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Yes, You Can Leave The North America Bubble

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Yes, you can leave the North America bubble It’s not the only place that matters

(Q24N) Yes, you can leave the North America bubble It’s not the only place that matters

I resisted moving to South America, as much as I enjoyed my time there during my mini-lives over the past several years.

But yesterday, after selling or giving away all of my stuff, I moved to Colombia.

In some ways, life is clearly better for me in Colombia than in the U.S.. I can get all of the fresh vegetables I can carry from the farmer’s market for less than $10, I can afford an apartment in a building with a pool, and my health insurance plan — the best available — is about $100 a month. Even though I’ve learned I can be miserable or happy in just about any kind of weather, the climate is an added bonus: 75˚F and sunny all year.

I have to admit, the lack of American*-level convenience was one of the factors that held me back. Can you imagine living without Amazon Prime? Still, I can get items from Amazon within about 2 weeks (after paying 30% extra on shipping and import taxes).

But the challenging parts of living in a developing country are the parts that make it worth doing. For example, since I’m operating in Spanish day-to-day — and interacting with people from a totally different culture — I’m forced to constantly assume that I’m wrong. The foreigner is always wrong. This is a kind of “patience therapy.” At first I get frustrated easily, but the relaxed rhythm of Colombian life eventually takes over.

For reference, New York City has the opposite effect. It fools me into thinking that I’m right, and there’s somewhere I have to be.

It’s hard to quantify the value of immersing yourself in another culture. Like a cold shower, it’s all at the same time shocking, refreshing, and invigorating. Once I reached the level of Spanish where I was able to give directions on the street, I felt like I had discovered a secret level on Super Mario Bros..

Suddenly, the world felt bigger. Not only could I now travel in newfound comfort in 13 countries, I had — in the process of learning and living — developed a new understanding of humanity at large: Having a sense of the universality of emotions like happiness, fear, and love; and the myriad ways of navigating all of it, brought vibrance to every face I saw on the street.

When Tim Ferriss asked Malcolm Gladwell what advice he would have for his 30-year-old self, his response was quick, and simple: “Leave North America…. Which is — despite the fact that it pretends to be the only place that matters — is not the only place that matters.” He then recalled an opportunity he had to live in Jamaica. “I should have done it,” he said.

I wonder about the details of Mr. Gladwell’s decision-making process when he passed up that opportunity. I imagine that the conveniences and familiarity of his home country felt even more comfortable when wrapped in a blanket of fear of the unknown.

Of course, it was a different world twenty-two years ago. There was no Skype or Facebook. He couldn’t just log onto JOL (Jamaica Online) to send an email to a friend. My own geographic flexibility would be unthinkable without impromptu FaceTime chats with my parents, and scheduled Hangouts with close friends.

I also imagine someone as accomplished as Mr. Gladwell was driven by his career aspirations. When you feel like you’re in “the only place that matters,” competing with your Washington Post colleagues, running off to Jamaica looks like career suicide.

I personally had to overcome the sense that by running off to South America, I was somehow admitting defeat in “The America Game.” But, this isn’t the first time that I’ve left the well-worn path for something counterintuitive. Eight years ago, I left my life as a product designer for Silicon Valley startups — job opportunities nipping at my tail. I didn’t have a plan in mind, but I eventually transformed into a writer, teacher, and podcaster. These are all things I can do from abroad, and in fact, I do my best work when in Colombia because I’m just happier here.

Sometimes I think about what my life would be like if I had stayed on that path (as if I could have stomached it). I’d probably be using my good fortune to build products that do whatever my mom doesn’t do for me anymore, paying $3,000 a month for a studio apartment, and looking for the next molecular gastronomy restaurant to cross off my bucket list.

I know that sounds sanctimonious, as if my flexible lifestyle weren’t made possible by innovators in Silicon Valley and beyond. It’s just that sometimes I think about how each of us could be living a life different from the one we’re living — a life that would actually make us happier — yet we have no way of knowing about it. We’re like dogs that haven’t figured out that the doggy door isn’t just a solid wall.

I think about a well-intentioned product designer in his studio apartment, shoving the last bite of pad thai he ordered from Seamless into his mouth while rushing to his Uber to drink craft cocktails. While surrounded by people discussing the latest TechCrunch article, he feels a faint sense of dissatisfaction — a sense that he’s not good enough. He takes another drink and forgets about it.

I wish he would reconsider. I wish he would seek out discomfort, face his insecurities, and live a life on the great frontier that technology has expanded for so many of us.

And even when I hear a real innovator like Elon Musk fantasize about colonizing Mars — as exciting an idea as that is — I cringe a little. The same way a magician waving his hand will keep you from seeing the dove he’s pulling from his pocket, I fear it will make people forget about the Earth, and humanity, and human experience — and how much of all of it each of us has yet to explore.

* I don’t like to call U.S. Citizens “Americans” (Colombia is also in The Americas), but I’m not sure what else to call us.

Original article by David Kadavy can be found at Medium.com

Article originally appeared at Today Colombia. Reposted with permission.

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Study Finds: Latinos Actually Do Age Slower Than Everybody Else

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Portrait of a Latina mother and daughter
Portrait of a Latina mother and daughter
Portrait of a Latina mother and daughter

(Q24N) Researchers at UCLA recently published the findings of a study that suggests that Latinos age slower than any other ethnicity. Scientists refer to the phenomenon as the ‘Hispanic paradox’, since Latinos typically have higher rates of diabetes and other life-threatening diseases.

According to researchers, the ethnic group is unequivocally healthier, lives longer than others, and has cells that take much longer to age.
To reach that conclusion, the researchers analyzed eighteen sets of data on DNA samples from around 6,000 people. In their analysis, they discovered that the blood of Latinos aged more slowly than other groups.

DNA specifically from the Latin American indigenous group Tsimané aged even slower than the general Latino group: around two years younger than Latinos and four years younger than whites.

We suspect that Latinos’ slower aging rate helps neutralize their higher health risks, particularly those related to obesity and inflammation,’ said Steve Horvath, a professor of biostatistics at the Fielding School of Public Health at UCLA.

‘Our findings strongly suggest that genetic or environmental factors linked to ethnicity may influence how quickly a person ages and how long they live.’

According to Horvath, the UCLA research points to an epigenetic explanation for Latinos’ longer life spans.

For example, the biological clock measured Latino women’s age as 2.4 years younger than non-Latino women of the same age after menopause.

Read the full article in the Daily Mail

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Uber Drivers Hiring Other Drivers To Operate Their Vehicles

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An edited ad placed by a Uber driver on Facebook
uber-drivers
“Drive Your Car & Be Your Own Boss‎” says Uber sas in its driver recruitment ads. Some drivers are taking it one step further, setting up their own fleet?

(QCOSTARICA) Driven by Facebook, some Uber drivers are looking to hire other drivers to operate their vehicles, in exchange for payment of a fee, working schedule and rules.

In the same way the driver/owners of formal taxis, these Uber drivers want to maximize their vehicle’s utility, offering them up to other drivers to work shifts up to 12 hours, having their cars on the road around the clock.

“Wanted driver from 6am to 6pm (…),” with conditions of work and coverage begin some ads appearing on Facebook.

An edited ad placed by a Uber driver on Facebook
An edited post placed by a Uber driver on Facebook

Uber says it is aware of the situation and encourages its driver to register the number of vehicles they wish, provided they meet the minimum requirements.

“These things happen often without any guidance from us, these are two people connecting through technology. Nothing to do with us,” said Humberto Pacheco, head of Uber in Costa Rica.

Pacheco went on to explain that the law of supply and demand protects the consumer from owners/drivers who exploit the (growing) Uber situation in the country.

“If a partner (Uber calls its drivers partners) offers unfit conditions, the customer will find another that will provide better,” said Pacheco.

In the works and expected to be ready next month, is a bill to regulate private drive companies using apps such as Uber and Cabify.

The bill aims to force these (and others) companies to register each and every one of their drivers with the Ministry of Economy, Industry and Commerce (MEIC) and linked to a particular vehicle.

Each vehicle would have an ID on the windshield that includes the name of the driver and or cooperative, the license plate number and special sticker for this kind of service.

However, lacking in the development of the bill is the employment relationship and working conditions of the drivers. According to the Ministry of Labour, they, the drivers, are at the mercy of the Ministry of Transport.

Spearheaded by PAC legislator, Franklin Corella, the draft bill calls for:

  • all transactions to be in national currency
  • a tax of 3% to 5% for each trip that would be earmarked for transportation projects
  • allowing only the transport of persons
  • maximum passengers of 5 to 7
  • applies only to ground transportation (no air or sea)

For its part, Uber says it wants greater autonomy on transactions, the tax is too high, wants the transport of goods included, the maximum number of people should be greater to include groups under its Ubervan and its application should apply to all types of transport, including maritime and air.

Corella explained that in the last several months it has called on Uber to participate in the negotiations, however, they have not been present.

The legislator added that in the coming weeks, prior to the final draft to be presented to the Legislative Assembly, the draft bill will be presented to the transportation sector and government authorities.

“We do not want the transport sector to see it as a threat, rather as an opportunity to regulate the service and improve this new form of mobility,” said PAC legislator.

 

Source La Republica

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Never See A Single Cockroach Again!

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(QCOSTARICA) Cockroaches are nasty insects, their physical appearance may scare everyone. They are often related to garbage and dirt, but you can also see them at home, walking down in our pantry or bedroom. We can find them anywhere in the world due to their power of adaptation. Especially in Costa Rica, it seems

cockroaches-home-remedies-bay-leavesCockroaches are one of the most resistant species on the planet as they support high levels of radiation and can survive without food for more than a month. These insects are omnivores, meaning they can eat both, plant foods or other animals. For these reasons we can find cockroaches everywhere, feeding on anything they find.

In addition to feeding on garbage, cockroaches leave chemical traces through their stool. In this way, they can easily find sources of water or food. That is a way of communication between them and that’s the main reason why they are all installed in a certain place. Amazing, I know… But we will help you to get rid of these nasty insects once and for all

If you want to get rid of cockroaches that present in your home, I recommend you try this trick which is very effective.

I discovered it by accident, the most powerful cockroaches repellent – Bay leaves (Laurel in Spanish).

I recently purchased from the Masxmenos (local supermarket) a package of dry bay leaves I sometimes use for cooking, then left the package open (my bad) in a room adjacent to the kitchen. After reading the article on http://www.feelhealthylife.com/, I consciously noted I had not seen a cockroach for some time.

My opened packaged of bay leaves (laurel in Spanish), next to my coffee grinds I burn to repel flying pests and in the garden soil
My opened package of bay leaves (laurel in Spanish), next to my coffee grinds I burn to repel flying insects in the house and spread in the  garden.

Bay leaves are an inexpensive and apparently are the best natural and effective way to repel cockroaches. This herb can’t kill them, but it the drives them away quickly because the smell is unbearable for the cockroach.

Place bay leaves in the garden or in the kitchen and you will never see cockroaches roaming around. They are perfect for the areas where food is stored such as kitchen or pantry because they are safe and non-toxic.

You can use fresh bay leaves or dry. But the best way to use these leaves is to crush dry leaves and make a powder. They release a much stronger smell used this way.

Share this post with your friends and help them to get rid of cockroaches once and for all!

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Men: How to Create an Awesome Profile on a Free Online Dating Site

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(QDATING) The internet is a treasure trove of eligible women, especially if you sign up for a free online dating website. As plentiful as the sea of singles may be, it can be a little overwhelming trying to find a great catch. Sure, you may come across some great contenders, but when it comes down to it, things can fall flat even before they get going!

Dating-in-Daylight-Cover-PhotoIf you experience this sort of let down more often than not, perhaps it’s not the people you’re meeting (or not meeting), but it is your profile that could be doing you dirty. Your profile is so important, whether you join a free online dating site or even a paid site. Keep reading if you want to know the best ways to appeal to someone, regardless of what dating site you decide to try.

1. Just Be You – When you join a free online dating service, you might feel inclined to embellish the truth because you may think that there is no way you could stand out among all the other singles on the site. Stop! Don’t even think about it! When you embellish the truth, you’re doing yourself a disservice, and you are also lying, and we all know that the truth always has a way of coming out, right? Just be yourself.

2. Don’t Use Boring Language – What we mean about using boring language on a free online dating site is don’t use phrases and words that appear on the majority of the profiles you see. For example, if you describe yourself as being laid back and carefree, you’ll probably get passed over because no one admits they are high strung—everyone is basically laid back. Instead, try to be more descriptive.

3. Tell Stories and Avoid Lists – Have you ever came across something and all it does is list things? It’s almost like you’re reading a grocery list! When you are filling out your profile, tell a story. People who read your profile should be able to picture how they will fit into your life, and they can do that when you describe things to them. For example, instead of listing some of the things you like to do, talk about a few experiences in detail. It’s a great way to draw interest and make people want to get to know you even more.

4. Avoid Sharing Too Much Information – While you may want to be upfront and honest with people about your past, some of your interests, and views, you don’t have to spill your guts on your profile. In fact, you want to put just enough information to draw attention and still have a little bit of mystery about you. Curiosity may have killed the cat, but it can be a magnet on a free online dating site.

5. Carefully Choose Photographs – Unlike Facebook where you can post all sorts of photographs, the pictures you upload to your free online dating profile should have some thought behind it. Most free online dating sites give you a limited number of pictures you can have, so you’ll want to choose pictures that best exemplifies who you are as a person, as well as some of your interests and hobbies. When you choose the right photos, you will almost see an increase in how many messages you receive.

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Tickets For Guns N’ Roses In San Jose Now On Sale

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(L-R) Duff McKagan, Axl Rose and Slash
(L-R) Duff McKagan, Axl Rose and Slash

(CONFIDENTIAL) Tickets for the San Jose (Costa Rica) concert for one of the most iconic Hard Rock bands, Guns N’ Roses NOT IN THIS LIFETIME… tour went on sale Monday, sparking a craze among the fans.

The band will take to the stage at the National Stadium, in La Sabana,  on November 26, 2016.

At 12:01am Monday (August 22) tickets were available to members of Fan Club International; from 12:01 Tuesday (August 23) to 11:59pm Saturday (August 27) they will be available to American Express cardholders; from 12:01am Sunday (August 28) to 11:59pm Sunday September 4 to Credomatic cardholders; and whatever is left will be available to the public from 12:01am Monday September 05 onwards.

Ticket prices range from ¢35.000 to ¢75,000 colones and available only through Publitickets.com.

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Christian Marin, Publitickets operations manager for Latin America, confirmed Ticos have been purchasing tickets to see the legendary band, however, there have been sales of a large number of tickets to fans in Central America, South America, North America, the Caribbean and Europe. Marin said they have also received a number inquiries from other countries, including from Asia.

Marin added that “unfair competition” attempted to hack their server by overloading the server with the idea of crashing it so that nobody can make purchases. “They tried hacking into us, but we responded in time,” said the operations manager.

The San Jose date is one of twelve announced to date in Latin America, that includes Medellin (Colombia), Sao Paolo and Rio de Janeiro (Brazil), Buenos Aires (Argentina), Santiago (Chile) and Lima (Peru), among others. Click here for all tour dates.

Guns N’ Roses is an American hard rock band from Los Angeles formed in 1985. The classic lineup, as signed to Geffen Records in 1986, consisted of vocalist Axl Rose, lead guitarist Slash, rhythm guitarist Izzy Stradlin, bassist Duff McKagan, and drummer Steven Adler. The current lineup consists of Rose, Slash, McKagan, keyboardists Dizzy Reed and Melissa Reese, guitarist Richard Fortus and drummer Frank Ferrer.

The post The Wait Is Over, Tickets For Guns N’ Roses Now On Sale appeared first on Costa Rica Confidential.

Article first appeared on COSTA RICA CONFIDENTIAL. Click here to go to the source article.

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Laura Pausini, The Undisputed Queen of Romantic Pop, Delighted Costa Rica

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(CONFIDENTIAL) The first time Amores Extraños was heard in the country was in 1994, when Laura Pausini released her first Spanish-language album, Laura Pausini, a compilation of ten adapted versions of hits from her previous albums. The record became the best-selling album of 1994 in Spain.

Laura Pausini on stage at the National Stadium in La Sabana (San Jose) Saturday night
Laura Pausini on stage at the National Stadium in La Sabana (San Jose) Saturday night

The album was successful in Latin America too, being certified platinum by the Argentine Chamber of Phonograms and Videograms Producers, the Asociación Colombiana de Productores de Fonogramas and the Chilean division of the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry. Moreover, the first four singles from the album, “La soledad”, “Se fue”, “Amores Extraños” and “Gente”, entered the top 30 on the Hot Latin Songs chart compiled by Billboard. Thanks to these results, Billboard ranked Pausini the second female revelation of 1994, after Mariah Carey.

Would you recognize her?
Would you recognize her? In the photo is the Italian singer, Laura Pausini (left) who took to the stage in La Sabana Saturday night, is seen here coming out the San Jose airport terminal. Photo David Chacon, Diario ExtraIn 1995, Pausini also received the World Music Award for Best Selling Italian Recording Artist and the Lo Nuestro Award for Best New Artist of the Year.

Saturday night, following the opening by Andres Carranza, who perfomed four original songs, at 8:00pm sharp the stadium lights dimmed and the sound of a heartbeat filled the open space. The screends showed a video, setting the tone for the evening.

“Tonight we are not alone,” said the voice with an Italian accent and the entire lower floor of the stadium stood up.

Laura Pausini came on stage.

The San Jose show is part of the Pausini Stadi Tour 2016 or Simili Tour, part of 17 Europe and 23 America dates, that began on May 25, 2016 and ending on October 25, 2016 in Munich, Germany.

In the Americas, Pausini opened her tour in Brampton (Ontario, Canada) on July 26, working her way down to New York City, Miami and Los Angeles, before hitting for five Mexico cities (Monterrey, Mexico City, Guadalajara, Queretao City and Puebla), ahead of San Jose (Costa Rica) on Saturday night.

Tomorrow, Tuesday night (Aug. 23) Pausini will be Panama, then off to Medellin and Bogota (Colombia) on the 25th and 26th, next to Quito (Ecuador), Lima (Peru), Snatiago (Chile), Buenos Aires (Argentina), Asuncio (Paraguay), Punta del Esta (Uruguay), Sao Paol and Rio de Janeiro (Brazil) and San Juan (Puerto Rico) before heading back to Europe, with a date in Madrid on October 7.

The post Laura Pausini, The Undisputed Queen of Romantic Pop, Delighted Costa Rica appeared first on Costa Rica Confidential.

Article first appeared on COSTA RICA CONFIDENTIAL. Click here to go to the source article.

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Venezuela to insist on defense of oil prices in tour of oil nations

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Venezuelan Foreign Minister Delcy Rodríguez said that oil nations are aware that oil prices must be balanced

Venezuelan government authorities have insisted on the necessity to balance oil markets and set fair prices that help recover the country’s economy; hence they are making efforts to reach consensus around their stance.

Petroleum and Mining Minister Eulogio del Pino and Foreign Minister Delcy Rodríguez embarked on a tour of OPEC and non-OPEC Member States with the aim of rethinking the oil market and leveraging the global economy.

As part of the tour, Del Pino on Wednesday met with his Omani counterpart Mohammed Al Rumhy.

For her part, Rodríguez stated that the nations have backed Venezuela’s proposals to face the future of oil markets.

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

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Nicaragua Among Countries Perfect For Budget Travelers

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You already know that there are so many awesome ways to travel when you’re on a serious budget. But what’s equally important is ~where~ you go in the first place.

Your dollar will get you pretty far in a dozen countries that include Nicaragua — which means they are pretty much the best places to go when you’re watching your wallet.

nicaragua-eiva

Nicaragua

Many people say Nicaragua is the new Costa Rica, which basically means that it’s getting to be an increasingly popular Central American destination. So get there while it’s still on the rise! Bonus: You won’t have to pay much once you arrive. The country is known for all of its high-adventure outdoor activities, particularly surfing — so do it up on the cheap. And you can get a dorm bed for as little as $5.

While you are in Nicaragua, take a look at these very close by countries:

Guatemala

guatemala

Those waterfalls are as beautiful as they look. This country is known for its gorgeous outdoor landscapes, as well as its cool arts-and-crafts handiwork. You can find tons of cool wooden sculptures and knickknacks in the weekend markets. It’s all affordable, too: A good meal, for instance, is roughly $3, and everything else is similarly budget-friendly.

Honduras

honduras - sada

Most people think of Costa Rica and even Nicaragua when they think of Central America. But Honduras is quickly becoming one of the rising hot spots for budget travelers looking to backpack on their own path. Fortunately, it’s very affordable — here’s what everything typically costs. Our favorite: A good local meal costs about 65 Honduran lempira, which is $3. Sold.

Peru

peru-daduia

Whatever you do, please, please put Machu Picchu on your travel bucket list. It is one of the coolest and most magical structures in the world. And the other parts of Peru are equally stunning — not to mention affordable. A taxi all around Lima, for instance, is about $7 (25 Peruvian nuevo). *Dances around apartment in joy*

Happy travels!

From Buzzfeed.com

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OIJ Takes Down “Narcofamilia” And MINAE Officials Growing Marijuana In La Amistad National Park

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Operativo del OIJ en Pérez Zeledón, este lunes 22 de agosto. (Mario Cordero)
Operativo del OIJ en Pérez Zeledón, este lunes 22 de agosto. (Mario Cordero)
OIJ police operation in Pérez Zeledón Monday morning (Aug. 22) Photo Mario Cordero, La Nacion

(QCOSTARICA) In a series of raids early Monday morning, the Organismo de Investigación Judicial (OIJ) detained seven people involved in the cultivation and growing of marijuana in 14 different points of La Amistad International Park.

The raids were carried out in eight locations in Perez Zeledon and Buenos Aires de Puntarenas, in the southern zone.

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The detained were part of a ‘narcofamilia’ – drug trafficking family – and two officials of the Minister of Environment and Energy (MINAE).

OIJ director, Walter Espinoza confirmed the police operation and the arrests. Espinoza explained that the two officials were part of the drug trafficking operation, allowing the planting and removal of the marijuana plants and monitoring the area of the national park.

The OIJ investigation was an eight month work that included two raids earlier this month (on Aug. 5) that netted the detention of seven people and seven more on Monday.

The Parque La Amistad is locared in the southern zone, reaching into Panama
La Amistad park is located in Costa Rica’s southern zone,  part in Costa Rica and Panama.

According to Espinoza, this ‘narco structure’ has been operating for more than two decades, taken down for the first time over 21 years ago. At the time, the drug network trafficked marijuana and cocaine hydrochloride sent to Germany, however, it is believed they started back up in operation in 2011.

Source: La Nacion, Telenoticias

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Costa Rica and Germany Agree to Eliminate Double Taxation

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Carlos Lizano, charge d'affaires a.i. our Embassy in Germany, Ambassador designate of Costa Rica in Germany, Mr. Giancarlo Luconi Coen and Dr. Götz Schmidt-Bremme, Legal Director of Consular Affairs and the Federal Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Germany.
Carlos Lizano, charge d'affaires a.i. our Embassy in Germany, Ambassador designate of Costa Rica in Germany, Mr. Giancarlo Luconi Coen and Dr. Götz Schmidt-Bremme, Legal Director of Consular Affairs and the Federal Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Germany.
Carlos Lizano (L), charge d’affaires a.i.  Costa Rica Embassy in Germany, Ambassador designate of Costa Rica in Germany,Giancarlo Luconi Coen (C) and Dr. Götz Schmidt-Bremme (R), Legal Director of Consular Affairs and the Federal Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Germany. Photo from Foreign Ministry website.

From January 1, 2017 the agreement ratified between both parties to avoid double taxation of income and assets will come into effect.

From a statement issued by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Costa Rica:

On Wednesday August 10 at the headquarters of the Federal Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Germany, a ceremony was held to exchange instruments of ratification of the agreement between Costa Rica and Germany to avoid double taxation on income and on assets.

This important agreement has as its main purpose the provision of clear rules for both countries to eliminate double taxation situations which might arise as a result of the collection of taxes on income and capital. For domestic purposes, this international legal instrument is applicable to taxes on income, property and ownership of motor vehicles, boats and aircraft.

The agreement was reached after a long process of negotiation and study, our country signing the agreement inFebruary 2014, the Legislative Assembly approveing it in February this year.

According to the Foreign Ministry, the approval of this agreement is consistent with the actions and efforts undertaken by the Government of Costa Rica to substantially improve its standards at international level on fiscal transparency.

The agreement will enter into force on January 1, 2017.

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Purchase Of Costa Rica’s Famed Peninsula Papagayo, Including Four Seasons

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Four Seasons Resort Costa Rica at Peninsula Papagayo
Four Seasons Resort Costa Rica at Peninsula Papagayo
Four Seasons Resort Costa Rica at Peninsula Papagayo

(QBUSINESS) In a transaction whose amount was not disclosed, Gencom, a leading U.S.-based international luxury hospitality and residential real estate investment and development firm, acquired the majority of the share capital of the hotel complex Peninsula Papagayo Resort in Guanacaste.Gencom,

According to a statement released by BusinessWire, the acquisition includes the Four Seasons Papagayo, an 18 hole Arnold Palmer-designed golf course and clubhouse, the 180-slip Marina Papagayo, and the 38,000 square foot Prieta Beach Club.

Four Seasons Resort Costa Rica at Peninsula Papagayo
Four Seasons Resort Costa Rica at Peninsula Papagayo

The Four Seasons Papagayo hotel is ranked as the only Forbes Travel Guide Five-Star Resort in Central and South America.

Manuel Ardon, COO of the local firm Ecodesarrollo Papagayo S.A., told the Elfinancierocr.com that “… although the purchase includes the aforementioned hotel, the Four Seasons chain still retains a share in the project and will continue as its operator. The addition of this new investor is an extraordinary opportunity to enhance the development of this important project and will undoubtedly have new positive impacts for Guanacaste, the people of Guanacaste and the country.”

The Businesswire reports that the ownership is partnering with Costa Rican developer Sinergo Development Group to carry out the renovation and reinvigoration of the existing assets, including the Four Seasons Papagayo.

“We are excited by the immediate and long-term benefits that this acquisition and further investments within the peninsula will bring to Costa Rica and the Guanacaste province, including job creation, increased tourism, and heightened global visibility for Peninsula Papagayo as a national jewel,” said Karim Alibhai, principal of Gencom. “This acquisition is part of our continued strategic response to an increased demand from elite international travelers for luxury, experience-driven vacations in prime destinations.”

Founded in 1987 by Karim Alibhai, Gencom is an investment and development firm specializing in the hospitality and luxury hospitality related residential real estate sectors. Headquartered in Miami, USA, Gecom owns hotel properties in the United States, Europe and the Caribbean.

Guanacaste is internationally noted as Costa Rica’s premier tourism destination, located in the country’s northwestern region along the Pacific Ocean, bordering Nicaragua to the north.

Source Businesswire

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Migrant Boom Provides Opportunities For Colombia’s Criminal Groups

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(TODAY COLOMBIA) A large influx of migrants from the Caribbean and other regions landing in Colombia has provided the country’s criminal groups with a ready-made opportunity to ramp up human smuggling operations.

Migrants desperate to leave Cuba, where the average monthly salary is a paltry $17, have essentially two options, both of which are daunting: take the overland route to the US that passes through South and Central America or test their fate at sea in rickety homemade rafts. The land route encompasses thousands of miles, numerous border checkpoints and reliance on human smugglers known as “coyotes,” while the sea route spans just 90 miles.

One reason some take the longer, more expensive land route is because of the US government’s “wet foot, dry foot” policy, which mandates that Cubans discovered at sea be turned back, while those that are apprehended on land can enter the US and start the process of applying for a green card.

IMG_WhatsApp-Image-20160_8_1_U88C1D1M_L228609270

This journey often starts, of all places, in Ecuador, where until November 2015 Cubans could enter without needing to obtain a tourist visa. Migrants then head north to Colombia and Central America in the hopes of reaching the United States, where the prospect of higher wages and reuniting with family members beckons. But the process broke down recently when a series of Central American nations started refusing entry to the Cuban migrants.


Human smuggling is a convenient source of income for Colombia’s criminal groups because it often overlaps with other illegal activities like drug trafficking.


The first domino to fall was Nicaragua. In November 2015, Nicaragua responded to a surge of Cubans at its southern border by militarizing the frontier area, leaving thousands stuck in northern Costa Rica. The following month, Costa Rica stopped receiving Cuban migrants as well, pushing the bottleneck further south into Panama. Panama followed suit in early May 2016, just a week after it had agreed to airlift almost 4,000 Cubans into Mexico.

The succession of border closures left some 1,300 Cubans stranded in Colombia’s northwestern city of Turbo. It was at this time that the authorities reported Colombia’s most powerful criminal group, the Urabeños, were charging Cuban migrants for the right to pass through the city. According to Gen. Jorge Rodríguez Peralta, the group threatened to leave the migrants in the large swath of remote jungle that separates Colombia and Panama, known as the Darien Gap, if they didn’t pay the ransom fees. The authorities were also reportedly investigating whether the group was using the heavy flow of migrants as a distraction to send drug shipments uninhibited via other smuggling routes into Panama.

But a more menacing threat than extortionist gangs soon materialized: immigration officers. In early August, Colombian authorities announced the migrants would be deported back to Cuba. The pronouncement sparked widespread fear within the migrant community, and last week a spokesperson told the Associated Press that over 1,000 Cubans had fled into the Darien Gap in order to avoid deportation. Just 350 Cubans remained in Turbo, according to government officials.

SAmerica

Shortly thereafter, the Colombian government announced it had “overcome the Cuban migrant crisis.” But the Cuban migrant “crisis” was neither the beginning nor the end of Colombia’s immigration and human smuggling problems.

Last year, for example, authorities in the region of Urabá — where Turbo is located — said the Urabeños were responsible for smuggling a group of Cubans, Somalis, Afghanis, Nepalis and others nationalities through the area. And this year promises to be an even bigger boon for human smuggling networks; according to Migración Colombia, 9,377 migrants passed through Turbo during the first seven months of 2016, surpassing the 8,885 migrants seen in all of 2015. The greatest number of migrants to arrive in Turbo are not from Cuba but from Haiti, while Indians, Pakistanis and Africans from several different countries have also reportedly entered the city.

“Right now there has been a lot of attention on what is happening with the Cubans,” Leonidas Moreno, a pastor based in the town of Apartadó, told El Tiempo in early August. “But this problem is not new, nor is it only Cubans, and it will continue.”

Migrant smuggling is not a major source of revenue for Colombia’s criminal groups. In a recent interview with El Colombiano, Professor Pedro Piedrahíta Bustamante of the Universidad Pontificia Bolivariana said that this type of smuggling in Colombia generates over $5 million each year. And Christian Krüger, the head of Migración Colombia, said in late July that coyotes charge anywhere from $1,500 to $2,500 per migrant to cross Colombia. If all of the 9,337 migrants that Bustamante said have been deported from Colombia so far in 2016 were to have paid the maximum fee, that would equal $23.4 million.

Either way, that’s a pittance compared to the annual earnings of the cocaine trade, which is measured in the billions, not millions.

Nonetheless, human smuggling is a convenient source of income for these groups because it often overlaps with other criminal activities like drug trafficking, according to Bustamante.

“In Colombia… any illegal armed group that you can imagine is involved in human trafficking because the migrants use the same routes as cocaine, marijuana, all of drug trafficking, [and] the illegal weapons that come from different parts of the world,” Bustamante said.

The reason behind the surge of Cuban migrants is two-fold. The thawing of US-Cuba relations has Cubans fearing that they will lose their preferential immigration status with the US government, while recent reforms by the communist government have loosened travel restrictions for ordinary citizens.

Many of the Haitians, meanwhile, are coming from Brazil, according to pastor Moreno. They came to Brazil after Haiti’s devastating earthquake in 2010, but the jobs there have since dried up, forcing the Haitians to look for work elsewhere.

Whatever the reason or the nationality, migrants will continue to land in South America looking for a route northwards to the United States. All will pass through Colombia, and many will inevitably rely on predatory human smuggling networks to deliver them a chance at the American Dream.

Article originally appeared at Today Colombia. Reposted with permission.

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Narco-Bus Stopped Carrying Cocaine to Olympic City

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A tour bus bound for the Olympic city of Rio de Janeiro was stopped in Paraguay carrying 296 kilograms of cocaine, further highlighting the criminal opportunities presented by the Olympic Games despite the Brazilian government’s assurances of complete security.

narcobus2Paraguayan officials said two men were arrested August 14 for attempting to smuggle the cocaine over the border to Brazil. Atilio Cañiza Fernandez, 52, and Adolfo Ramon Mendoza Aquino, 46, have been charged with international drug trafficking and other crimes, ABC reported.

The men were attempting to transport the cocaine on a bus carrying the logo and credentials of the commercial company VIP Tours S.A. and was bound for the Olympic City of Rio de Janeiro. The bus was legally sold by the VIP Tours S.A. firm back in July, with the expectation that its logos and credentials would be removed, the company said. The bus was apparently carrying no passengers, which aroused suspicion. It was stopped near the friendship bridge which connects Ciudad del Este in Paraguay with the Brazilian city of Foz do Iguaçu, reported ABC.

Ciudad del Este and the surrounding Tri-border Area — where Paraguay, Brazil and Argentina meet — has long been a notorious hub for the smuggling of contraband and counterfeit goods.

Officials from Paraguay claim that based on the quality of the seized drugs, they believe the cocaine originated in Colombia and had a value of $3 million in the Brazilian market.

Cocaine seizures such as this highlight the various opportunities afforded criminals during the Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. Foreign athletes being robbed, drug trafficking, and rising violence in certain parts of Rio de Janeiro have tarnished the image of the Olympic Games.

These incidents have occurred despite the Brazilian government’s deployment of some 85,000 security forces and a budget of $215 million for security. It appears that authorities are barely keeping a lid on security issues.

The tri-border area where the seizure occurred is notorious for impunity and what has previously been called an “avalanche of contraband.” It is a notoriously difficult area to patrol.

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El Salvador Ex-President Leaves Country Amid Corruption Probe

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129817-004-AFAC1039Former President Mauricio Funes has reportedly left El Salvador on business as authorities raid properties in search for evidence he committed acts of corruption while in office, a case likely to test the new attorney general’s resolve to combat impunity for high-level politicians.

On August 17, El Salvador’s Attorney General’s Office raided seven properties belonging to Miguel Menéndez, known as “Mecafé,” in search of documents that would reveal corrupt acts committed by Funes during his 2009-2014 presidential term, La Prensa Grafica reported. Mecafé led the “Friends of Mauricio” movement that supported Funes during his 2009 presidential bid. He is also the owner of the company that won the greatest number of private security contracts awarded by the Funes administration, according to the Salvadoran news outlet.

“Since the Funes administration, it is known to all that there have been many acts of corruption involving these companies” of Mecafé, said Andrés Amaya, head of the Anti-Corruption Unit within the Attorney General’s Office.

Funes wrote on Twitter on August 18 that he is no longer in El Salvador. The former president said he is traveling to do consultancy work, not “fleeing” the country. He has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing, and called the investigation “ridiculous” and a “show.”

Funes is being investigated for illicit enrichment, embezzlement, participation in illicit business, and influence trafficking, according to El Diario de Hoy. The Supreme Court ordered the freezing of four of Funes’ bank accounts and several other assets back in February, also for suspected illicit enrichment.

The investigation is a positive sign Attorney General Douglas Meléndez, who was sworn in to office in January, is willing to tackle political corruption. But no arrest warrant has yet been issued for Funes, and the Attorney General’s Office has not formally indicted the former president, a potential sign that Meléndez is not prepared to seek a conviction.

Meléndez is under added pressure because he succeeded Luís Martínez, an attorney general who faced down allegations of corruption. Last December, six members of the US House of Representatives signed a letter urging Salvadoran authorities to select a new attorney general “focused on defeating corruption and organized crime.”

Allegations of corruption among high-level officials in El Salvador extend beyond Funes and Martínez. Funes’ two immediate predecessors, Francisco Flores (1999-2004) and Elías Antonio Saca (2004-2009) have also come under investigation for using their high office for personal enrichment. Flores was ordered to stand trial but died in January 2016 before the case went to court. While both Saca and Flores were with the opposition party, Funes was president for the governing Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front (Frente Farabundo Martí para la Liberación Nacional -FMLN).

Given that El Salvador’s last three presidents have been investigated for corruption, it is hardly surprising that a reported 97 percent of Salvadorans are in favor of creating an international anti-impunity commission similar to the ones that have been set up in neighboring Guatemala and Honduras.

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The Costa Rica Real Estate Market Explained

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(QBLOGS) I have over twenty-eight years of combined experience as primarily a Real Estate Attorney, in both Canada and Costa Rica, fourteen years in each jurisdiction, with a Law Degree from each jurisdiction (English Common Law and Roman Civil Law respectively), and a Notary and Registry Degree from Costa Rica in addition.

I belong to a very “exclusive club” of two, or three Attorneys in Costa Rica, that have a similar academic and legal practice background.

During my fourteen years of practice in Costa Rica, I have seen several real estate cycles completed. From a residential and commercial real estate point of view, these cycles are largely driven by the state of the U.S. Economy at any given time, with a lag-time of eighteen months to two years for the economic effects in the U.S. to “take-hold” in Costa Rica.

At the moment, although there has been a steady improvement in the U.S. Economy from the 2008 downturn, the effects of this improvement have yet to be felt in any significant fashion in Costa Rica. The real estate market in Costa Rica is currently “slow” when it comes to property sales, making it a “Buyers’ Market” price-wise.

Taking this “lag-time” factor into account and the up-coming U.S. Election in November, my prediction is that the Costa Rica real estate market is “on the cusp” of changing into a “Sellers’ Market”, starting late this year and continuing into 2017.Accordingly, property prices will rise consistent with the “Sellers’ Market” conditions arriving.

In my opinion, there will be a significant exodus of U.S. Citizens from the U.S., from the losing side, following the Election. In other words, if Hillary Clinton wins, it will be Republicans leaving and of course, if it’s Donald Trump, it will be the Democrats.

I have seen this happen previously following U.S. Elections, but with the significantly more emotionally charged Election and the deep divisions politically which exist in the U.S., I expect this pattern to be amplified this time around. Apparently, there have been well over one million inquiries to Canada by U.S. Citizens, inquiring how to move to Canada, if Donald Trump wins the Election.

Having set the scene for a potential Costa Rica property purchase, what should a property purchaser be looking for and what basic due diligence should be followed, to avoid pit-falls? In my opinion, only registered title properties in the National Registry, should be considered for purchasing. The Costa Rica Government guarantees the state of the property title as registered in the National Registry, except in the case of fraud. The Property Transfer Deed must be prepared by a Costa Rica Notary.

In Costa Rica, it is possible to hold property by way of a “Right of Possession”. In that scenario, a Private Deed may be prepared by a Costa Rica Notary, passing by way of a contract, without registration in the National Registry, the possession rights of a current property possession holder, to a third party purchaser of those rights. Unfortunately, in that scenario, the Right of Possession acquired by the purchaser, is only as good as no other party with a better Right of Possession to the property exists. In other words if the seller of the Right of Possession to the property did not have the legal rights to the exclusion of all other third parties, you as the purchaser, can lose your Right of Possession, with little, or no practical recourse.

Likewise, Concession properties located in the Maritime Zone (Beachfront), also present their own set of problems. Concession rights to beachfront properties, all owned by the Costa Rica Government, are usually granted on a “lease-basis” to a private, or commercial holder, for a period of twenty years and are presumably renewable (no guaranty). The local Municipality administers the Concession Agreement. Foreigners must have legal Costa Rica Residency for a period of five years in order to hold a Concession property in their name. Accordingly, a Trust Agreement must be entered into to facilitate the holding of the Concession with a majority Costa Rican interest specified, until this Residency requirement is met.

The bigger problem arises in Estate Planning, because even if the current foreign Concession holder meets the Residency requirement, the heir must also meet this requirement at the time of the inheritance taking place, or a new Trust Agreement has to be entered into to facilitate the same.

An interesting difference in property purchase transactions in Costa Rica, is that unlike property purchases in the U.S. and Canada where the purchaser pays all Closing Costs, the Closing Costs are quite often split equally between a seller and a purchaser. This is a negotiable item as part of the over-all property purchase transaction and may not be applicable in certain property purchase transactions of a “fire-sale” nature.
As the Real Estate industry is not regulated in Costa Rica, nor is there any MLS, it is very important to choose a Realtor with local knowledge in the area where you are looking to purchase a property and to carefully check their credentials; reliable references are a must.

Likewise, it is equally important to select a competent Real Estate Attorney and Notary to handle the purchase transaction and represent your interests as the purchaser. Property Title Insurance is not available, nor do Title Companies exist in Costa Rica. You must rely upon your Attorney and Notary to carry-out the necessary legal due diligence for your property purchase transaction.

An Attorney/Notary having a Government registered and regulated Escrow Account is important, to safe-guard both the purchase deposit monies prior to Closing and the balance of the purchase monies for the Closing. The Attorney should be retained from the out-set of the property negotiations and no deposit, or purchase monies should be paid from escrow to a seller prior to the Closing.

Deposit monies may become a “guaranty of performance’ by the purchaser and non-refundable, following an agreed upon period of due diligence to be performed by the purchaser, but with such funds continuing to be held in escrow until the Closing date and the Property Transfer Deed has been executed by both the seller and the purchaser.

This Article is by no means meant to be a listing of all of the considerations that a property purchaser in Costa Rica should have, but it does provide a practical framework from which to approach such a transaction.

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Taxi Overcharges, Really Overcharges Family On Arrival In Costa Rica

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(QCOSTARICA) How much does a taxi ride cost from say the San Jose airport to La Sabana? Under normal circumstances, around ¢12,000 colones; in Friday afternoon rush hour add another ¢3,000 for the 16 kilometre trip.

orangetaxi

But, a visiting couple go the screwing within their first hour of their arrival, paying an unscrupulous “orange” (airport) taxi driver ¢70,000 colones, yep, you read it right, for a trip that should have cost ¢15,000 at most.

orange-taxi-overcharge
The credit card receipt showing the absurd charge of ¢70,000 colones for a ride from the San Jose airport to La Sabana

Susanna Peña, with a Telenoticias television crew, took to the task taking an ‘airport’ taxi to the same location of the visiting couple; the taxi meter clocking ¢14,120 colones for the 40 minute ride last Friday afternoon, during rush hour. Click here for the Telenoticias video.

susanna-pena
Susanna Peña took a taxi from the airpor to La Sabana, the same location of the visiting couple and the meter on this orange taxi came to ¢14,120 colones.

There is now way a properly working taxi meter could arrive at such a charge on the credit card client receipt issued by the airport taxi driver.

A rate of ¢70,000 colones is from the airport to Playa Jaco or Puntarenas, for example.

A sad first impression.

According to Carolina Mora, spokesperson for the Aresep, the government agency responsible for taxi licenses, if the driver is identified he could face sanctions that range from a fine to losing the concession.

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I fell for Costa Rica rapidly!

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Adrenaline hit: Ride Costa Rica's rollercoaster rapids on the Pacuare river are a must visit
Adrenaline hit: Ride Costa Rica¿s rollercoaster rapids on the Pacuare river are a must visit
Adrenaline hit: RidingCosta Rica’s rollercoaster rapids on the Pacuare river are a must visit.

(QTRAVEL)  The first thing to know about white-water rafting on the Pacuare, Costa Rica’s most scenic river, is that you should not look at the souvenir T-shirts.

These reveal the unsettling names given to its rapids, ranging from Class I to IV, and include Pinball, Rodeo — and Cemetery.


British Airways (BA.com) flies from Gatwick (LGW) to San Jose (SJO) twice a week.


The second is that the water isn’t the dangerous bit: most injuries result from being whacked with a paddle by your neighbour.

Finally, the secret of survival lies in teamwork. You will most likely be rafting with strangers, so it helps that my motley crew includes a silver-haired English couple and two young Irish honeymooners.

Both arrived the night before on the new direct BA flight from London to San Jose, the capital of this most welcoming of Central American countries. ‘We thought of going to the Maldives and flopping on a beach,’ explains the bride, ‘but I fancied doing something exciting we’ll never forget.’

This is not in doubt as we set off in a 14ft, six-passenger inflatable raft that seems woefully small for our 17-mile rollercoaster ride down this mighty river. At the first rest point, Max, our trusty guide and helmsman, makes us jump off a rock into raging water, then desperately swim to grab his paddle.

Later, we stop at a waterfall to escape the 30c heat and enjoy a natural massage in its thundering deluge. I soon become accustomed to being smashed in the face by waves, and learn not to fear our near-crashes with the oncoming rocks.

After 90 minutes of paddling for our lives, soaked and bruised but exhilarated, everything stops for time out at Pacuare Lodge, a remote and luxurious eco-hotel, where virtually every guest rafts in and out.

With its hammocks, plunge pools and exuberant nature, this blissful 18-room lodge sings of romance.

If you need more action, there’s canyoning, ziplining and strenuous hikes to visit the indigenous Cabecar people.

Costa Rica has more species of birds than the whole of Europe. As we breakfast on slices of luscious mango and papaya, squadrons of chestnut-headed oropendolas criss-cross the Pacuare like some avian Battle of Britain.

If the rain comes (and most afternoons it will), there’s a delightful riverfront spa, where therapists wearing gumboots soothe your paddle-weary muscles.

During the evening, the great frog chorus starts up, while howler monkeys bark and growl like MPs at Prime Minister’s Questions. When you head to bed, your suite is lit with more than 40 candles.

After two nights of rainforest heaven, it’s time to raft back to civilisation on a three-hour ride battling through 16 rapids.

This time, my companions include two Indian brothers and their mother, who can’t believe they made her leave her Gujarat comfort zone to face the perils of Double Drop and Devil’s Armpit. ‘I’m scared!’ wails Mama, as we don our helmets and lifejackets.

Unlike in Africa, Costa Rica doesn’t permit its rafting companies to ride the truly wild Class V rapids, which means you get the thrills without the spills — though there are hairy moments when we find ourselves pirouetting down one rapid and later get stuck on a midstream boulder.

Spliced between these adrenaline-fuelled encounters are interludes of astonishing serenity as we glide through the 300ft-high forests.

Blue morpho butterflies flutter by in the thick heat. Yellow-throated toucans flap past, weighed down by their magnificent beaks.

A machaca fish jumps, grabbing a quick lunch of purple orchid blooms floating on the tea-coloured water.

I feel like an explorer dreamily floating through an enchanted canyon of emerald trees and silvery waterfalls — until Max suddenly cries: ‘Paddle now!’ and we’re off again, bouncing around like a sock in a washing machine as the Pacuare roars and pours its way down to the Caribbean Sea. Finally, we turn a bend in the river and return to the real world.

Our brave little raft passes beneath a huge concrete bridge laden with trucks transporting the bananas, pineapples and tropical fruits for which Costa Rica is renowned.

‘Will you go white-water rafting again?’ I ask Mama. ‘Oh, yes!’ she replies with a grin as we raise our paddles in a final, jubilant high five. Me, too.

Original article by  Nigel Tisdall For The Daily Mail

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Small (Really Small) Shoe Store Owner Loses Legal Battle Against Land Owner

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For two years
For two years
For two years Carlos Aguilar Jimenez fought a legal battle against eviction.

(QCOSTARICA) For the past two years, a small, really small, show store (zapateria in Spanish) stood among the debris of  torn down buildings. For two years, Carlos Aguilera Jimenez, stood his ground. Literally.

Since December 2014, this small, again, really small, shoe store owner fought a legal battle with the owner of the land, file injections, avoiding eviction.

On Tuesday
On Tuesday the small structure was demolished on the order of a judge.

The zinc metal structure came down on Tuesday morning on the order of a judge of the Juzgado Primero Civil de Menor Cuantía de San José. The rest of the lot, less Aguilera’s shoe store, was cleared by bulldozers last December (2015).

It appears that poor health may have led to losing the battle, according to relatives and friends telling Ameliarueda.com (the online blog following up on their report last January of Aguilera’s battle) when they tried to contact Aguilera. Even Aguilera’s lawyer did not return calls.

A call to the owner of the land, a 1,000 square meter lot, did not result in not being able to talk to Claudia Carro, legal representative of Carro S.A. The AR caller was told Doña Claudia is out of the country. Period.

Today, all that is left amid the rubble of the Zapateria Panama are the memories and the human struggle of a small businessman against a land owner.

The lot today
The lot today where the Zapateria Panama once stood.

The land is located one block north of Paseo Colon, across from the Scotiabank building, known as the Torres Mercedes, an area that is undergoing urban renewal.

The lot and former Zapateria is shadowed by the country’s tallest buildings, the recently built “Torres Paseo Colon” only less than a block awat, and only a half block from the planned to be tallest building in Costa Rica, “Torre 40”, a 40 storey building that will soon rise next to the Torres Mercedes, on the old Grupo Q lot.

 

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Costa Rica Banking For Foreigners (and Visitors) Made Easy

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Cash carrying tourists

Cash carrying tourists

(QCOSTARICA) The scenarios. In the first, you’re in Costa Rica on vacation for say a few weeks or more and the local ATM machine it eats (retains) your card. In the second, not wanting to experience that of the first, you walk around with pockets full of cash. In the third, you live in Costa Rica, but are not a resident and would like the convenience paying utility bills online or using plastic (instead of cash) at the supermarket.

The golden rule for travel is never keep all your money in one bag or wallet. If you get robbed or misplace your stuff…common sense is to carry a useful amount of cash for a day hidden somewhere discreet, and leave the rest in a secure spot, like your hotel safe.

Even using your credit card or bankcard from your home country has its pitfalls. Hello, (credit card company or bank)…lots of minutes later on long distance…your card will arrive in a few days (weeks in Costa Rica time). And to where, supposing you will be the country that long. Costa Rica doesn’t have traditional addresses here, explaining that and giving the paragraph long address will add more minutes

What do you do if the Costa Rica ATM eats up (retains) your foreign bankcard. Hello…I am in Costa Rica and…

to your already expensive call. To the hotel? A possibility if you plan to hang around the hotel waiting…waiting…waiting and so on.

What do you do? Fortunately there is a solution. And a rather simple one. On your arrival in Costa Rica, open a bank account.

What, you don’t have a cedula (Costa Rica identification for residents and nationals)? No problemo!

In the past, a decade or more ago, foreigners were able to open bank accounts in Costa Rica without a fuss. But then things changed. Financial institutions could no longer accept only a passport to open accounts and for those (foreigners not residents) who had an account, banking life became complicated.

In January of this year the state bank, the Banco de Costa Rica (BCR), was the first of the Costa Rica banks to allow foreigners in the country to open an account with only their passport. The BCR reports that the “cuentas de expediente simplificado” (simplified account) has brought in some 180,000 new clients in the first 8 months.

Since, two other financial institutions now offering the same; in March, the Grupo Mutual became the second financial institution; yesterday, the Bancredito announced its Rapicuenta.

The account(s) can be in US dollars or Colones.

More financial institutions are expected to do the same.

How does it work?
While the regulations differ somewhat at each institution, opening a implied account is a phone call or branch visit away.

In the case of the Banco de Costa Rica (BCR), the bank this writer has personal experience with, it starts with a visit to the bank’s website: fill in the information and press send. Required is a local cellular number to receive the text message confirming your request and two or three days later, that your bankcard (Visa debit card) and account is ready at the branch indicated on the application. Sounds a bit complicated, but, you can also visit the nearest branch in person. And getting a local cellular number is as simple as locating the closest carrier (Kolbi, Movistar and Claro) and purchasing a prepaid sim card.

At the BCR, once your account is ready (if you applied online) at the branch you will need to present your passport and within minutes you now have a bank account and the personalized bankcard, which can be used at any ATM in Costa Rica and abroad.

The BCR puts limits on the average amount of cash you can move in a month, typically deposits of less that US$1,000 dollars. Larger deposits, according to the bank agreement, at the option of the bank, may require an account upgrade and thus additional documentation.

At the Bancredito, according to their website, there are no limits on movements and no annual fees for the bankcard.

For the short-term visitor this is a great alternative to carrying cash. You open the account and make your deposit; before leaving you close the account; during you use your bankcard instead of carrying cash. In Costa Rica cards are accepted everywhere. In fact, most places will not accept US$50 or US$100 bills, forget about other currencies like Canadian loonies or Euros.

For frequent visitors if your country bank is a Visa affiliate there is the “Visa Direct” option for international transfers, for a fee, you can transfer from your country bank to your Costa Rica bank account, that immediately loads your debit card. On your arrival to Costa Rica, you have instant local cash.

For foreigners living, but not resident in Costa Rica, a local bank account allows online payment of utilities and reduces the amount of cash carried. Why carry wads of cash or risk having the local ATM eat up your foreign bank card?

img_tarjseg-2008Another bonus to using a local bankcard (via a Costa Rica bank account) is the reduced costs of using ATMs.

Local ATM’s charge a fee for the use of a foreign bank card. Typically this cost can be up to US$3 for dollar transactions and ¢1,500 for colones. Most ATMs in Costa Rica have a ‘per transaction’ limit, this limit can be US$400 or ¢250,000 colones.

The total amount you can take out in a day will depend on the limits on your bankcard. Using the example of taking our US$1,000, with the above per transaction limits, the cost (for 3 transactions) add up. Some foreign banks don’t charge their customers ATM fees, most do. Check with your home bank.

Having a Costa Rica bankcard the charges for ATM withdrawls usually is when you use the other bank’s machines.

 

Use the comments section below or our Facebook page to tell your experience with using a foreign bankcard at ATMs in Costa Rica or your Costa Rica bank experience in general.

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Man Shot In Drive-By Outside Downtown San Jose Hotel

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(QCOSTARICA) It was 1:30am Thursday when two men on a motorcycle shot a man outside the infamous Hotel Del Rey in downtown San Jose.

According to a report by the Diario Extra, the man, identified as a Fonseca, 45, an area taxi driver, was shot twice in the belly.

The motive for the shooting by allegedly two gun-men, shooting while in motion, is unclear.

Several similar incidents have occurred in the area of the Hotel Del Rey, a night (and day) spot well-known by locals and foreigners as a place for gambling and women offering sexual services in exchange for payment.

The area around the hotel is commonly known as “Gringo Gulch”, an area that includes, in addition to the Del Rey hotel, Key Largo, bars and casinos catering to San Jose’s seedier side of night life.

With notes from the Diario Extra report by Esteban More, photo credit to Mauricio Aguilar

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Carolina Rodríguez Crowned Miss Costa Rica 2016

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Carolina Rodriguez
Carolina Rodriguez

(CONFIDENTIAL) Carolina Rodríguez was crowned the new Miss Costa Rica 2016 on Friday night, at the beauty pageant held at the National Auditorium of the Museo de Los Niños in San Jose.

Choosing the winner had a moment of tension after a tie in the question and answers round. A second round was necessary.

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Rodriguez, who received the crown from Brenda Castro, Miss Costa Rica 2015, will represent the country in the Miss Universe international competition.

The final decision was based on evaluation of the judges and response from the public through Teletica’s interactive app.  Teletica (Televisora de Costa Rica), the local television channel 7, is owner of the Miss Costa Rica franchise.

The competition included a question and answer session, swimsuit and evening dress.

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The runners up were: Elena Correa and Andrea Castro.

The click here for the video of the moment of truth. Watch the video below of the thank you message by the new Miss Costa Rica.

Click here for more of Carolina Rodríguez

The post Carolina Rodríguez Crowned Miss Costa Rica 2016 appeared first on Costa Rica Confidential.

Article first appeared on COSTA RICA CONFIDENTIAL. Click here to go to the source article.

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Despite Technology, In 2016 In Costa Rica, You Can Still Call For The Time

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More than 16,000 people daily use the time-by-phone service provided by ICE
More than 16,000 people daily use the time-by-phone service provided by ICE
More than 16,000 people daily in Costa Rica use the time-by-phone service provided by ICE. The cost is ¢1 colone, the telecom says it will continue the service while there is demand.

(QCOSTARICA) Remember when you could call for the time? In Costa Rica, every day some 16,000 people still call to find out the time, a service that survives despite today’s technology.

The interesting part is that only does it still exist, but people still use it.

The appeal for calling the time may be practical. For example, after an eletrical outage,  you might want to use the service to reset your clock on the nightstand, the television, a cellular phone, maybe?

In Costa Rica, today, if you call 1112 a pleasant automated voice tell you the exact time.

The cost to for the call for the time is ¢1 colon.

The call for the time service is provided by the state telecom, ICE, through its “1112” service. ICE does not say how many use a land based line or a cellular phone to call for the time.

The number of callers is high though decreasing every year.

According to ICE, in 2014 there were some 9 million (24,000 daily) calls to the service, the number last year was 6 million (16,000 daily).

ICE says it will maintain the service while there is a demand.

call for the timeDemetrios Matsakis, the chief scientist for time services at the U.S. Naval Observatory that still operates the time-by-phone service (call 202-762-1401 today, and you’ll hear a pleasant ticking sound followed by the announcement of the exact time, delivered in an old-timey-broadcasting voice), told The Atlantic, “there’s an interesting sociology to it.

They don’t call as much on the weekend, and the absolute minimum time they call is Christmas. On big holidays, people don’t care about the time. But we get a big flood of calls when we switch to Daylight [saving] time and back.”

Matsakis says the U.S. Naval Observatory gets some 3 million calls a year.

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Growth With Risks in Costa Rica

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(QCOSTARICA) Excess liquidity in the financial system, soaring loans in dollars, a rising fiscal deficit and a less favorable global environment will complicate the path in the rest of the year and in 2017.

The document “Macroeconomic Review Program 2016-2017” by the Central Bank (Banco Central de Costra Rica – BCCR) says that these four elements are the main factors that could adversely affect overall economic performance.

The report notes that in an environment such as the one just described and with “moderate growth …. of our major trading partners for the biennium 2016-2017, lax conditions for international liquidity and moderate and orderly rises in the international price of raw materials, the macroeconomic projections for this period include the following:

i) The Costa Rican economy will grow by 4.2% in 2016 and 4.3% in 2017, driven mainly by domestic demand; These projections are associated with a current account deficit of 4.2% and 4.4% of GDP respectively. While the current account gap will be financed with long term external resources, available estimates indicate that total flows of net foreign savings (short and long term) planned for the next 18 months may need to be supplemented by the use of RIN.

Read full report by the Central Bank (in spanish).

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Purchases and Sales of Glass in Central America

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basic glassware(Q24N) In 2015 Guatemala led the import of glass and glassware in the region, with 87,000 tons worth US$63 million, followed by Costa Rica, which bought from abroad 84,000 tons, for US$60 million.

Market figures for glass and glassware in Central America compiled by the Business Intelligence Unit at CentralAmericaData.com show that in 2015 the countries in Central America together imported 331,000 tons of glass and glassware, equivalent to US$287 million.

In the case of imports and manufactures of glass made in Panama, it can be seen that in 2015 the country bought 48,755 tonnes in total, with a value of US$63 million.

Together Guatemala and Costa Rica, the major exporters, sold abroad 205,000 tons of glass and glass products, worth US$150 million.
Source: Centralamericandata.com

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Essential Costa Rica Open Pro QS3000 Confirmed for October 2016

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(QCOSTARICA) At a press conference in San Jose on Thursday, the World Surf League (WSL) announced that Costa Rica is back on the Men’s and Women’s Qualifying (QS) schedule for 2016 after fourteen years away from tour.

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Noe Mar will trade this Mexican lineup for his native country’s own in October. – WSL / Chris Ramirez and Elias Miranda

The Essential Costa Rica Open Pro QS3,000 will be held October 5 – 9 in Esterillos Este, Parrita (south of Jaco).

With 3,000 points on the line, some of the top men and women from the QS will be on site to earn vital points in their Samsung Galaxy Championship Tour (CT) qualification campaign.

One of those surfers and Costa Rican native, Noe Mar McGonagle (CRI), is elated with the opportunity to claim a win on his home soil. The 20-year-old knows the importance of this event and what it can provide for his fellow countrymen. Though he may not be an Esterillos Este local, that will not keep McGonagle from performing to his best ability and representing Costa Rica with pride.

“We’ve been waiting for this to happen for a long time and it’s basically a dream come true,” McGonagle said. “It’s always good to compete in my home country and this brings a lot of opportunity to our surfers, especially to demonstrate their level of surfing and for the Latin American surfers in general to earn QS points. I’m not super familiar with the wave, living far from Esterillos, but I do know waves are fun and consistent — it’s really exciting.”

Alongside her brother Noe Mar, Leilani McGonagle (CRI) will be one to watch in the Women’s QS3000 event as a local favorite. It is a chance the young Costa Rican relishes and will look to take full advantage of to earn valuable points.

“It’s so amazing to have this opportunity and I can’t wait,” McGonagle said. “It’ll be great to see more of the Ticos, that don’t get to travel as much, have a chance to showcase their talent. I love watching my brother compete and it’s always nice to have his support, so I will be looking forward to having him and my dad coach me. I love traveling, but it does get stressful so I’m so excited for this event and only having to drive a few hours from home is going to be awesome.”

Event Director Diego Naranjo has been around the WSL for some time as an athlete and now helping produce an event in Costa Rica is an opportunity he’s been trying to make a reality for some time. Naranjo has great ambitions the break of Esterillos Este will provide competitors with quality waves for them to revel in.

“I am really excited because it has been my life’s dream to be part of the WSL tour and I tried very hard as an athlete but didn’t have the support I needed,” Naranjo said. “Now, along with my team, we have helped the tour come to Costa Rica and give an opportunity to new generations and make their dreams come true. I was involved in small part as producer in the 2001 and 2002 events which were really good events.”

“Now, with the commitment of the Costa Rica Tourism Board and private companies, we are able to show the audience a real surfing life style with music, food court, and a beautiful beach,” Naranjo added. “This beach is very contestable on all different tides and we can’t wait to show this paradise to the world.”

WSL North America Tour Manager Brian Robbins was in attendance for the press conference announcing the event and showed his delight with Costa Rica joining the WSL schedule once more. Helping provide a stage for many of the native surfers to showcase their talent on a pro level is something Robbins hopes to see more of the future and a goal the WSL regional offices are striving for.

“This marks a pivotal moment for Costa Rican surfers and all of the event organizers involved,” Robbins said. “We couldn’t be happier to see this event brought to life and it’s a testament to the hard work Diego and his team have put in to make it happen. It’s incredible to have their support hosting a QS3,000 level competition that will give surfers a great experience, while also earning valuable points toward their season. We’re beyond excited for this one and know it will prove to be a great stage for the deep surfing culture that runs through their country.”

The Costa Rica Open registration is now open to all competitors and will take place following the Cascais Billabong Pro. For more information go to www.worldsurfleague.com, or download the WSL App to get updates on your mobile device

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Remembering Alberto

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Alberto 4by Michael Miller, Albert Brilliott, better known as “Alberto” to hundreds of his friends, will be toasted at a short remembrance ceremony at the Sportsmen’s Lodge in downtown San José, Costa Rica on Saturday August 20th, at 7 p.m.

Bill Alexander, the owner of the Sportsmen’s Lodge, said that this will be an informal event. “I plan to say a few words about my good friend, Alberto,” said Bill. “I will raise a glass to his memory, and I hope others will join me.”

Alberto, a well-known figure in Downtown San José, passed away in his sleep on Thursday, August 11. He had been a resident of Costa Rica for nearly two decades, and on many an evening could be found holding court at the Sportsmen’s Lodge.

With his extensive knowledge of San José and many of the nation’s beach destinations, Alberto was a source of information to hundreds of visitors over the past few years. One visitor, learning of Alberto’s passing, remarked, “I can’t believe I am coming to San José and I will not be able to talk with Alberto. We are going to miss him.”

Alberto had several nicknames, the most prominent being “The Sausage King,” since he made and sold authentic Italian sausages to many area restaurants. He was also known as “The Mayor of Gringo Gulch,” and “Your Information Guru.”

Alberto 5The remembrance of Alberto at the Sportsmen’s Lodge will be held just before a previously scheduled party, the third annual Miss Sportsmen’s Lodge Contest. According to Sportsmen’s owner, Bill, “We will drink to Alberto, and then we will begin the party. I know that is exactly how Alberto would have wanted it.”

The Sportsmen’s Lodge is in the Barrio Otoya section of Downtown San José. The cross streets are Avenida 9 and Calle 13. Photos of Alberto are from the Mark Wise Collection.

Sportsmen_lodge

Michael Miller is the author of the only guidebook that focuses on Downtown San José, Costa Rica, titled: The Real San José. To see more of Michael’s stories about Downtown San José, go to TheRealSanJose.com

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The Great Taxi War – 2016

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QBLOGS – The “reds” against the “orange”, the “pirates” against the deadly free lancers, yet authorized “porteadores” and all of the those listed are ganging up to attack the newest kid on the block…Uber.

Now here is a classic case of the informal organization stronger and becoming more legitimate than the formal organization. Also, the public demand for a change or “wink” in law being created to on behalf of the buying public.

It all started with the official “red” taxis on the warpath against those of the “pirates” who use their own cars which might or might not have insurance, did not pay for the “right to roam” and simply kept on driving until small, certain regulations were passed to make these drivers quasi-legitimate.

Ergo, to open the highly regulated, controlled “red” taxi monopoly, the “pirates” operated illegally until there were just too many to be regulated. Thus equality or as a result of lax law enforcement is a textbook case of the informal organization taking over the formal organization.

Uber Is another case to challenge the monopoly or the oligopoly, of which “reds”, “orange” and “pirates” collectively oppose.

It is about monopoly, the struggle to keep it alive and healthy in Costa Rica.

CRHoy’s columnist and feature writer Edgar Espinosa said, “We recently tested a legal red taxi for a Tres Rios service to Juan Santamaria Airport; also an orange taxi to the same airport each costing 28 thousand colones and then Uber, whose total charges were 8,000 colones, all leaving at 7:00AM and taking the same identical route.”

The difference in price? Some 20,00 colones.

According to many in the executive office of this country Uber services are indeed illegal. However, there is no official notice to “shut them down” and with the exception of a very few, the cars keep on rolling.

It must also be noted that Uber has promised Costa Rica a US$3.2 million customer service center.

Instead of waving down a “red” taxi on a rainy day, with Uber you use the application and a car is sent to you within minutes. Plus, short of carrying cash? Uber only accepts credit or debit card payment online that has a secondary value; you are not cheated.

The government has a problem to shut down Uber. By doing so it is essentially censoring the Internet which would be an international scandal since “free” press is supposedly guaranteed in Costa Rica.

What is the answer?

In general terms, the protected, formal organization must come into this century and learn marketing as well as that dreaded concept of customer service. Pricing is an issue but even more important is comfort and knowing you will have a ride within two to five minutes.

Please. “Red” and “Orange”, grow up and “pirates” keep up the challenge until you learn how Uber functions.
<em>Note: The “orange” taxis are the official airport taxis.</em>

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Legislator Says Imprisoning a 22 Year Old For Having Sex With A 17 Year Old Is Too Much

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If the new law is approved, a 22 year old would go to jail for four years if they mantain a relationship (sexual or not) with a 17 year old.
If the new law is approved, a 22 year old would go to jail for four years if they mantain a relationship (sexual or not) with a 17 year old.
The new law, if approved, would send a 23 year old to jail for four years if they mantain a relationship (sexual or not) with a 17 year old.

(QCOSTARICA) “Sending to jail a young adult of 22 or 23 for having consensual sex with a 17 year-old male or female, seems to much, to send a young person to jail for 4 years for consensual sex(…),” said legislator Otto Guevara of the Movimiento Libertatio (ML) party.

The statement by the legislator and former (multiple) presidential candidate was made on Wednesday on the radio program, Nuestra Voz, with respect to bill 19337 “Prohibition of Improper Relations” (ley 19.337 “Prohibición de Relaciones Impropias”), currently waiting legislative approval, that establishes a prison term of four years for those who maintain a relationship with a minor with an age difference of five years or more.

If approved, for example, the new law would prohibit a 15-year-old having a relationship with a 20-year-old.

Guevara said on the radio program his opposition to the bill is that it lacks “rationality.

The legislator says that currently “thousands of young people”, regardless if they are having sex, maintain personal relationships with minors.

In addition to causing social problems, the legislator says it will also generate a collapse in the national justice system “for all young people would be jailed”.

By way of background. The proposed law aims to punish improper relations was presented by legislator Emilia Molina, of the Citizen Action Party (PAC), aimed at prohibiting marriage of adults with minors.

Today, the law allows relationships between adults and minors 13 years of age and over if the age gap is greater than 10 years, and the adult did not take advantage of their age or brokered a payment.

In mid-July, prior to the introduction of the bill in the legislative process, the UN Population Fund (UNFPA) said that in Costa Rica, every 90 minutes is a bord a child to a mother between 12 and 17 years of age.

According to the National Institute of Statistics and Census (INEC) each year 482 girls aged 14 years or under have a baby in Costa Rica.

Source: Ameliarueda.com, host of the Nuestra Voz radio program

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Costa Ricans Will Have A New Cedula Starting In September

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The changeover begins in September. The current cedulas will remain valid unti expiry.
The changeover begins in September. The current cedulas will remain valid until expiry.

(QCOSTARICA) The “cedula” is the major identification card for all Costa Rican nationals. Every Costa Rican, born in the country or naturalized, is issued a cedula.

The new cedula, that will be distributed starting in September, includes new security features to prevent duplication, such as microtext only visible with a magnifying glass, a holographic image and an image of the TSE building only visible under ultraviolet light.

President Luis Guillermo Solis holding his new cedula.
President Luis Guillermo Solis holding his new cedula.

On the back the information will include the name of both parents (and their nationality) and a reduced bar code containing encrypted information of the card holder.

The front and back characteristics of the new cedula. Source TSE
The front and back characteristics of the new cedula. Source TSE

The Tribunal Supremo de Elecciones (TSE), the government body that issues the cedulas and runs the elections in the country, said the current cedulas will remain valid until their expiry date, meaning citizens don’t have to change them over until due. This also means that for a while we will see both issues of the cards in use.

The TSE says that while the printing of each card is US$1.96, the overall production cost is US$5.50; the equipment and materials purchased from the French firm, Oberthur Technologies.

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Huyndai Dealer ‘Replacing’ All 202 Of The Defective Vehicles It Sold In The Country

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The 202 owners of 2016 and 2017 Huyndai Santa Fe vehicles will get a new replacement, their existing does not count with a passenger airbag, as required by law
The 202 owners of 2016 and 2017 Huyndai Santa Fe vehicles will get a new replacement, their existing does not count with a passenger airbag, as required by law
The 202 owners of 2016 and 2017 Hyundai Santa Fe vehicles will get a new replacement, their existing does not count with a passenger airbag, as required by law

The 202 owners of the 2016 and 2017 Hyundai Santa Fe will be getting a brand new replacement vehicle, says Grupo Q, the exclusive Hyundai dealer in Costa Rica, after it was found the vehicles were sold without the required passenger airbag.

The dealer decided to offer its clients a replacement after the Ministry of the Economy, Trade and Industry (MEIC) rejected the initial proposal from the dealer to correct the defect in the vehicles.

Article 33 of the Ley de Transito (Traffic Act) requires all new vehicles to include a passenger side airbag.

“Grupo Q has decided to voluntarily replace the affected vehicles, without (customers) filing claims, as a sign of support that characterizes us,” said Erick Xirinachs, Commercial Director of Hyundai Grupo Q.

Xirinachs said the owners of the affected vehicles have been notified. “Our biggest concern is the satisfaction of our customers,” said the Grupo Q spokesman.

As explained by deputy minister of the MEIC, Carlos Mora, the consumer law that applies to all retail purchases in the country provides three types of warranty options: repair, replacement or refund.

Consumers experiencing problems with their purchase and not obtaining satisfaction from the seller can file a claim with the Comisión para Promover la Competencia (Coprocom), the government body that decides the most suitable option.

Grupo Q had reported the problem last July 29.

Perhaprs, the question not being asked, at least publicly, is how did these new vehicles land in Costa Rica without the required passenger safety?

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The Death of Democracy in Ortega’s Nicaragua

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Nicaragua’s Daniel Ortega is running for reelection, this time with his wife, Rosario Murillo, on the ticket for vice president. Esteban Felix AP
Nicaragua’s Daniel Ortega is running for reelection, this time with his wife, Rosario Murillo, on the ticket for vice president. Esteban Felix AP

(MiamiHerald.com) How much more can he get away with? What must Daniel Ortega do before the United States and other democracies finally act, or even speak, against his demolition of Nicaragua’s democracy?

Over the past few months his lackeys on the Supreme Court have declared the principal opposition party illegal and banned it from contesting the November elections. Then Ortega had them expel that party’s representatives, who had been elected almost five years earlier, from the National Assembly.

He described the Organization of American States, European Union, and Carter Center as “shameless” and stated unequivocally that they will not be invited to observe the balloting. And he named his wife as his vice-presidential running mate for the elections, another indication that he wants to establish a family dynasty, just as his erstwhile enemies the Somozas had done.

He has thrown three American officials out of the country on the flimsiest of pretexts. In what appears to be an attempt to intimidate his neighbors, especially Costa Rica, which has no armed forces, he has arranged to buy Russian tanks. When three Venezuelan parliamentarians tried to enter Nicaragua to express solidarity with the political opposition, they didn’t get beyond the airport.

Having bought or muzzled most of the independent media, and co-opted much of the pliant business class, he faces little public criticism. To be sure, a couple of publications, managed by members of the courageous Chamorro family, as well as a handful of radio stations still speak out for democracy, but they must feel isolated and beleaguered. So too must those valiant but rare Nicaraguan advocates for human rights and political pluralism.

If these democrats are expecting support from the American government, they likely will be disappointed. Although the United States publicly condemned the Sandinista evisceration of the political opposition, our embassy in Managua at about the same time was hosting a conference on economic development.

The State Department did offer a feeble response to the expulsion of the American officials. According to the transcript of the daily briefing, the spokesman read a statement filled with the usual diplomatic pabulum — the action was “unwarranted” and that “we conveyed our strong displeasure” to the Nicaraguan ambassador in Washington. This is hardly the stuff to scare Ortega straight.

Ortega has mastered the modern caudillo’s art of creating an authoritarian state while maintaining the trappings of democracy. All the while, he has largely escaped censure and sanction.

In 2009, when I was serving as ambassador in Nicaragua, I invited to breakfast a prominent Sandinista, then politically inactive and dedicated to overseeing his considerable financial interests. He told me that shortly after the success of their revolution he and several others, including Daniel Ortega, met with Fidel Castro in Havana. Castro gave them two pieces of advice.

First, don’t provoke the Americans into taking serious measures against you. They are too big, too strong. You can disagree with them, insult them, befriend their enemies, but know your limits. Second, under no circumstances, no matter how intense the pressure, allow free and fair elections.

My breakfast guest laughed and said that they had disregarded Castro’s counsel and the result was the Contra War and the internationally observed elections of 1990, which the Sandinistas lost decisively. Daniel Ortega, he assured me, would never make the same mistakes again.

Robert Callahan
Robert Callahan

He hasn’t. Despite twice blatantly stealing municipal elections, illegally altering the Constitution to allow him unlimited presidential terms, and regularly excoriating the United States as an imperialistic power, he has usually incurred nothing more serious than a brief scolding. If he suspects the United States might act, he makes a conciliatory gesture or two, lies low, and lets America’s displeasure, such as it is, abate.

And he certainly will not allow a free and fair presidential election in November. Even though the political opposition is fragmented and weak, even though he controls the Supreme Electoral Tribunal, even though the polls show him the favorite, Ortega adamantly refuses to invite reputable national and international experts to observe the elections. He thought he had all the same advantages in 1990, and he lost. He’ll never risk defeat again.

The question, then, is what will the United States do? Will we utter a few words of disapproval and, after a decorous interval, get on with the business of bilateral diplomacy? After all, Nicaragua is a small, poor place of little geopolitical consequence. We have many other demands on our time and efforts. Why bother?

Or do we say that if Ortega does not restore the legal status of the main opposition parties, return the expelled deputies to their seats in the National Assembly, and invite electoral observers, we will not recognize the results of the election or deal with the government — inevitably, the Sandinistas — it produces?

If we don’t act now, the situation in Nicaragua will only get worse. Much worse.

Robert Callahan is a former U.S. diplomat who served as ambassador to Nicaragua from 2008 to 2011.

Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/opinion/op-ed/article95670662.html#storylink=cpy

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27 March 2026 - At The Banks - Source: BCCR