright awkward and argumentative (so basically I was all shades of my every day self); she initially just thought that I was drunk and only realised that I had in fact been drugged the next day when I told her. The only affect that I can say the drug had on me with any certainty is that it caused me to completely blackout; my memory of that night has never returned.
Scopolamine, Colombia’s zombie drug
What You Can Do.
Don’t be paranoid about laced newspapers, leaflets, business cards. You’ll look a complete dick wandering around Colombia in white gloves unwilling to touch anything and besides that there is no actual evidence that it can be administered porously through the skin; rather these stories are best left in the cold war spy thrillers from where they seem to be taken.
Do however be vigilant in bars and clubs because if you are even remotely sociable then you will be invited to share in aguardiente or, if you’re so inclined, will be offered a roll up or a joint. I guess the trick is to make sure that your new friends are also partaking and also watch where your drinks are coming from.
Stories of honey traps are commonplace so remember, whilst Latina women are friendly (particular towards westerners) the usual rules of courtship will still apply so if you’re an ugly, fat bastard and yet a beautiful Colombiana is suddenly all over you then be very suspicious .
Ultimately your gut instinct will guide you and had I listened to mine that night then you wouldn’t be reading this now.
By Waldo Mendiluza, special correspondent (Prensa Latina) Delegations from Cuba and the United States will hold here today the 4th meeting of the Bilateral Commission, a mechanism that seeks to boost cooperation between the two countries in a scenario marked by the effect of the U.S. blockade.
The meeting of the instrument started one year ago, to monitor ties and set new goals aimed at improving them, is chaired by Josefina Vidal, director of the United States Division at the Cuban Ministry of Foreign Affairs; and Mari Carmen Aponte and Jonathan Finer, officials from the State Department.
Aponte is the assistant secretary for Latin America, while Finer is the Director of Policy Planning.
Today’s meeting is expected to be the penultimate of the Bilateral Commission under President Barack Obama, who will leave the White House in January 2017.
According to the Cuban Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the two sides will verify during the event the agreements of the previous meeting, held in May, and design new steps towards improving the relationships between Havana and Washington, which were restored in July 2015.
In recent statements, deputy director general of the U.S. department at the Cuban Ministry, Gustavo Machin, noted that the high-level visits in both directions, the conduction of technical meetings and the adoption of agreements in areas of common interest will be defined.
The diplomat also stated that the Cuban delegation will reiterate the hosts the necessity of ending the economic, commercial and financial blockade against the Caribbean country for more than 50 years, considered one of the main obstacles for the full normalization of the bilateral ties.
We will also insist on the return of the illegally occupied territory by the U.S. naval base in Guantanamo, Cuba, the cessation of policies favoring illegal immigration and the removal of programs beyond the control and coordination with the Cuban authorities, Machin said.
Authorities, students and representatives of civil society rejected in Cuba during the last few days the World Learning program, arguing that the initiative joins to the long list of U.S. actions destined to the internal subversion and regime change.
(Prensa Latina) The Nicaraguan Deputy Foreign Minister Luis Alberto Molina and his Russian counterpart Serguei Riabkov today signed a joint statement rejecting the deployment of nuclear weapons into space.
The two countries pledged to not be the first to deploy strategic weapons into space.
Ryabkov stated that, together with his Central American colleague, he presides over a intergovernmental commission for economic and scientific-technical cooperation that operates in the Foreign Ministry.
‘We addressed several aspects of practical cooperation and we are very grateful to the government of President Daniel Ortega,’ the deputy minister highlighted.
The Russian diplomat wished the Sandinista Front victory in the presidential elections on November 6th and spoke about their common determination to prevent the deployment of offensive weapons into space.
He added that the agreement would ensure that more countries take the decision that weapons must not be in space.
‘By signing this statement we ensure that our political cooperation and mutual understanding is stronger,’ he declared.
Molina added that the signing of the agreement and Riabkov comments on both the role of Russia and the strengthening of bilateral relations are ‘a very important part of the balance for the maintenance of peace’.
The agreement also means that Nicaragua will support any initiative to strengthen peace and security in the world, the deputy foreign minister of the Central American nation reaffirmed
(QCOSTARICA) Panama’s Supreme Court dismissed a judge who set four Costa Ricans free after being arrested with 500 kilos of cocaine.
La Prensa in Panama reports the Full Court “decided to annul” the interim appointment of Mixila Alicia Méndez Sánchez as judge of Garantías en el Circuito Judicial de Chiriquí (west).
The decision was made after Mendez decided not to order preventive detention (jail) for the four Costa Ricans arrested on September 22 on the high seas in a boat with a double bottom where authorities found the half ton of cocaine.
In a hearing on September 25, the judge instead ordered the four to sign in weekly at the courthouse and not to leave the country.
This, “without assigning to police custody or ensure that they were registered with the National Migration Service, knowing that (those involved) have no roots in the country,” said the Supreme Court statement.
The prosecutor’s office filed an appeal, but the four Ticos did not appear at September 27 hearing and their whereabouts are now unknown.
(QCOSTARICA) On Thursday, September 29, published in the official government newsletter, La Gaceta, is the decree updating the income tax regulations where the minimum monthly exempt from taxes is ¢792.000 colones.
Every year, in September, the Ministry of Finance (Ministerio de Hacienda) updates the income tax provisions.
The adjustment applies to salaries, bonuses, salaries, allowances, commissions, overtime, royalties, pensions and other items. The taxation year begins on October 1 and runs to September 30.
The tax increases progressively. Monthly earnings from ¢792.000 n to ¢1.188.000 is taxed at 10%, above that the tax is 15%.
The Ministry of Finance (Hacienda) wants to stimulate the use of plastic instead of cash for better collection of sales and income tax
The Ministry of Finance (Hacienda) wants to stimulate the use of plastic instead of cash for better collection of sales and income tax
(QCOSTARICA) The Ministry of Finance (Ministerio de Hacienda) plans to return one percentage point of sales tax to people using their plastic for purchases.
The plan, if adopted, would mean consumers using plastic would effectively pay a 12% sales tax instead of 13%.
The deputy minister of Finance, Fernando Rodriguez, explained that the incentive does not apply only to debit cards, but that the Ministry of Finance will not apply it to credit cards. In the words of the Minister, “we don’t want to encourage borrowing”. Rodriguez added that credit card issuers already offer their customers incetinves for using plastic instead of cash.
When will the discount be applied? Rodriguez said discussions are ongoing with the banks (issuers of debit cards) to see if they can return the percentage at the point of sale.
“The idea is that from the tax they retain (the sales tax at the point of sale) they can separate the rebate and credit the consumer at once. We have to discuss that with them or at best a month later, but the idea is that people see the return of the money immediately,” said Rodriguez.
The Anti Tax Fraud bill (Ley para Mejorar la Lucha contra el Fraude Fiscal) that authorizes Hacienda to rebate the sales tax was approved in first legislative debate on September 9. It is currently in consultation with the Constitutional Court.
In addition to the rebate, the bill also requires businesses and professionals (ie lawyers, accountants, doctors, etc) to accept, as an alternative payment, credit and debit cards.
The measure is aimed at improving the collection of taxes on sales and income, discouraging cash transactions that cannot be tracked by the tax department.
This year, started in January, the state bank Banco de Costa Rica (BCR), allowed non-residents of Costa Rica once again to open a personal bank account (with a monthly deposit limit of US$1,000) and obtain a debit card.
The Banco Nacional (BNCR), Bancredito and the Grupo Mutual earlier this month have begun to also apply simplified banking. See our report The “New” Banking In Costa Rica.
It is expected that more banks will do so, returning Costa Rica’s banking system to a time where there were no restrictions on foreigners opening and operating a local bank account without the requirements of a Costa Rican cedula (national) or DIDI or DIMEX (foreign residency).
(Q24N) December 31, 2007 is the date Slate magazine says “for the first time, Americans send more texts than they make calles on their mobile phones”. In the article by Timothy Noah we learn that when Slate was founded in 1996, people all over the world spent much of their day speaking into telephones. In 2016, as Slate celebrates its 20th birthday, the phone call is a thing of the past.
Not entirely of the past, of course; phone conversation lives on in roughly the same way that swing dancing lives on, or Latin declension, or manual transmission. You can still find it, but you have to look a lot harder, because it’s no longer a way of life.
The phone call died, according to Nielsen, in the autumn of 2007. During the final three months of that year the average monthly number of texts sent on mobile phones (218) exceeded, for the first time in recorded history, the average monthly number of phone calls (213). A frontier had been crossed. The primary purpose of most people’s primary telephones was no longer to engage in audible speech.
Some were still, of course, making phone calls on their “landlines.” But by 2007, landlines were already being displaced rapidly by mobile phones, in part because you couldn’t send a text on one. Today, we’re mere seconds away from a majority of U.S. households possessing no landline at all, and text messages are five times more frequent on mobile phones than phone calls. You can still call your best friend on the telephone, but he probably won’t pick up. Instead he’ll text you, or ping you on Facebook, and wonder when the hell it was you became so emotionally needy.
It’s a lonely business, this life without telephone calls.
I have a friend named Joe, whom I don’t see often because we live in different cities, and always have. He’s not a close friend, but I like him enormously. I used to phone Joe, or Joe would phone me, a couple of times a year. No particular reason—we’d just check up on each other, exchange a bit of gossip, talk about politics or journalism or our families. I saw Joe recently at a party, along with his second wife and their young son, and was caught up short when I realized that I had no idea what their names were. I had no idea because Joe and I had stopped phoning each other sometime around, well, 2007. When I introduced myself to Joe’s wife (her name turned out to be Dawn) I noticed that my name was no more familiar to her than hers to me.
Calling somebody on the phone used to be a perfectly ordinary thing to do. You called people you knew well, not so well, or not at all, and never gave it a second thought. But after the Great Texting Shift of 2007, a phone call became a claim of intimacy. Today if I want to phone someone just to chat, I first have to consider whether the call will be viewed as intrusive. My method is to ask myself, “Have I ever seen this person in the nude?” The sighting doesn’t have to be (indeed, seldom is) recent. Nor is it necessary that I remember it. I need only deduce that, sometime or other, I must have seen this person naked. That clears phone calls to a wife or girlfriend, to children, to parents, to siblings, to old flames, to former roommates from college, and very few others.
The final voicemail that anybody actually heard was recorded sometime around 2009.
I make exceptions to the naked rule now and then, but always with trepidation, because when a friend you’ve never seen naked sees your name pop up on his smartphone he’s liable to think you lack boundaries. If you aren’t on this never-naked person’s contacts list, forget about connecting at all. Nobody answers a cellphone that blinks an unfamiliar phone number, and nobody has the patience to listen to voice mail. (The final voice mail that anybody actually heard was recorded sometime around 2009.)
With business calls, prevailing etiquette isn’t all that different. If you know somebody pretty well in the business sense (the threshold here being not “have I seen this person naked?” but “have I ever seen this person across a lunch table?”) you may phone with some confidence that the party will pick up. If not, you’ll have to leave a message and enter a ghastly limbo that requires a formal appointment. To talk on the phone! If you’re a journalist like me, appointment phone calls are a dreary ritual in which you’re put on speakerphone and a press spokesperson sits in to eliminate the possibility that anything of the slightest interest will be said.
The phone call always was an invasive form of communication, so perhaps we shouldn’t be surprised that as soon as a plausible substitute presented itself we grabbed it. What was the very first phone call, on March 10, 1876, if not an urgent human demand? “Mr. Watson,” said Alexander Graham Bell, “come here—I want to see you.” That Thomas Watson, situated in the next room, would comply was a given, because Bell was his employer. For the next hundred years, phones continued to boss people around. A loudly ringing telephone demanded its owner’s immediate attention because you never knew who it might be. It could be the president! Or news that you’d inherited $1 million from a relative you’d never heard of! Or (God forbid) your teenager wrecked the car and was in the hospital! Octogenarians still tend to respond to a ringing landline with terrific urgency, risking hip fracture as they lunge to answer it.
The telephone’s bratty demand for attention is a leitmotif in midcentury American popular culture. Ray Milland’s plot to murder Grace Kelly in Alfred Hitchcock’s Dial M For Murder makes no sense without the presumption that she’ll get out of bed to pick up a ringing telephone at 11 p.m., something nobody I know has done for years. The “Telephone Hour” number in Bye Bye Birdie is based on the quaint notion that teenage gossip travels at breathtaking speed through fat analog phone cables; today, of course, it travels infinitely faster through silent Instagram postings permeating the very air.
The telephone’s rule was absolute until the mid-1980s, when the rising popularity of answering machines and caller ID began to undermine it. Baby boomers wielded these tools against their telephones like a lion tamer’s whip. If it was important, the caller could leave a message just as if they weren’t there, a deception their World War II generation parents could never countenance. The advent around the same time of call waiting similarly made human agency a deciding factor in whether you were available to talk. Sometime around 2010, my then-teenage daughter was trying to call a friend. Something’s wrong, she said. This phone has gone berserk. She handed it to me. I listened, then explained patiently what a busy signal was. She’d never heard one before.
With the rise of mobile telephones around the turn of the 21st century, you and your telephone were never going to be apart, and screening phone calls became a simple matter of survival (literally, if you were driving). Mobile phones were vastly inferior to landlines (and remain so), with iffy coverage and lousy reception. Rare is the lengthy cellphone call that isn’t dropped at some point, requiring one party or the other to redial. (Or both, and then both are sent to voice mail, and everyone gives up in exasperation.) The iPhone, introduced in June 2007, made telephone reception slightly worse, but it did everything else so well that you just had to have one. People stopped thinking of it as a phone and started calling it a “device.” Within six months the phone call was dead.
In Costa Rica there are more cellular telelphones lines than people. The three operators (Kolbi, Claro and Movistar) report more than 5 million uers. The population of Costa Rica is 4.586 million (2011 census).
Freedom from the telephone call’s yoke has yielded many societal benefits. You can go wherever you want (except certain mountainous areas) and stay on the grid—or not—as you desire. You can end a dull phone conversation by saying, “Hello? Hello? I think you’re breaking up,” even when the reception’s crystal clear. The age-old complaint, “Nobody writes letters anymore,” is seldom heard, because in fact we write letters all the time in the form of the texts and emails that replaced phone calls. We may not rank up there with Héloïse and Abelard, but then neither did most 12th-century correspondents.
But this new freedom came at the cost something precious: the human voice. Texting is more stilted and less spontaneous than speech, even for those of us who write for a living. It’s performed with greater anxiety about being misunderstood (hence the nervous punctuation with emojis) yet also, paradoxically, it’s more controlled, with highs and lows filtered out.
Anger is difficult to convey properly in a text, compared to the hallowed method of shouting into a phone and slamming the receiver down. This mode of communication reached its apotheosis in 1950-1984, with Western Electric’s magnificent Model 500, an absolutely unbreakable hunk of molded plastic. The phone smash came in especially handy when you got the runaround from customer service. But today “customer service” means you send email or a text into a void where no one can hear you scream. A dozen years ago I congratulated myself in Slate for tracking down Amazon’s customer service number, which was more closely held than the nuclear launch codes. Today it’s a cinch to Google Amazon’s customer service number (888-280-4331), but that ease is illusory, because once you dial it you enter an automated-menu labyrinth that would put the Minotaur to shame. To press the correct sequence of phone buttons necessary to locate a human being is beyond the patience of most Amazon customers—especially pissed-off ones—and you can bet Amazon knows that.
Texting is a good medium for flirtation, a transaction typically between two people who don’t know each other very well. But it’s a poor medium to express love in its more mature forms—romantic, familial, or platonic—because one’s beloved has learned to expect a wealth of cues that only a poet could supply through written words alone. The tinkle of human laughter, perhaps the sweetest sound on Earth, is entirely absent in texting, replaced by a depressingly pro forma “LOL” whose sincerity is always subject to doubt. Indeed, texting is a superb medium for telling lies. You have plenty of time to think through how to frame your deception, and the person you’re lying to will never hear the catch in your throat. Texting is an even better medium for passive rejection, or “ghosting.” In the early aughts there was a lot of press for something called the Rejection Line. If someone was pestering you for your phone number, you just gave him the Rejection Line number instead of your own, and when he called he’d hear an automated message telling him to get lost. It was an ingenious prank, but it’s no longer necessary, because even stalkers now prefer texting.
What sort of future will the telephone call’s death bequeath? Will we become a nation lobotomized, where no love may ever ripen nor grievance be aired? Will our circles of friends shrink and shrink and then finally disappear? Lately I’ve been experimenting a lot with video calling. But that’s even more demanding than a telephone call; even within my naked-people circle I dare not video call more than two or three souls, lest they actually be naked when their device rings. Those who indulge my video calls do it purely out of generosity. They all hate the medium. The reception is even worse than with a cellphone call, and I hear a lot of complaints from the over-50 set about unflattering camera angles.
Perhaps a hardy band of artisans in Brooklyn or Venice, California, will revive the telephone call as a boutique ritual, much as they’ve revived the playing of vinyl records on turntables. Perhaps Google, once it’s perfected the self-driving automobile, will automate text messaging, allowing our cellphones to communicate without any human intervention at all. (Imagine, for instance, an algorithm that could recognize the linguistic structure of a joke and then answer automatically: “LOL.”) Perhaps we’ll just barge in on each other more, like wacky neighbors did in 1950s sitcoms.
Perhaps all these things will happen at once.
Even more than a writer, I am a reader: of newspapers, magazines, the internet, and books. Logically, I ought to cheer the triumph of the written word that this age of texting hath wrought. But the telephone call’s demise has impoverished me, separating me from friends with whom I communicate now mostly on social media, which isn’t the same. My kids are grown and the house is quiet. A whole day will now pass when I don’t hear the sound of my own voice. It would be nice now and then to hear the telephone ring.
The Turrialba volcano has been spewing out gas ash since Monday, with varying intensity.
The Turrialba volcano has been spewing out gas ash since Monday, enterting its fifth continuous day with eruptions of varying intensity.
(QCOSTARICA) Since the early hours of Monday morning the Turrialba volcano has been continually expelling gas and ash and a rocks, varying its intensity.
The volcano is entering its fifth day of constant eruptions, with columns of gas and ash reaching altitudes from 500 to 3,000 metres above the crater, depending on the energy of the eruptive pulses and wind speed.
Dr. Mauricio Mora Fernández, volcanologist of the National Seismological Network of the University of Costa Rica (RSN – UCR) said that the amount of expelled material is due to the internal characteristics of the volcano as the conduit has deepened and widened as part of the normal evolution from one eruption to another, causing more material to be projected into the atmosphere. He also added that the sustained activity is due to processes of fragmentation and gas flow in the inner of the volcano.
This situation has generated persistant and great accumulations of ashfall in areas such as Silvia, La Picada and San Gerardo de Irazu nearest the colossus.
Ashfall and the smell of sulfur has also been reported in areas north of the Central Valley, such as Moravia, Coronado, Goicoechea and the province of Heredia, in particular the cantons of San Isidro, San Rafael and Barva. There are also reports of ashfall in Escazu and Guapiles.
This week, unlike the previous week, airport operations at the Juan Santamaria International (San Jose airport) were not affected. The winds did not blow any ash far enough west in the area of the airport to cancel or delay fligths. On Thursday some social media reports a number of flights cancelled by an airline, reports coming in from passengers in Panama delayed on their flight to Costa Rica.
Important during this activity is stay informed from official sources.
Volcanologist Dr. Guillermo Alvarado Induni historical memories and studies of prehistoric eruptions permit the capacity of authorities and the population for proper risk management. The expert clarified that it is not possible incandescent rocks or lava flows can reach the Central Valley.
Dr. Alvarado added that, like the Irazu volcano eruptions between 1963 and 1965, we can expect constant ashfall for a long time.
specialists at the RSN and the OSVICORI, as well as other expert agencies, are remaining vigilant, analyzing step by step the evolution of the volcano.
(CONFIDENTIAL) In addition to sharing a passion for modeling, three well known Colombian models to take to the catwalk (pasarela in Spanish) to seduce Costa Ricans tonight, are also successful in their own right.
Laura Palacio, Cristina Camargo and Marcela Gutiérrez will be in Costa Rica tonight (Thursday Septemebr 29) to present the new collection of Chamela brand lingerie to Costa Rica. The event will take place in the El Exito Betancur ballroom in San Jose, starting at 8:00pm.
Laura Palacio, courtesy Chamela
Laura Palacio, at 29 has been modelling for the past night. Is a fashion designer and holds the crown for the Miss World Colombia 2010. The Colombiana enjoys modelling lingerie, though she confesses that before doing so she was very apprehensive.
“At first I was shy about going on stage in underwear, but one gets used to it and is the most work I do. I felt shy, but eventually lost my shyness. For me it is with pride to model this Colombian brand,” said Laura.
Cristina Camargo, courtesy Chamela
At 28, Cristina Camargo has been modeling and taking part in beauty pageants for the last eight, starting at 15. For her modeling underwear is “all natural”. Cristina was Miss Atlantic 2008, works sporadically in communication, but most of her time is devoted to modeling and image consulting services.
“Sometimes people stigmatize it and want to shame you for the intimacy, but it’s as we were at the beach,” says Cristina.
This is the fourth time social communication with an emphasis on public relations visits Costa Rica, and regrets it is only for work. “I’m starting my brand of beauty products, with them I seek to empower women. I see myself as a successful entrepreneur and consultant in beauty,” she said.
Marcela Guttierez, courtesy Chamela
Marcela Gutierrez is another model with more than a decade of experience in the modeling. At 28, her career in modeling began 13 years ago in Colombian youth contests.
Exploring different facets of the modeling profession, Marcela discovered that lingerie is on her favourites. Marcela is completing her studies in Business Administration, and working at promoting her boxing gym.
“I started boxing three years ago, I liked it so much I decided to have my own gym. It’s the only sport I play, I do not like competitions,” she said.
“Boxing gives you discipline, perseverance and also helps me stay in shape. All of this benefits me in modeling,” she said. Marcela will also soon be launching her own clothing brand – in which is already working on – and become a mother.
Greater regulatory burden and distrust in public institutions are the weaknesses identified by the World Economic Forum
(QCOSTARICA) Excessive government bureaucracy (tramitomanía in Spanish) has cost the country a drop in competitiveness this past year. Costa Rica fell 11 positions in the industrial sector analysis and 2 positions overall by the World Economic Forum.
According to the Global Competitiveness Report 2016-2017, that assesses the competitiveness landscape of 138 economies, Costa Rica ranked 54th overall, dropping from 56th place the previous year.
Switzerland, Singapore and the United States remain the three world’s most competitive economies.
“Declining openness in the global economy is harming competitiveness and making it harder for leaders to drive sustainable, inclusive growth,” said Klaus Schwab, Founder and Executive Chairman, World Economic Forum.
Though this year’s report highlights the slow global growth environment and increased uncertainty experienced by economies around the world, some countries managed to make significant rises up in the ranking since last year. In Latin America, Panama rose to 42nd this year from 50th spot in the previous year, Mexico is this year ranked 51st from the previous year’s 57th and the Dominican Republic rising six points from 98th 92nd.
In Central America, Costa Rica is second to Panama’s 42nd and followed by Guatemala (78), Honduras (88), Nicaragua (103) and El Salvador (105).
Rounding out Latin America: Chile (33), Colombia (61), Uruguay (73), Brazil (81), Ecuador(91), Dominican Republic (92), Argentina (104), Paraguay (117), Bolivia (121) and Venezuela (130).
In Costa Rica, regulatory burden and distrust of public institutions were the main weaknesses identified in the study.
While showing a leading position worldwide in the health and primary education pillars, Alberto Trejos, dean of the INCAE Business School, said that one should think differently to solve the problems facing Costa Rica.
“In the country it takes 900 days to pass a law, that’s terrible. We must change because the country evolves slowly,” emphasized the researcher.
Robert Thompson, mayor of Alajuela, agreed that ways should be sought to avoid delays in the development of the country.
“In Alajuela, to change a stop sign one must resort to an office of the MOPT (Ministry of Public Works and Transport) and it takes six months for an answer. It should be a wake-up call, because there is lack of coordination and duplication of functions in institutions,” stressed the politician.
Francisco Gamboa, director of the Chamber of Industry, said that the decline in the competitiveness index is not surprising, due to the problems of the national road network and calls for an “official war” against bureaucracy.
José Manuel Quirce, president of the Chamber of Foreign Trade, stressed that the country does not move fast enough to improve competitiveness. “It’s frustrating to know that we are able to do public work and improve, but we do not succeed in it,” said the businessman.
QCOSTARICA – Although it seems like a bad joke, a Uber driver who had his wallet stolen from by a passenger is told by the company to meet with the passenger to get it back.
The incident occurred hours after the transport app enabled payment in cash in Costa Rica.
The driver told the media that he reported the incident to the Uber technical support team, who recommended him to meet with the person responsible for the theft to coordinate the return of the wallet.
“We have communicated with the user to make contact with you and to make a return of your wallet, ideally you should coordinate with him a meeting point for the return,” cites the Uber response.
On Tuesday, another driver was affected by the cash payment policy, when in Desamparados a passenger got out of the vehicle and ran off without paying for the ride.
The driver said on the social media the worst is that Uber will be charging him his percentage of the ride, left holding the proverbial bag.
On Monday, a group of Uber drivers protested outside the company’s offices in San Pedro against the cash payment option now available to its users.
Until Monday, Uber accepted payment online by either a debit or credit card and Paypal. Drivers say the cash payment puts them at risk, as occurred in at least to occasions in the first days of the new policy. The company defends the change by saying the practice is in place in at least 70 cities worldwide, in which at least 30 are in Latin America and security of drivers is still maintained.
The Costa Rica version is an adpation of the British television series Strictly Come Dancing
(CONFIDENTIAL) Dancing With The Stars Costa Rica is a dance reality show produced and broadcast by local television station Teletica, is the Tico adaption of the British television series Strictly Come Dancing.
Costa Rica becomes the 49th country to adapt the format and second in Central America after Panama. Teletica purchased the franchise in February 2014, with the first show airing in August of that year. The current season (third) began on September 11.
The format of the show consists of a celebrity paired with a professional dancer. Each season 10 couples perform predetermined dances and competes against the others for judges’ points and audience votes. The couple with the least combined points of judges and audience is eliminated. The couples stay together throughout the season until they are eliminated. Professional dancers can appear in multiple seasons and with a different celebrity partner.
Dancing with the starts airs every Sunday night at 7:00pm on channel 7 and Cabletica’s HD channel 86.
This season’s celebrities include Jale Berahimi, Alejandra Portillo, Karina Ramos and Glenda Peraza. Co-hosting the third season are Randall Vargas and Shirley Álvarez.
(CONFIDENTIAL) “Politics makes strange bedfellows”, is the famous quote by Charles Dudley Warner, defined as to bring together people who otherwise have little in common.
And what in common does HilLary Clinton have with Madonna and Katy Perry? Nothing, probably, except that the latter two are taking their clothes off in support of the former, in her bid to become President of the United States.
“Im voting naked with Katy Perry!! Vote for Hillary. She’s the Best we got!. Nude Voting series # 1” said Madonna on Instagram.
In the picture you see the 58-year-old Queen of Pop from the nose down to her cleavage, and she is wearing a glistening grill in her teeth.
“Women Run the World now they have to get out and start supporting one another.
“No more misogynist feminists! No more mysogony. Get out and Vote (sic).”
Katy Perry also stripped off to encourage voters.
On Tuesday, Katy Perry, a prominent Hillary supporter, shared a light-hearted clip on her Twitter page where she turns up to vote in the buff, but soon runs into trouble when the police turn up to arrest her.
Arresting performance: Madonna declared that she was following lead of Katy Perry, who stripped naked at a polling station in a new parody video for Funny Or Die
She finds herself in the back of a police car next to a fellow naturist voter.
“Did you really read the Constitution or just skimmed it,” Perry is asked when insisting she read the Constitution and it is her constitutional right to vote naked. Or is it?
QCOSTARICA – Not wanting to buy drugs and defending his companion a man lost his life at the hands of an alleged drug dealer in Jaco, early Wednesday morning.
The Organismo de Investigación Judicial (OIJ) confirmed the incident occurred around 4:30am outside a nightclub located in the centre of Jaco.
The victim was identified as John Logan, an U.S. citizen, who died after receiving two bullets in the chest.
Apparently, leaving the club, Lonegan was approached by a drug dealer while getting in a taxi with a female companion.
Lonegan and his companion refused to buy the drugs, the seller bothered by the reaction tried to pull the woman out of the taxi, Lonegan struggled with the suspect for several moments, ending up being shot.
Micheal Soto, head of the OIJ office of operations, said the assailant fled the scene on a motorcycle and are investigating eyewitness accounts to find the suspect.
According to the OIJ, it is not known if Lonegan was in the country legally or for how long, but he did not have a criminal record.
The mother of the child said he was the youngest of six children. (La razón)
The serious social, political and economic crisis in Venezuela has resulted in an increase of malnutrition cases in Venezuela, most of which involve children under 10 years old.
Various organizations have denounced this situation on several occasions on national and international stages.
The most recent is the case of Junior Joneido Gonzalez Rodriguez, 1 year old, who was dying in the state of Zulia in the neighborhood of Mariu Urdaneta. The website The Venezuelan News reported that doctors had diagnosed him with severe malnutrition, which lasted four months. His last days were spent with his mother Julia Rodriguez at the ranch where they lived, “as he wept from fever and had trouble breathing.”
The Venezuelan newspaper La Verdad published an article that revealed the baby had had two days with fever and diarrhea. Last Wednesday, the situation worsened and he ultimately died at his home at 11 at night because of respiratory failure.
The mother said they ate what they could find, but often had nothing. In order to pay for funeral expenses, the Indigenous Peoples of Maracaibo had to offer assistance.
Rodriguez reported that the baby was the youngest of six children. She also said that in 2016, he had been hospitalized three different times. The most recent was in May following a bout of pneumonia. The mother said she had requested aid from the Governor of Zulia, but never received a response.
“I have no where to leave them,” she said, “so it is difficult to go get work and get money to eat.”
Nicoya Peninsula, Costa Rica – The Blue Zones is the name given to the five world regions celebrated for the health and longevity of their populations. Second on the list is Nicoya peninsula in Costa Rica, where this 101-year-old woman hails from
Nicoya Peninsula, Costa Rica – The Blue Zones is the name given to the five world regions celebrated for the health and longevity of their populations. Second on the list is Nicoya peninsula in Costa Rica, where this 101-year-old woman hails from
QTRAVEL (CNN) Going on vacation could help you uncover the secret to a long and healthy life — if you pick the right destination.
It’s no secret that certain populations around the world live longer and produce a greater number of centenarians than others.
More importantly, these marvels of nature remain healthy and active as they enter the three-figure age range.
Just how they do it remains something of a mystery, but the clues indicate it could all be down to the food.
Nicoya Peninsula, Costa Rica – Native tubors, such as yams, are a common ingredient. Pictured, a traditional Costa Rican casado meal with rice, beans and plantain.
“There are five cultures around the world with the highest proportion of centenarians globally,” says David Katz, president of the American College of Lifestyle Medicine. “They set the standard.”
Katz is referring to the communities of the Blue Zones — places in Europe, South America, Asia and the United States where people live long and are largely free of chronic disease.
“They live an enviable standard,” Katz adds.
These hotspots of health and vitality are located in Ikaria, Greece; Okinawa, Japan; Ogliastra, Sardinia; Loma Linda, California; and the Nicoya peninsula, Costa Rica.
“They live long, they prosper and check out peacefully and that’s as good as it gets,” says Katz.
He acknowledges that other cultures’ cuisines, such as the complex spices of South Asia or the fresh tastes of the Mediterranean, also bring benefits to the dinner table.
Live long and eat
“The fundamentals are minimally processed plant foods,” says Katz. “Today our diet is distorted from the native normal.”
The dangers of increased Western appetites for processed foods have been well researched, particularly their links to cancer, obesity and diseases such as diabetes.
Instead, experts are keen to lure people towards the unprocessed, natural foods eaten daily by these centenarian-filled communities.
Each cuisine consists of their own flavorsome version of core ingredients: wholegrain, vegetables, fiber and protein — mainly in the form of fish.
So what is it the Blue Zone communities are getting right?
Okinawa, Japan
This island has become synonymous with longevity, conjuring up images of smiling people in their older years hiking up mountains.
With turquoise blue seas and fresh fish at their fingertips it’s not hard to see why they’re smiling, but they’ve set a global precedent for how to eat well.
“The Okinawa diet is a lot of vegetables, rice and fish,” says Alice Ammerman, professor of public health nutrition at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Ammerman uses diet to manage chronic diseases among her patients and sees the rewards that changing meals can bring.
“We can borrow from different cultures and their benefits,” she says.
The foods are heavily plant-based and meals are often made up of stir-fried ingredients, producing dishes that are rich in protein, but low in calories.
“Using meat cut-up and mixed is good, so it’s not the central part of the meal,” says Ammerman.
Mealtime habits also play a part.
“The culture is not one of excess, but instead quality and appreciation of food,” she adds.
Nicoya peninsula, Costa Rica
Added into the mix here are beans and native tubors, such as yams.
These, sometimes eaten with a small portion of meat, give people living here the energy they need do whatever they want — or at least feel that way.
“It’s not just longevity, but also vitality,” says Katz.
In all Blue Zone regions, people are active and full of life, fueled by them eating exactly what’s needed — and no more. “[The food] is again minimally processed,” adds Katz.
Once again meals are often light, but this time eaten early, according to the Blue Zones project, which examines these lifestyles.
The project has found that people in this region are twice as likely as the average American to live to the age of 90.
Eating early and minimally has been shown to have positive results.
“It’s not just the type of food, but the amount that is important,” says Lu Qi, professor of nutrition at the
Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. “Less calories are very beneficial.”
Asian Spice
Qi’s research investigates the benefit of spicing things up in the kitchen to reduce mortality. “Some nutrients, like capsaicin, may be beneficial, but evidence is still lacking,” she explains.
Ammerman says claims that spices like turmeric and ginger have anti-inflammatory and anti-bacterial properties which can reduce risk of mortality are difficult to assess.
Other factors could be at play, such as the food those spices are used to flavor.
“If you’re eating a lot of turmeric, you’re probably eating a lot of vegetables,” says Ammerman.
Sardinia, Italy and Ikaria, Greece
“[Both of these regions] tend to be working the land, are agrarian and produce their own food,” says Katz.
This personal production of food brings two benefits: It keeps folk fit and ensure they have fresher food that they’re more likely to appreciate.
Animals are also kept, but are more expensive to slaughter and so eaten less frequently. “[They eat] very little meat proportionally,” says Katz.
The region sets some of the rules of the widely revered Mediterranean diet.
“Mediterranean diets put many so-called healthy diets together. It’s rich in fish, vegetables, and wholegrain with moderate alcohol,” says Qi. “The diet is good for longevity by lowering risk of cardiovascular diseases,” she says.
Ammerman highlights the benefits of tapas culture in limiting portion sizes. “The idea of small plates of things makes sense,” she says.
In Ikaria, Greece, people live eight years longer than Americans and experience 20% less cancer, according to the Blue Zones project.
The rate of heart disease is half and there’s almost no dementia.
Loma Linda, California
This long-lived community sits removed from the rest of the United States, outliving the nationwide population, on average, by a decade, according to the Blue Zones project.
The community consists of Seventh-day Adventists, a Christian group with strict rules on diet, exercise and rest.
Meat and dairy products are avoided.
“They have a traditionally low-fat, vegan diet,” says Katz, though some eat meat in moderation — served as a side, rather than main.
They follow a more “biblical diet” of grains, fruits, nuts and vegetables and drink only water. Vegetables such as legumes — for example, peas, beans and tomatoes — are a regular component of meals.
Try this at home?
So could these diets be brought home from vacation as life-enhancing souvenirs?
There are clear themes that transcend cultures and geographic location, suggesting anyone could actually cook up healthier lifestyles.
Qi agrees.
“They have a lot of similarities: rich in fish, wholegrain, vegetables, fruit and fiber,” she says. “Only their name is different.”
Original article “These cuisines could help you live longer” from CNN.
Since April, thousands Haitian migrants are putting down roots in the Costa Rican border as part of their pilgrimage to the United States in search of the American dream. They travel overland from South America, mainly from Brazil. | MAYELA LOPEZ
Since April, thousands Haitian migrants began putting down roots at the Costa Rican border with Nicaragua as part of their pilgrimage to the United States in search of the American dream. They travel overland from South America, mainly from Brazil. Photo Mayela Lopez, La Nacion
QCOSTARICA – The announcement last week by the United States to deport migrants who enter their country illegally could see a reduction in the flow of Haitian migrants to Costa Rica.
According to Communications Minister, Mauricio Herrera, the announcement by the U.S. last Thursday could be a disincentive for migrants to travel to South America (mainly Brazil), then make their to Costa Rica, Central America and Mexico and to the U.S. in search for a better quality of life.
“We think it is a good step to discourage an extremely dangerous and inhuman irregular migration (…). Being a discouraged one would expect that in the near future there will be fewer people of Haitian descent trying to reach the United States by this dangerous path,” said Herrera.
The decision by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security toughened immigration measures against the islanders, eliminating a series of special guarantees put in place that prevented the deportation of Haitians after the devastating earthquake of 2010.
Since 2011, U.S. authorities expelled from their country only Haitians who were convicted of a serious crime or posed a threat to national security. Now, they will be treated like any other migrant reaching their borders, according to the AP news agency.
In the last five months more almost 11,000 Haitians and other migrants from Africa and Asia reached Costa Rica, with almost 5,000 still in the country, unable to cross into Nicaragua on their path north through Central America and the U.S. border in Mexico.
Herrera said that Costa Rica will continue with their immigration policy, that is, continue to extent temporary permits for transit up to 25 days, in order to maintain a record of the migrant population and to provide them with legal status so as not to become victims of traffickers (coyotes in Spanish) and organized crime.
In his opinion, Herrera said it is unlikely that the Haitians will decide to stay in Costa Rica following the U.S. announcement.
“These migrants don’t want to stay in Costa Rica that it is very clear that they want to leave the country as soon as possible, none have shown so far that intention,” said Herrera.
Prominent Costa Rican politicians feel a Trump presidency could be bad for the country, Latin Ameriac and mankind
QCOSTARICA – U.S. presidential candidate Donald Trump’s promise to limit foreign operations raises concerns in Costa Rica, where thousands of jobs and millions of dollars in foreign investment could fizzle from the country, if he is elected.
A number of prominent Costa Rican politicians feel a Trump presidency could be bad for the country, Latin America and mankind
For this reason, among others, many in Costa Rica see the importance of Hillary Clinton being elected president of the United States, which according to an article in La Republica, has the unanimous support of a number of prominent Costa Rican politicians.
As to the economic proposal, Donal Trump proposes to bring back U.S. companies with operations in other countries, including Costa Rica, with tax reductions. There is also the fear that a Trump presidency would break the Free Trade Agreement (FTA) the U.S. signed with Central America.
Moreover, Clinton has been recognized as an experienced, restrained and with global vision to meet the challenges of her country and the region.
With respect to a possible Trump win, former Costa Rica president Rafael Ángel Calderón says, “Every day I ask God for Clinton to win, because Mr. Trump would be a real disgrace for America and the world for its fundamentalist positions…The Republican candidate has no respect for anything or anyone and his explosive temper can not trust anyone…For Costa Rica imperiled is the FTA with the United States, including the thousands of jobs that have been generated by that agreement.”
Former President Abel Pacheco says, “Trump Is Interesting … As A Psychiatric Case and considers a Trump win would not only be bad for Latin America but for all humanity.”
Antonio Alvarez, president of the Legislative Assembly says, “Trump’s speech is anti Latino Americano with a vision of defense of trade and jobs in the United States. This would translate into an affectation to foreign investment, while reducing employment in countries like Costa Rica. I do not think he can break the FTA, but it could seek mechanisms to affect the direct application of treaties, especially because his policies seem unpredictable. Meanwhile, a Clinton victory gives tranquility to the private sector, because it provides a continuity of policies.”
Patricia Mora, president of the Frente Amplio party says, “I think Trump would be a shame for the United States and a serious threat to mankind. He should not occupy the presidential seat of that power, or access to nuclear power. What would be better for us?, I see it rather as what is an affront to all human beings?, although I must admit that women’s leadership in the US, would generate a positive effect on the fight for equality…that man is unpredictable and sees underhanded Latin America.”
Otton Solis, legislator and former presidential candidate for the PAC, says “Trump is a person in whose heart and head have yet to accept human rights and values since the French Revolution and his proposals are widely discriminatory for those who are not white and American. My candidate was Bernie Sanders, but in the current situation, what’s best for Costa Rica and Latin America is for Clinton to win.”
QBLOGS – I’m not a promoter of conspiracy theories, but I believe the evidence to be overwhelming, that Governments around the world, look for ways to socially control their respective populations in order to retain power. Sometimes these methods of social control are more obvious than in others.
We have the neighbouring country of Nicaragua, where President Daniel Ortega is expecting to appoint himself as Dictator for life in an election to be held in November. Strangely enough, Nicaragua has just acquired a military inventory of fifty Russian tanks.
I don’t believe that these tanks were acquired to threaten neighbouring countries, such as Costa Rica, so much as they were acquired for social control within Nicaragua; to ensure Mr. Ortega’s grip on power as a Dictator. After-all, he does have the experience of being over-thrown once by the Contras. This is an example of a very obvious social control mechanism implemented by a Government.
In Costa Rica, not having a standing military, social control is handled in a more ingenious and less obvious manner. Costa Rica has a population which is generally more educated and sophisticated than many of its Latin American neighbours. Accordingly, the biggest threat to the Government’s retention of power is to not afford Costa Ricans sufficient time for critical thought and a reflection on matters that might lead to a conclusion that the Government was unfairly taxing, regulating, or in some other manner affecting their lifestyle in a negative way.
In the eighteen years that I have lived in Costa Rica, it is clear to me that professional soccer (football) is an all-consuming event for the population at large. In my opinion, it is really the only National activity that unites the Costa Rican population with patriotic fervor. Clearly, Costa Ricans spend most of their free time either watching, or speaking about football, with little, or no time devoted to any critical thinking regarding their lot in life.
In addition to the obsession with football exhausting all time for critical thinking, is the relative ease with which bank credit is available to Costa Ricans. Particularly with Public Sector employees, high wages and salaries make qualifying for a bank loan, or mortgage, based on monthly income amounts, a “breeze”.
This is obvious from the number of new vehicles patrolling the streets of San Jose and the number of new condo projects in the Metropolitan San Jose area and where bank financing is readily available to this Sector of the working population. This, along with their usually “maxed-out” credit cards, conveniently keeps Costa Ricans working pay cheque to pay cheque, with again, little, or no time for any critical thought.
The interesting thing to note, is that this social control mechanism utilized in Costa Rica is very passive in nature. I doubt that Costa Ricans in general have any idea that these instruments of social control are even in effect.
The manipulation is subtle and Costa Rica is by no means unique in its use of such social control techniques.
QCOSTARICA – Republican U.S. presidential candidate Donald Trump “is interesting, as a psychiatric case”, for former Costa Rica president Abel Pacheco de la Espriella (2002 – 2006).
Abel Pacheco
With less than two months before the U.S. election on November 8, Pacheco crosses his fingers that Trump does not win, because in his opinion he would not only be bad for Latin America but for all humanity.
“Donald Trump is interesting, but as a psychiatric case and nothing else. I see with terror we could get a surprise and he wins, putting the world at serious risk. Through the history of mankind, we have seen how civilized countries, are seduced by populist people,” Pacheco said.
The former president asserts that Trump, if elected to office, could break the Free Trade Agreement (FTA) signed by the United States with Central America, with the aim of bringing back (to the U.S.) American companies that today do business around the world.
Pacheco, one of six children of a bananagrower, who in 2002 was elected on a platform to continue free market reforms and to institute an austerity program, is a medical doctor who graduated from Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México with a degree in Psychiatry from Louisiana State University.
During the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s Pacheco was a popular presenter of short programs on Costa Rican television, while continuing to teach at the University of Costa Rica (UCR).
Pacheco is the author of a number of books, including both, fiction and non-fiction and was awarded with the prize “Citizen of the World” for his valuable contribution to culture and literature around the world.
QCOSTARICA – A group of three Costa Ricans made a video in the streets of San Jose to make awareness of street sexual harassment (acoso sexual) many women, and some men, face daily.
Rene Montiel Bonilla produced the documentary that presents a woman, Laura Leon, walking the streets of the capital city for about tow hours. Along the way Laura received offensive remarks and including unwanted touching.
Documentary aims to stop street sexual harassment in Costa Rica. Street sexual harassment is an every day thing in the country. The documentary with a hidden camera gives us a glimpse of what women live through daily on the streets of San Jose
“Almost all my friends have told me about the issue of street sexual harassment. I am always here the stories of what happened to them on the street, so I decided to make a short documentary to do something about it,” said Montiel.
The documentary opens with the images of the cities of Mexico City and New York where similar projects have revealed the harassment bared by women there.
In Costa Rica there is no legislation to punish street sexual harassment and such is seen as normal.
In the video, Montiel tells us that 61.7% of the 2.4 million women in the country have been victims of street sexual harassment. In contrast, only 32.8% of men report being victims.
At the of the video, Montiel’s has a message to men, to “stop this bullshit”, to “once and for all” stop being part of a vicious circle and culture of violence against women.
The video, published on Monday, has been already seen almost 9,000 times.
Do you part, watch the video and share it with your friends and on the social media.
QCOSTARICA – The Costa Rica economy is a time bomb, where increased debt accelerates the countdown, says a report by La Republica.
It is expected that the deficit this year will be lower than in 2015; however, the efforts made so far is like covering your eyes from the sun with one finger, writes Javier Adelfang in the article published Monday.
The country is facing an enormous economic challenge that could result in a financial crisis as debt continues to increase and little is being done to create new sources of income. Adding to the situation is the refusal of the opposition to approve the tax reform that will generate new revenue, the government’s refusal to spending cuts and a “negative” tax collection due to tax evasion, both individual and corporate.
How did we there here?
In 2009, then president Oscar Arias introduced the “Plan Escudo” (Shield Plan), aiming to mitigate the impact of the global crisis. This prompted government spending, especially in public employment, without any genuine increase in revenue.
Since that time numerous obligations were approved, many were noble, but without asking where will the money come from. Add to this the salary and pension situation of the public employees.
Tax evasion, both on sales and income, has become a huge stumbling block for the government. This has led each year the government to borrow, not only to meet basic expenses, but to pay down the debt accumulated in the previous year.
Financial experts say that the country is in a vicious circle: Half of next year’s budget will be financed with debt, and one-third of it will go to pay old debt and interest.
Adelfang says the circle is nothing more than a variant of the Ponzi scheme.
Ponzi schemes occasionally begin legitimately until failure to achieve the returns expected, then continues under fraudulent terms. The scheme get its name from, in the 1920s, in the U.S., when Charles Ponzi promised high returns in a short time for investment in his business.
At the beginning Ponzi could fulfill his promises of paying generous interest with the continuous flow of money from people investing every day. It ended when confidence in Ponzi was lost (that is no new investors) because of a publication of the Boston Post revealing the scheme.
While Costa Rica has the confidence of the lenders who believe they will get back their money (and interest), but if the country does not generate substantive changes to improve the situation, since the scheme requires a continual stream of investments, it sooner or later, falls apart.
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What is your take on Costa Rica’s economy? Let your opinion be known in the comments section below or post to our official Facebook page.
Malcolm Turnbull with the Australian contingent at the UN. He announced that Australia would resettle refugees from camps in Costa Rica and Central America. Photograph: Julie Jacobson/AP
QCOSTARICA – Australia’s Prime Minister, Malcom Turnbull, told the UN that his country will take refugees from Costa Rica. This does not include the African migrants currently in Costa Rica, on their way north to the United States.
At Barack Obama’s global migration summit in New York, Turnbull said that the humanitarian intake will include a cohort of refugees from the violence-plagued “northern triangle” countries of Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador.
Turnbull praised Obama “for bringing us together to pledge new commitments to support some of the world’s most vulnerable people”, but did not pledge any additional places in Australia, according to a report by The Guardian. Instead he announced the previously earmarked increase in Australia’s humanitarian intake to 18,750 by 2018-19 would be made permanent.
Last July, Costa Rica agreed with the United States to offer temporary protection to refugees fleeing Central America. The partnership was announced following an admission by Obama administration officials of its failure to address the surge in refugees fleeing violence, rape and kidnappings. See the Q report here.
Turnbull’s address did not mention Australia’s offshore processing regime. Here is what the Australian PM said:
“Our strategy addresses all parts of the problem – employing strong border protection policies and a tough stance on people smugglers, while tackling the causes of displacement, with a generous and compassionate resettlement program supporting refugees in our communities.
“This is why Australia recently announced a $220m commitment to help the humanitarian and resilience needs in Syria and its neighbouring countries.
“And I can announce that Australia will commit an additional $130m over the next three years in support of peace building and assistance to refugees, forcibly displaced communities and host countries. This multi-year commitment will give greater certainty to aid delivery organisations and facilitate longer-term planning.”
iPhone 7 Owners Are Being Tricked Into Drilling A Hole into Their Phones
iPhone 7 Owners Are Being Tricked Into Drilling A Hole into Their Phones
QTECH – Don’t do this at home (or at work). Unless you’ve been living off some remote island or the jungles of Costa Rica, you have heard that the new iPhone recently out has no headphone port, the great minds at Apple deciding to do away with wire connected headphones in the iPhone 7, which only has a lightning port.
But some iPhone users won’t have any of that, so a prank video that had gone viral on the social media, shows a man drilling a 3.5mm hole in the bottom left hedge of the iPhone 7 held in a vice, claiming that users can add a headphone socked to their new phone by simply drilling the hole.
iPhone 7 Owners Are Being Tricked Into Drilling A Hole into Their Phones
The video, produced by Sacramento, California-based Ukrainian YouTuber Taras Maksimuk who “specialises in smashing technology for your pleasure” according to his profile, which has more than 11 million views at the writing of the post, shows that once the hole has been drilled you can plug in your headphones and listen to the music.
OK, the music is really coming out of the speakers and surprisingly and surprisingly the phone did not get damaged. WARNING, the video is a prank and common sense says that drilling into it will damage it.
Some of the comments (38,158 and counting) on YouTube go like this:
Dude said, “WTF??? F**k you! My screen turned black the moment I started drilling and now I can’t even open it.”
Lukelaluke123 said: “ARE YOU KIDDING ME? I WAITD TILL MY DAD WAS SLEEP THEN I WENT TO THE GARAGE AND GOT HIS DIRLL AND DID THIS ND NOW MY IPHONE WONT NOT EVEN WORK!!!!! YOU ARE SUCH ASCUM BAG WHY WOULD YOU DO THIS IM GOING TO MAEK SURE YOURE UTUBE CHANNEL IS GETS SHUT DOWN.”
Toxic Predator said, “I drilled a hole in my iPhone 7 and it worked! ALSO!!!!! if you throw your phone off into the grand canyon and the put a jack-hammer to it it gives you unlimited apps for free and unlimited memory! ALSO ANOTHER HACK!!!!!!!!!! if you throw it into a volcano it will print money!!!”
MackaliMesut1 said, “I drilled the hole in it. The headphone doesn’t go all the way in. Do I need to drill deeper? Also my phone turned of because of low battery I think. I’m charging it for an hour now it doesn’t turn on, is this normal?”
Besides the hole drilling, Maksimuk has other videos on destroying the iPhone 7, including what happenrs if you microwave it or place it in liquid nitrogen for five minutes. Remember, Apple says its new phone is water-resistant.
In total there are seven videos showing him destroying the iPhone 7, which seemingly hasn’t stopped people from drilling holes into the phone bottom of their new iPhones.
This may not be what an immigration looks like today, but the experience has changed much
This may not be what an immigrant is today, but the experience is pretty much the same.
(QTRAVEL) The following is from a great article by Claire Litton-Cohn on the Matador Network detailied ten unexpected or unforseen problems you’re going to have when you become an immigrant, be it in Costa Rica or anywhere else from where you are right now.
Temporary or permanent, you’ve moved away from the country of your birth (and passport) into the wild unknown… or at least, unknown to you. You’ve shouldered your backpack or closed the door on your shipping container, and found a place to stay for the first few weeks in your new hometown. Whether you’ve been gone for two weeks or twenty years, here are some problems that might sound familiar to you… which you never would have experienced without leaving home.
1. You can’t eat your favorite foods anymore.
Whatever it is, chances are your new country either doesn’t have it, it tastes different, or it’s very hard to find. There are all kinds of glorious new and exciting flavours and taste profiles to explore… but if you’re exhausted from a day of figuring out the health insurance system, what you really want is whatever brings you back to your happiest childhood dinnertime memories. I just moved to Sweden with my toddler daughter, only to discover that it’s one of the few European countries that doesn’t import Goldfish crackers. Since this is about half my daughter’s daily diet, we are scrambling to come up with an alternative to those tasty cheesy fish.
2. Telling jokes and dating are suddenly incomprehensible.
Unless you’re utterly fluent in your new country’s language from the minute you move, the nuances and idioms of that language will come slowly (if at all). Telling jokes and impressing potential new partners with our repartee are among the top ways we flex our verbal muscles, and feeling uncertain about verb tense or vocabulary will leave you quiet. I remember once being very impressed with myself when I could join in a brisk conversation about World War 2 with a bunch of native francophones… and I still couldn’t have made a pun to save my life. Especially if your native language is commonly spoken in your new home, you may find yourself never reaching this level of fluency in a second (or third) language.
3. Personal space rules are totally different.
My husband was waiting in line for something and noticed someone edging closer and closer to him, until they were touching. Being from the United States, where people have pretty large personal space bubbles, this drove him nuts. But for many people around the globe, this is just how you stand when you’re in line… waiting too far back is rude. You’ll likely have to readjust how you think about basic interactions, even with strangers on the street. Remember: in countries where they drive on the right, pedestrians walk to the right of the sidewalk, and vice versa.
4. Bureaucracy and paperwork in every country are very, very different.
You might have done a lot of paperwork in your home country — maybe you registered a business or bought a house or signed a contract. No matter what, you have a whole new pile of papers to sign, date, and figure out what they mean with the help of Google Translate (once you have your new phone contract up and running, assuming you figured out how to get one!)…and everyone you’ll be dealing with has understood how it all works since they were children. Swedish leases (called firsthand contracts) are very difficult to get; you can be on a waiting list for years before getting one. We just found out a few weeks ago that the contracts are for life, which we never would have guessed, but Swedes assumed we knew.
5. You miss your support network more than you expected.
Family or chosen family, you’re now possibly thousands of miles away from the people who meet you for sushi after work. You’ll make new friends, of course, but you can’t make new family… and even friendship takes a while to really settle in. Social networking provides an illusion of closeness, but you may also just not have time to keep up with all of the people you care about even with a daily status update or tweet. Human beings do not function well in isolation, so be kind to yourself while you adjust. Schedule regular video chats with your nearest and dearest, download a secure texting app (I like WhatsApp), and try to keep in touch without letting it occupy your time so much that you ignore face-to-face opportunities with new people.
6. Your partner/family doesn’t love it as much as you.
For whatever reason, you’ve settled quickly and adeptly into your new normal. But your spouse or kids: not so much. I met someone on a local social media group who said that her teenaged kids had a terribly difficult time when they moved to Italy — they went from a familiar (American) culture, to the more restrictive culture of Italian youth. The things teens talked about were boring to them, and there just wasn’t anything to do in the evenings. They stayed miserable until they left Italy a few years later. If your family or partner are suffering wherever you are, you can’t feel comfortable. Do your best to help them adjust and address their problems; if you are the person whose job brought you all to the new place, you may have had corporate assistance and training to deal with your new culture… while they likely just got thrown in the deep end.
7. Grocery store confusion.
We’ve already discussed how hard it is to find your faves, but… what’s with all this yogurt? What’s the difference between this entire row of tomato sauces or fish pastes? Does anyone know how to cook this frozen lamb head? I’ve often had to resort to internet searches to figure something out (what even IS Vegemite, Australians?) or determine which of the numerous cartons before me contain the correct form of milk. Items aren’t where you’d expect them to be — salt is with the sauces, not with the spices — and that tube you thought was squeezy cheese turns out to be caviar. It might take a long time, months even, to sort out what all of this stuff is and how to find it. Investigate multiple stores until you find one you like, with prices that work for you. This might be a somewhat more expensive process than you’d hope, or you might get lucky and discover some incredibly cheap things you never would have found tasty before.
8. Forcibly changing your mental habits.
I was so worried about accidents when I started driving in Australia that I mentally chanted “keep to the left, keep to the left” until I could drive on the correct side of the road and change lanes and use the turn signal instead of the windshield wipers. Then I went back to the U.S. for a holiday and ended up almost killing us on a highway in a rental van because I’d totally overwritten my previous fifteen years of driving experience and kept turning into oncoming traffic. It can be literally a matter of life or death to change things that you’ve taken for granted most of your life — like where the seatbelts are — so you have to do it quickly. It took me years to stop climbing in the passenger side of a car when I was getting ready to drive somewhere, too.
9. Your home country might cause some frustrating problems.
Canada offers a savings program for parents who want to put money aside for their children to go to university; the government, both provincial and federal, puts in a certain amount for free based on what you contribute. Sounds great, only the United States considers this a “foreign investment account” on par with tax shelters by billionaires in the Cayman Islands, and this makes filing taxes in either country a long and arduous process. Do you have to pay taxes in your passport country as well as your new resident country? Do you need to legally declare yourself absent? How do you vote? Figuring this stuff out might take a while, and you also might not know you’ve made a mistake until something comes back to haunt you.
10. VPN blocking and regional websites.
Netflix, I’m looking at you. The websites you can access might vary by country… and your favorite tv show in Canada might be inaccessible in Spain. Your Google homepage persistently tries to present itself in your new country’s language (based on your IP address), not the language you actually speak. Netflix has shot down all of the VPNs that make it easy to switch between areas so you can watch movies in peace. The internet superhighway has a few off-ramps, and you might find yourself stuck on one of them.
TODAY COLOMBIA – The Colombian government and left-wing Farc rebels have signed a historic agreement that formally brings an end to 52 years of civil war.
The rebel leader Timoleon Jimenez, known as Timochenko, apologised to “all the victims of the conflict” and was greeted by cheers and applause.
Colombia’s President Santos, left, and the rebel leader known as Timochenko shook hands after signing the deal
He said: “I would like to ask for forgiveness for all the pain that we have caused during this war.”
Guests dressed in white at the ceremony in Cartagena, to symbolize peace.
The UN Secretary-General, Ban Ki-Moon, and leaders of Latin American countries were among those present.
The last of the major Cold War conflicts killed 260,000 people and left six million internally displaced.
The UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon, second from left, and the rebel leader Timochenko, right, watched as the president signed the historic deal
Timochenko said the Farc, a group founded as the armed wing of the Communist Party in 1964, is leaving armed conflict behind and moving in to peaceful politics.
“No-one should doubt that we are moving into politics without arms,” he said.
“Let us all be prepared to disarm our hearts.”
The president and Timochenko used a pen made from a bullet to sign the deal.
The deal must pass a referendum on Sunday before it can pass into law. Polls indicate the majority of Colombians will vote for it, although there has been some opposition, led by two ex-presidents.
Under the deal, the Farc will be relaunched as a political party. The entire peace agreement will be put to Colombian voters in a popular vote on 2 October.
It comes after four years of talks in Havana, Cuba, between President Santos and Timochenko.
About 2,500 foreign and local dignitaries witnessed the signing ceremony in the walled, colonial city of Cartagena.
The president said the decision to use a bullet-pen was intended to illustrate Colombia’s transition from a country of bullets into a country of “education and future”.
Correspondents say President Santos has risked his political future on the success of the peace deal.
Dignitaries attending the ceremony include UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, US Secretary of State John Kerry and Cuban President Raul Castro.
Relatives of people kidnapped and murdered by Farc rebels are attending the ceremony
“This step that your country is going to take is a giant step,” Kerry said as he arrived in the country.
He praised the efforts of Santos to secure the deal and pledged US$390 million dollars to help implement it.
Correspondents say most Colombians are expected to support the deal – these supporters have made a sign of the Spanish word for “peace”
The U.S. is not yet ready to remove the Farc from its list of terrorist organizations, he said, but is prepared to review that sanction once the peace agreement is up and running.
However, only hours before the signing, the EU announced it was removing the Farc from its list.
“This decision will allow us to support the post-conflict program and will be of benefit to all Colombians,” EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini said on social media.
Correspondents say that although there is widespread hope that the deal may bring an end to the kidnappings and bloodshed that have blighted Colombia over five decades, it has also led to divisions in Latin America’s fourth-biggest economy.
Some are angry that it allows rebels to enter parliament without serving time in prison.
Farc rebels must now hand over weapons to the UN within 180 days.
QCOSTARICA – This Monday morning a large group of Uber drivers took to the streets in protest, a protest against the Uber company on its decision to allow cash payment for the service.
The drivers say the company’s requirement that they keep at least ¢36,000 colones in cash to give passengers change, exposes them to attacks.
However, Julie Robinson, spokesperson for Uber, said that driver safety is not at risk because the same registration and protocols used before, during and after the trip will remain.
“The safety of partners (drivers) is not compromised. We implemented the cash because it is important to give the opportunity to all people who are unbanked (don’t have a debit or credit card or Paypal) to use the safe and reliable service we offer,” Robinson said.
According to Robinson, the cash payment option is used in more than 70 cities worldwide, including about 30 in Latin America, such as Mexico, Panama, Colombia and Chile.
A Uber driver told La Nacion that in addition to the crowd gathered outside the Uber offices located in Plaza Antares, in San Pedro, some 400 drivers were disconnected from the service this morning.
The driver added that in the coming days another group will be asking the company to cut its commission from the current 20% to 15%.
By 1:00pm, about the time the downpours started in the San Jose area, the group disbanded without speaking to any company representative.
During the protest, Transito (traffic) officials remained on the scene in the event the drivers took to the same tactic used by formal taxis, blocking traffic.
Uber’s announcement coincides with an investigation by the Tax Department “” the way in which the company operates and its relationship with the drivers, to determine the tax liability of both.
On Friday, following the Uber announcement, the Minister of Finance said that the cash payment promotes informality. Fernando Rodriguez, Deputy Minister of Finance, called the move “a step backwards”.
“Any activity that at this point starts promoting cash is promoting informality and obviously with that, the possibility of avoiding (tax) controls and traceability,” said the official.
Uber in Costa Rica says it has some 7,000 drivers and about 225,000 users.
(Q24N) The people entrusted with enforcing the law in Venezuela regularly make the headlines as suspects or alleged accomplices, facilitators or perpetrators of serious crimes, a sign of the advanced deterioration and corruption of the country’s security forces.
Corrupt officials — especially police and military — play an essential role in the penetration and growth of organized crime in Venezuela, which is reflected in alarming crime statistics.
The cases have ranged from officers of the Bolivarian Armed Forces accused of transporting drug shipments in military vehicles, facilitating the passage of drug planes or managing gasoline smuggling to Colombia. Even the recently named interior minister has been accused by the United States of facilitating drug shipments when he was head of the country’s anti-narcotics effort, a charge he denies.
Police officers have been known to allow prisoners to escape, or to support or participate in kidnapping and extortion rings. There have been cases of security force members providing weapons and information to criminal groups and even procuring grenades for prison mafias.
As Latinobarometro has noted, police corruption is one of the principal problems in Latin America, and public perception of its extent is a big issue for regional law enforcement. The belief that police are corrupt in Latin America runs from 90 percent in Mexico to 47 percent in Uruguay, and 70 percent of people polled in Venezuela have a negative view of their authorities. In addition, 56 percent of Venezuelan respondents say they believe the police are involved in organized crime.
In 2009, Interior Minister Tarek El Aissami said that 20 percent of crimes in Venezuela are committed by police officers and, despite a lack of statistics, general perception is that those numbers have since increased. That perception has been fed by cases like the January 2015 arrest of 11 judicial police officers who were holding a local merchant for ransom in their police station.
Publicity surrounding that case led to a “restructuring” of the detective corps and the creation of a presidential commission tasked with developing a new model for the police, the third reform effort since 2006. The commission submitted a report that included a series of legislative bills on police reform. However, the legal project was never debated, much less voted on, despite the governing party’s majority in congress. The two previous reform efforts — in 2006 and 2012 — met with similar fates.
Venezuela’s Bolivarian National Guard (Guardia Nacional Boliviariana – GNB) has long been tainted by corruption. The responsibilities of this fourth branch of the Venezuelan Armed Forces include border surveillance, ports, airports, oil facilities, parks and maintaining public order. In recent years, officers of the GNB — as well as member of all the nation’s defense and security agencies — have been implicated in drug trafficking, kidnappings and other illegal practices.
Testimonials of mid-level GNB officers who spoke on condition of anonymity indicate that officers pay their superiors for assignments in the “most profitable” areas of the country, as determined by potential for collecting bribes. The bribe money is divided according to rank, with operational troops in the field getting 30 percent, intermediate officers getting 20 percent and commanders raking in 50 percent.
These “commissions,” as they are called, are collected for allowing contraband gasoline shipments through to Colombia, allowing cocaine to be placed on an aircraft or turning off a radar to let a suspicious flight go by undetected.
Members of the Bolivarian National Police have said that some officers pay their superiors to be assigned to area’s where merchants sell basic goods on the black market. These areas are prime jurisdictions for collecting bribes.
Similarly, criminal detainees, defense lawyers and even public prosecutors know the “rates” charged by detectives to alter police records or “mistakenly” change one digit of a suspect’s ID number, which can indefinitely delay a case. They also know the “cost” of removing evidence or “misplacing” an entire case file.
The director of security for the state of Guárico was replaced in November 2015 after he was accused of passing information to Venezuela’s most wanted criminal, gang leader José Tovar Colina, alias “El Picure.” Police finally caught up with Tovar and killed him in May 2016.
The occasional dismissal of officers caught in the act of corruption, however, is not enough to restore public confidence in the police forces. Only profound changes in the functioning and efficiency of the Venezuelan police can do that.
The Venezuelan media reports on a daily basis cases of military officials who are suspected or are alleged accomplices, facilitators or perpetrators of serious crimes. The jobs performed by police officers puts them in more direct contact with criminals than any other sector of society. As a result, they constantly are exposed to temptation or are targeted by attempts to corrupt them.
Both informal and institutional regulation of police forces is essential in any democracy. But in Venezuela, the controls that existed have been systematically dismantled, facilitating the strengthening of organized crime.
Internal Supervision
In an effective system of police hierarchy, higher ranking officers are expected to play a significant role in controlling the conduct of their subordinates. In the Venezuelan police forces, advancement through the ranks is based on loyalty and political sympathy rather than training, experience or merit.
Internal Affairs
Most police forces have an internal affairs office in change of investigating improper or illegal activity carried out by members of the police. While Venezuela’s National Police Board has mandated such offices in all police agencies, that mandate has not be carried out in practice. The lack of effective internal controls was highlighted by the reform commission appointed by President Nicolás Maduro in 2014, which called on the creation of a national internal affairs office. As noted, that reform effort was shelved.
Citizen Control
Venezuelan law provides for a degree of citizen participation in regulation of the police, via the Citizens Police Control Committees (Comités Ciudadanos de Control Policial – CCCP), community councils and any other legitimate community-based organization. But polarization of Venezuelan politics at all levels — and majority control of the governing party at the community level — has made citizen control of police functions ineffective. Government control of a high-level and little-known General Police Council, whose members are appointed by the interior minister, limits its effectiveness and independence.
The National Assembly
Although the National Assembly has a legal mandate to perform a watchdog function with regard to other government institutions, it has failed to do so. Despite a series of disturbing developments in recent years involving increased crime and violence, weapons being smuggled into prisons and reports of serious human rights abuses, the National Assembly failed to hold any enquiries or call on any senior officials to testify in hearings between 2005 and 2015.
The Attorney General of the Republic
No unit dedicated to investigating police corruption or crimes committed by officials exists in the Attorney General’s Office. The proceedings against military or police officers are assigned according to the nature of the charges to the different departments of public prosecutor’s office: Drugs; Anti-Corruption; Anti Extortion and Kidnapping; Defense of Women; Protection of Fundamental Rights; etc. The attorney general reported that in 2015, 1,312 officials from different security forces were suspected of wrongdoing and 959 of them were formally charged with committing crimes. The report did not specify what crimes they were charged with, making it impossible to establish how many are related to police corruption.
The Ombudsman
The majority of the National Assembly from 2005 to December 2015, which had little understanding that the Ombudsman exists to limit the abuses of the authorities, appears to have decided that it should appoint someone who is prepared to protect the state, regardless of its actions. In December 2014, the National Assembly appointed Tarek William Saab, a recognized leader of the ruling United Socialist Party of Venezuela (Partido Socialista Unido de Venezuela – PSUV) and deputy governor of Anzoátegui. Tarek Saab has taken a much more active approach than his predecessors. He nonetheless finds himself in the difficult position of trying to restore the dignity of the office while also remaining a politician.
Non-Governmental Organizations and Human Rights Defenders
In an ideal context, non-governmental organizations (NGOs) should receive support from their governments to help carry out their activities. In a “normal” context, NGOs should be allowed to carry out their activities with freedom and respect. In Venezuela, however, the context has been hostile, slowing the ability of NGOs to act, as the authorities refuse to accept their reports, recommendations or complaints. In some cases, the authorities have even targeted the leaders of NGOs. This has prevented them from fulfilling their role as a watchdog of police corruption, among other things.
Media
The press is an essential element in the fight against police corruption, as it is in many ways the eyes and ears of society. Unfortunately, the attitude of the Venezuelan government toward media reports has been similar to its attitude toward NGOs.
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The police situation in Venezuela is complex, especially when analyzed in the context of the social, economic, political, and public safety crises facing the country. Police agents and their families suffer equally from shortages of food and basic goods, as well as from the permanent threat of being killed by criminals looking to steal their weapon or even items like their bicycle.
In short, Venezuela’s police forces are not subject to any kind of control, be it formal or informal, internal or external. They have awful labor conditions, work in high-risk environments, and the few punishments handed down to corrupt officers fail to improve the situation of a country in crisis. It should not be surprising then, however troubling it may be, that police corruption in Venezuela continues to grow.