The following is translated from Humoralotico.com, (humour tico style) titled: Dios, Satanas y la C.C.S.S. (Costa Rica’s social security), also known as La Caja.
GOD populated the earth with spinach, cauliflower, broccoli, and all kinds of vegetables, for the Men and Women can feed and lead a healthy life.
And ‘SATAN‘ created McDonald’s. And McDonald’s created the Big Mac.
And SATAN said to Man: ‘Do you want it with French fries and Coca-Cola?
And the man said, ‘Big size, please … and apple pie’.
And Man gained weight.
And GOD said, ‘Let there be light yogurt and granola, for women to keep the silhouette that I created with the rib of man.
And SATAN created the tres leches (three milk cake) and torta chilena (Chilean cake) and caramel flan
And the woman gained weight.
And GOD created vegetables in salads and extra virgin olive oil, red wine; and he saw that it was good.
And SATAN made ice cream and the milk churchill with double Pinito and condensed milk.
And the woman gained weight.
And GOD said, ‘Look I have given vegetables and fruits in abundance, that will serve as food and fiber to cleanse your body.’
And SATAN produced chicharron (pork rinds), white beans and chifrijo.
And Man gained weight, and his bad cholesterol went through the roof.
And GOD created the courts and gyms and weights and abs. And the man decided to run and lift weights to lose those extra kilos.
But SATAN conceived cable television and added the remote control so Man would not have to get up to change channels between ESPN and FOX Sports, with the sweat of his brow. And Satan saw that it was good.
And Man gained weight.
And the man came to have clogged coronary arteries.
And GOD said: ‘It is not good that man has a heart attack.’ And then created the catheterization and cardiovascular surgery.
And what do you think SATAN thought of next ?????
He created the Caja Costarricense de Seguro Social … so no one could OPERATED ON TIME !!!!
Some restrictions apply, price only valid for nationals and residents of Costa Rica
Some restrictions apply, price only valid for nationals and residents of Costa Rica
QTRAVEL – Nature Air wants your to get to know Costa Rica, with promotional offers starting at ¢14,000 colones, one way.
The promotion is for travel in August, September and October for purchases online at http://natureair.co.cr/ or call centre at 2299-6000.
Meet Costa Rica flying! From 25 to 28 June Buy your tickets to our national ¢ 14.000 ** via * destinations, to travel in August, September and / or October.
The cheap flights are subject to availability of spaces and flights. And there are some conditions:
Only for nationals or residents.
Purchases must be made from June 25 to 28 2016
Travel is only for the months of August, September and October 2016
Price does not apply to multiple destinations
Not for travel to Bocas del Toro (Panama) or Managua (Nicaragua), Punta Islita and Limon.
Gerardo Porras, guitarrista de Los Ajenos, fue sentenciado a dos años de cárcel por tener relaciones con menor de 14 años. (Facebook)
Gerardo Porras, former guitarist for the Costa Rican rock band Los Ajenos, was sentenced to two years in prison for sex with a 14 year-old girl, a student at his music class.. Photo from Facebook
QCOSTARICA – Gerardo Porras Montagne, 30 years of age, on Friday was found guilty by the Pavas Criminal Court for having consensual sex with a minor, a 14 year-old girl.
According to Costa Rica’s Article 159 of the Criminal Code, the offence of having sexual intercourse with a minor between the ages 13 and 15 is between two and six years in prison.
However, Porras, member of the musical group Los Ajenos will not be going to jail, despite the prosecutor’s office requesting a 23 year prison sentence for two counts of sexual abuse and two counts of rape.
According to the indictment, the crimes occurred back in 2008 when the young girl, aged 14, was a student in the Escuela de Musica de La Sabana, where the Porras was a guitar teacher. The crime was not reported until 2011.
On Friday, the Criminal Court judge, sentenced Porras to 2 years in prison. However, given the man does not have a criminal history, he judge granted five years probation (beneficio de ejecución condicional de la pena, in Spanish), meaning he will not see the inside of a prison cell.
Note posted on band’s Facebook page
On Facebook, the bank on Friday night posted that Porras is no longer with the group, he had quit 15 days ago, before the trial began.
You should never wash raw chicken before cooking it
QHEALTH – Chicken is consumed by people all over the planet. In Costa Rica “pollo” is a staple food item at home and in restaurants. Pollo frito is perhaps the most common. And many of those people before cooking it, they wash it. They do that in order to eliminate the bacteria that raw chicken has, because the bacteria that raw chicken contains can be harmful to humans.
But what if washing your chicken before cooking is actually doing the opposite?
According to the Food Standards Agency in the UK, washing your chicken can increase the spread of those harmful bacteria rather than eliminating them.
This you may think is nonsense, but here is why washing raw chicken might be harmful for your health.
Like me already known, raw chicken is full of bacteria that can cause many troubles to human’s life. Two most common types of bacteria that caused food poisoning in North America are from campylobacter and salmonella. Both can be found in raw and uncooked chicken.
Salmonella can cause many troubles to humans, and it can even lead to death in some cases. This group of bacteria is commonly found in the intestines of birds. Diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, fever and abdominal cramps are the symptoms.
In the United States the leading cause of diarrheal illness is campylobacter. Causing extreme abdominal pain, this illness can even last up to almost two weeks. From exposure to campylobacter long term effects have been reported such as arthritis and development of a rare disease called Guillan-Barre syndrome (40% of Guillan-Barre syndrome cases in the United States are attritubed to exposure to campylobacter).
What the Food Standards Agency claims is that campylobacter cannot be eliminated with water, so that means washing uncooked chicken that contains campylobacter will not be eliminated but it will be even worse then, because that way the bacteria will spread through water particles.
Here is how to avoid food poisoning
All you will have to do in order to eliminate all the harmful bacteria in your chicken is you make sure you cooked it well, and before serving it to be steaming hot. You can check also by cutting into the thickest part of the meat and if there is no pink meat and all the juices run clear, your chicken is safe to eat.
Remember to never store your chicken at higher temperature than 4 degrees Celsius, because chicken in higher temperature is a magnet for bacteria.
Costa Rica model Kathia Adriana Corella in court. Photo El Nuevo Diario, Nicaragua
QCOSTARICA – Costa Rican model Kathia Adriana Corella Rojas and other members of the Cacique criminal gang were convicted in Nicaragua for drug trafficking, money laundering and organized crime.
On Wednesday, a Managua (Nicaragua) court, headed by Judge Octavio Rothschuh, made the ruling.
According to the indictment presented by the prosecution, the 25 year-old model was in charge of receiving and safekeeping the group’s money.
Corella being escorted to and from the courtroom. Photo El Nuevo Diario, Nicaragua
The prosecution requested a prison term of six years for Corella, for the crime of money laundering and another six for racketeering. For its part, the Nicaragua Attorney General’s is calling for 12 years in prison for money laundering and seven for organized crime.
Corella’s defence attorney said the evidence presented a trial does not link her to all the crimes, and is asking for the minimum sentence of five years on money laundering and five for organized crime.
Adriana Corella, in court during trial. Photo El Nuevo Diario, Nicaragua
A sentencing hearing will be held in the coming days.
Corrella was nabbed in Nicaragua on December 3, 2015 (and held in preventive detention since) when police captured the criminal group, seizing 285 kilograms of cocaine hidden in the fuel tanks of tractor trailers, US$871,000 dollars in cash and a pick-up truck, among other items that included guns and real estate.
Nicaragua’s Ministerio Publico accused the defendants, that included Corella and two other Costa Ricans, Gustavo Adolfo Artavia, driver of one of the trucks and José Castillo, driver of the pick up truck carrying the cash. The latter two pleaded guilty last May in Nicaragua to the crimes of international transport of narcotics, organized crime and money laundering.
According to authorities, Corella had a relationship with a man identified as Wálter Mauricio Pereira Castillo, a Costa Rican national resident of Alajuela, alleged to be the head of the criminal group. Pereira is believed to the father of Corella’s five year-old daughter.
The couple had been in Nicaragua for a month when they were surprised by the police action. Pereira managed escaped capture, taking off to the couple’s home in Santa Monica, a high-end Managua community, pursued by police, where he committed suicide.
Judge Rothschuch also found guilty the Guatemalan national, Llendy Perez, and three Nicaraguans, Carlos Carbonero, Ninoska Bonilla and Aryilia Bonilla, all linked to the “Los Zetas” Mexican drug cartel.
Corella caught the attention of journalists with her revealing style during trial. All photos from El Nuevo Diario, Nicarauga
Nicaragua has banned the import of Dos Pinos products from Costa Rica, in what Costa Rica officials say is a retaliatory move for its banning dairy products from two Nicaragua plants.
Nicaragua has banned the import of Dos Pinos products from Costa Rica, in what Costa Rica officials say is a retaliatory move for its banning dairy products from two Nicaragua plants.
QCOSTARICA – Costa Rica and Nicaragua are locked into a diary war, with the first punch thrown by Costa Rica when it closed imports products from two of the four dairy industrial plants by Lala, the Mexican company located in Nicaragua.
The ban on Lala dairy products went into effect last month when inspections by the Servicio Nacional de Salud Animal (Senasa) de Costa Rica found “technical issues: one plant already exporting to Costa Rica had its permits expired, the other was getting ready for its first export.
On June 6, Nicaragua retaliated by closing its borders to the import of Dos Pinos products.
Alexis Sandí, acting director of Senasa, explained that Nicaragua inspections were conducted from May 9 to 13.
According Sandí, Senasa officials went to Nicaragua to inspect the plants before granting the renewal and first time permits, but found several problems, which were reported the Institute for Health and Agriculture (IPSA) of Nicaragua.
A week later, says Sandí, Costa Rica officials concluded that it was not advisable to open the market to exports from the two plants.
In Costa Rica, Nicaragua health authorities had conducted in November 2015 an inspection of the Dos Pinos plant, finding a number of irregularities. Sandís says the Costa Rican cooperative corrected the problems and continued exporting.
However, on June 6, after Costa Rica reported its findings with the Lala plants, Nicaragua’s IPSA decided to impose (on the same day) a ban on Dos Pinos products, explains Sandí.
Both Sandí and Costa Rica’s Minister of Agriculture and Livestock (MAG), Luis Felipe Arauz, call the Nicaragua decision retaliatory.
For this reason, Arauz says he has convened a meeting of high-ranking officials of both countries, with a possible meeting occurring in the first week in July.
From the Costa Rica side, the ban has resulted in some 270 tons of dairy products not making it into Nicaragua. Products like cheese, yogurt and ice cream are included in the ban.
Nicaragua is the third largest market in Central America for Costa Rica products. Last year Costa Rica exported to Nicaragua some 6,600 tons of dairy products, according to data supplied by the Chamber of Milk Producers.
Russian President Vladimir Putin is pictured meeting his Nicaraguan counterpart, Daniel Ortega, who has led the left-wing Sandinistas for more than 30 years
TODAY NICARAGUA – Russia has agreed a deal to build an electronic intelligence-gathering base in Nicaragua, which will no doubt renew fears of a new Cold War.
Moscow will also give Nicaragua 50 tanks as part of the deal
In the 1980s Nicaragua’s Sandinista regime was a sworn enemy of US
The deal between Moscow and Managua, which will also involve the sale of 50 Russian T-72 tanks, comes as President Putin’s regime ramps up the pressure on Nato in eastern Europe.
Russia said it would be deploying nuclear-capable missiles in the Kaliningrad enclave, close to the Polish border, by 2019 and may even site them in newly annexed Crimea.
Putin has refused to back down after economic sanctions were imposed on Russia following the annexation of Crimea and has ramped up its military facilities around the world.
Nicaragua’s leftist President Daniel Ortega was once the bete noire of the White House.
His Sandinista regime were targeted for a decade in the 1980s by President Ronald Reagan and Ortega has remained friendly with Moscow since the collapse of the Soviet Union.
Last week three Americans, working for the US Department of Homeland Security, were expelled from Nicaragua without explanation.
Washington complained about the explusion which they said was ‘unwarranted and inconsistent with the positive and constructive agenda that we seek with the government of Nicaragua’.
After more than a decade out of power Ortega was re-elected in 2006 and has tried to reintroduce socialist policies.
He has also announced plans for a huge canal, to rival the Panama Canal, which would be funded by a Chinese consortium.
QCostarica.com is ranked 59th in the “top 200 Costa Rica websites most visited” in an “exclusive study” by Conozcasucanton.com, compiled using Alexa ranking, the California-based company (wholly owned subsidiary of Amazon.com) that provides commercial web traffic data and analytics.
Costa Rica has a high internet penetration, with 47% of the people using the internet
Conozca su Cantón (Know your Canton) says it undertook the task to determine how well ranked Tico websites were in the world.
Taking the crown is the digital news source, Crhoy.com with a worldwide Alexa rank of 1.749, ahead of Nacion.com ranked globally 2,609. Qcostarica.com (at the time of the study) has an Alexa ranking of 233,580 placing it in 59th spot in Costa Rica websites.
Costa Rica has a high internet penetration, with 47% of the people using the internet and 72 out of every 100 using a mobile device to connect. It is estimated by 2036 everyone (100% of the people) in the country will be connected to the internet.
Who takes the crown?
English Still Queued
Of the total of websites on the top 200 list, 76% are exclusively in Spanish, 13% are only in English and only 9% are bilingual.
Tico websites are still poor when it comes to a digital presence in English, a negative for a country that has an economic model based largely on tourism.
Interesting is that of the top 200 websites only 17 (8.5%) are tourism related, with only three hotel sites. This shows that the tourism sector, that in 2015 represented 5.8% of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP), has a weak digital presence in terms of visits.
When it comes to e-commerce, the Costa Rica post office (correos.go.cr) is tops and top dog in digital media in the country, Grupo Nacion, makes the list of 200 with 8 products, including nacion.com and yuplon.com.
While the majority of the top 200 are big business, public and private institutions, with a staff and financial resources, the Q with its staff of three (me, myself and I) is proud to be in the top half of the list.
QCOSTARICA – Tighten your belt, a gas price increase is on the way next week, that will once again send prices at the pumps over the ¢600 colones a litre.
The follows the approval by the Autoridad Reguladora de los Servicios Públicos (Aresep) of the Refinadora Costarricense de Petróleo (RECOPE) request of June 13 to increase prices by ¢84 colones for a litre of super, ¢77 for regular (plus) and ¢71 for diesel.
No, this is not a misprint.
The new prices will take effect sometime next week. For the approval to take effect, it must be published in La Gaceta, the official government newsletter, within five working days.
The increase will mean an additional ¢3.780 colones to fill with a 45 litre tank with super when the price goes to ¢602 from the current ¢518. Regular will go from the current ¢498 to ¢575; and diesel from ¢380 to ¢451.
This increase does not include the ¢5 billion colones the ARESEP should add to the rates soon, as ordered by the Constitutional Court to resolve an appeal brought by RECOPE workers. That ruling overturned a decision by the ARESEP rejecting including spending rates under the collective agreement. So, even higher prices are around the corner.
Infograph by La Nacion. Soruce: RECOPE
In the past year, gasoline prices kept dropping from a high of almost ¢700 (for super) in August 2015 to under ¢500 in March 2016. The slide to lower prices began with a big drop in October 2015 and even bigger drop in March 2016. But since have slowly climbed up, with this increase will be back to the May 2015 level.
QCOSTARICA – A man, described as thin and about 30 years of age, walked around naked Friday morning in the area of the Hispanidad fountain in San Pedro (in front of Mall San Pedro), for about 45 minutes before being detained by police.
According to the police report, the man was stark naked in public from 6:45am to 7:28am (when police arrived) on Friday morning.
Photo from Facebook
The press office of the Ministry of Public Security (MSP) said the man was arrested for disturbing public order. “He was given a ticket for committing an offence against the integrity of the people,” said the press report.
As of Friday afternoon the man continued in police custody, at the Montes de Oca (San Pedro) police station, waiting for some family member to come for him.
John Wesley Saatio is headed home tomorrow, quickly thrown out of Costa Rica after escaping from an immigration holding centre, leading to his denial of refugee status. On Saturday he will be handed over to the U.S. Marshals Service for his flight back to the U.S.
QCOSTARICA – John Wesley Saatio is headed for home on Saturday, confirmed the Minister of Security, Gustavo Mata, who said he spoke to U.S. authorities to get the fugitive back on American soil as soon as possible.
According to Mata, the foreigner will be taken (under heavy guard) in the morning to the Juan Santamaria airport, where he will board a commercial flight that leaves Costa Rica at 12:55pm. According to fly2sanjose.com, United Airlines fligth 1490, Houston bound, is the only one leaving Costa Rica at 12:55pm.
The Minister explained that the fugitive will handed over to the United States Marshals Service, the primary agency for fugitive operations and responsible for prisoner transport.
“We made significant efforts to get him out of the country in record time. When these type of individuals come to the country, we have to act strong and forceful. The country has to send a message to these antisocials with sex offences, so they know we don’t want them,” said Mata.
The Minister explained that the fugitive is being transported on a commercial flight to get him out promptly and cannot wait for a special plane to arrive.
Saatio was arrested in Costa Rica on June 2 for being in the country illegally, in the area of Jaco beach and authorities learning he was a wanted fugitive in the United States.
He was under orders of the of the Dirección General de Migración y Extranjería (immigration service) to be extradited, but the process was suspended following a request for asylum.
On June 19, Saatio escaped from the Hatillo immigration detention centre, recaptured on Tuesday, June 21. That same day his refugee request was denied.
In the U.S., in Houghton County, Michigan, Saatio faces charges of trespassing, malicious destruction of police property and sexual abuse. On June 19, 2015, he escaped while being transported back to prison after a hearing in Green Bay, Wisconsin. Authorities do not yet know how the convicted sex offender made his way from the United States and enter Costa Rica.
QCOSTARICA – Costa Rica’s economy would be affected indirectly through the United States, following the United Kingdom’s decision to break from the European Union, reports the country’s leading business newspaper, La Republica.
The report says the U.S. is expected to be affected negatively, with lower exports, tourism and slower growth in the economy, which in turn would affect Costa Rica, given the importance of that economy to ours.
Luis Diego Herrera, economist for the Grupo Financierio Acobo, explained that declining incomes would bring a decrease in imported goods and reduce spending on vacationing, thus affecting Costa Rica’s tourism sector.
However, “the effects of the UK’s departure from the EU will not be seen from one day to the next, it would take some months to be seen,” says the expert.
19% of Costa Rica’s exports in 2015 were destined for the European Union and of that total, 10% went to the UK. The accumulated so far this year (to May) is 22% to the EU and 9.6% of the total to the UK.
According to the Washington Post, “although Britain may not actually leave the E.U. for years, Thursday’s vote fires the starting gun on what is widely expected to be a messy proceeding as Britain and E.U. officials begin untangling the vast web of connections between this island nation and the other 27 members of the bloc.”
QCOSTARICA – John Wesley Saatio, the U.S. sex offender who escaped from the Hatillo immigration detention centre last week, has been recaptured and is now in the Organismo de Investigación Judicial (OIJ) jail cells.
Saatio while on the run from American authorities was nabbed in Costa Rica on June 2 and was waiting a deportation hearing when he escaped. OIJ agents caught up with the tall and tattooed 35-year-old sentenced to U.S. prison for sexual crimes, in the area of San Miguel de Desamparados.
The Minister of Security, Gustavo Mata, confirmed the recapture in a press conference on Wednesday.
Previously he had tried to escape police custody by bending the bars in a thwarted jail break. Mata said that the American is now being held at a “maximum” holding facility.
Saatio was being held in the Hatillo immigration detention centre after his arrest on June 2, escaping on June 19 while being served dinner, breaking through a fence and up through the roof of the facility. Immigration officials are investigating whether there was negligence or a pay off.
On Monday, immigration director Gladys Jiménez, explained that Saatio was moved to the dining room of the detention centre despite an order he be held in isolation.
The immigration director confirmed that Saatio had made an application for asylum in Costa Rica,w ith a hearing scheduled for June 13. Following the press conference, Minister Mata on his Twitter account said Saatio’s asylum had been denied.
Saatio will now be deported from Costa Rica to the United States as any other illegal immigrant or extradited if the U.S. makes a request.
It is still not known publicly how Saatio managed to make his way from the United States to Costa Rica despite his “wanted” status. Saatio escaped from a Michigan jail on June 19, 2015, after being arraigned on break-in charges. He was already service a sentence for sexual offences.
QCOSTARICA – The outbreak of the Zika virus in the Central Pacific town of Jaco has worsened, health officials reporting 10 new cases last week. According to the Ministry of Health, in just seven days, the number of cases went from 67 to 77 people with the virus in the district of Garabito.
In addition, at the national level, the number of cases has grown to 127 cases, that is 20 new cases in the same period, which are spread out in 19 cantones across the country.
So, 60% of the cases of Zika are in Garabito (Jaco area) alone.
Parrita and Quepos (south of Jaco) have had new cases in the past week. So has San Mateo, the small town between Jaco and San Jose. Across the country, communities reporting cases of Zika include Grecia, Esparza, Montes de Oro, Heredia, Guacimo, Limon, La Cruz, Carrillo, Golfito, Puntarenas, Santa Cruz, Nicoya and Alajuelita.
Of the 127 cases, 52 are men and 75 women, all between 1 and 74 years of age.
In addition, the number of imported case of the Zika virus has grown, as of Wednesday there were 12 confirmed cases of the virus arriving from Nicaragua.
Health officials in Costa Rica report that to date five pregnant women are registered with the virus, of which two have already given birth and their babies did not suffer any complications. In the other three doctors have not detected if the babies may present malformations caused by the virus.
The first case of Zika was confirmed in February this year in Nicoya, Guanacaste.
Dengue is still a concern for health officials, with 8.323 confirmed cases of dengue as of June 11 (week 23), increasing from 7,711 a week earlier (week 22). See our report Costa Rica approves sale of dengue vaccine.
The number of people with Chikungunya has remained constant.
QCOSTARICA – Costa Rica has endorsed the entry into the country of a vaccine that protects against dengue, becoming the 5th country in the world and fourth in Latin America to approve the Sanofi Pasteur‘s tetravalent dengue vaccine.
The vaccine, called Dengvaxia, was recently endorsed by the WHO World Health Organization) recommendations supporting the safety, efficacy and public health value of the dengue vaccine in endemic countries.
The other four countries to approve the vaccine are the Philipines, Brazil, Mexico and E Salvador.
This past Monday the Dirección de Regulación de la Salud (Regulation Department of Health) as confirmed by Roberto Arroba Tijerino, coordinator of Immunization and technical secretary of the National Commission on Vaccination and Epidemiology.
But, before the public can access the vaccine, the laboratory at the University of Costa Rica (UCR) must complete microbiological tests on the drug, according to Arroba. The vaccine protects persons from 9 to 45 years of age against all four serotypes of dengue.
Once the (testing) process is complete, the vaccine will be available in the private sector.
“What can be guaranteed is that it will be accessible to all and at a fair price,” said José Alejandro Mojica, medical director at the Sanofi-Pasteur for Central America and the Caribbean, without indicating a price level.
Infographic from La Nacion
As to being available at the Caja Costarricense de Seguro Social (CCSS) – Costa Rica’s public health system – Arroba explained the drug has to be included in the revolving fund of the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO). In addition, the National Vaccination Commission needs conduct a study of cost-effectiveness, and identify priority populations for application, Arroba said.
Such research could begin in the next year. The doctor added the vaccine should definitely be accessible and distributed by the Caja, due to the high incidence of dengue in the country.
According to the records of the CCSS, up to week 23 of this year (June 11) there have been 8.323 cases of dengue across the country.
Among the 15 cantones with the most cases are: Alajuela, Puntarenas, Pérez Zeledón and Atenas.
According to the WHO, dengue is currently the fastest-growing mosquito-transmitted disease in the world, causing around 400 million infections every year.
“Dengue represents a growing and serious public health issue in many parts of the Americas with significant associated human and economic burden,” according to Cesar Mascarenas, Global Director of Medical Affairs for the Dengue Project, Sanofi Pasteur. “Approval of the dengue vaccine in Costa Rica will give the country’s healthcare providers access to the first clinical preventive tool against dengue, allowing them to better protect their patients against this threat.”
Sanofi Pasteur’s dengue vaccine is the first and only vaccine licensed for the prevention of dengue in the world.
A rendering of the old cars in Cuba, the majority, some 60 years later, still used daily
A rendering of the old cars in Cuba, the majority, some 60 years later, still used daily
I am back from my visit to Cuba and will be updating QCostarica.com in full starting today.
Cuba is a great place to visit, surprised at the number of visitors on the island, mainly in the city of La Habana.
The city displays hits of progress and modernization. Great place to be a visitor, still a life of full of “pain” and “challenges” for the average Cuban.
I will in the coming days be posting reports (with photos) of my Cuba visit on the Q and launching my travel site Sand Under Your Feet.
QCOSTARICA – It was minutes before 6:00am Friday morning when the Turrialba erupted, spewing out a cloud of ash and gas reaching a 1,000 metres (one kilometre) above the crater.
The Observatorio Vulcanológico y Sismológico Nacional (Ovsicori) – National Seismological and Volcanological Observatory, reported the eruption at 5:50am, winds blowing the gas and ash in a northwesterly direction towards the Central Valley, though most of the accumulation of expelled material will remain around the colossus.
The Turrialba has been presenting volcanic and seismic activity since early 2015, the most powerful eruption reaching a height of 3,500 metres (3.5 kilometres) on May 24 of this year.
BLOGS – The Republic of Costa Rica, such as it is (I’ve said that it is really an “Oligarchy” in some of my previous blogs), has a number entities within its territorial boundaries, with the biggest being RECOPE, ICE, and UCR, but being among others, that function more like independent republics, much in the same manner that the Tribal Homelands of Swaziland and Lesotho function within the territorial boundaries of the Republic of South Africa.
However, I would hasten to add that the similarities of these Costa Rican entities with the Tribal Homelands in South Africa ends there, as with the salaries, benefits, and pensions paid to the hierarchy of these various institutions in Costa Rica, it precludes any likelihood of seeing any of “local royalty” dancing around in loin cloths in front of mud huts.
These institutions have a certain amount of autonomy delegated to them under the Constitution and in law, which if properly and responsibly exercised, would allow them to carry-out their respective mandates in a more effective manner, than if they were merely another Government Ministry, or Department. Unfortunately, that is not the case, as over-time, the autonomy factor has been exaggerated to the degree that they do indeed function more as though they were independent republics, with no requirement for atonement with the Central Government of Costa Rica.
Much of this unsatisfactory abuse of power revolves around fiscal (tax) mismanagement and outright waste, not to mention the “overly generous” Union Collective Agreements which for the employees in each of these Institutions.
Indeed, ICE has previously acted in an obstructionist in failing and refusing to meet its legal requirements to release internal documentation for the purposes of Central Government oversight.
RECOPE has recently released documentation that supports the expenditure of over $40,000,000 U.S. on the planning of the building of a refinery in a partnership with China, a refinery for which no construction has been started and the Chinese have now back-out of agreeing to build, in favour of working with another country in a similar project capacity.
The most recent transgression in UCR, is that the Rector of the University arranged for the hiring of his own daughter to fill an administrative position at the University, who has now been miraculously promoted through the ranks to the detriment of others. Although most would see this as being improper and unethical, it would appear that the Rector is unmoved by his actions, claiming the autonomy of the
Institution to be able to basically do as it pleases.
In Costa Rica, as it is throughout Latin American, the pecking-order for benefiting by those in authority is “Family, Friends, and Country”, in that order. As those of us who are citizens and residents of Costa Rica know, there is precious little left by the time you get down to benefiting the Country.
Latin American Society just does not have the necessary underpinning to accept such a delegation of semi-autonomous authority as exists in these various Governmental institutions under study and still have them conform and perform according to their respective mandates, in an ethically and fiscally responsible manner.
Dear readers of the Q, I am currently in Cuba, where Internet connection is limited. Wi-Fi (weefee as the Cubans call them) hotspots are the only way to connect and use is limited to a public area (parks, hotel lobbies, etc) and wtih connection speeds are a throwback to the early days of the internet.
Text, emails is fine, but images and Whatsapp and Skype is subject to the number of connections around you. My connection this morning (Saturday) is great, no drops at all, but last night, took a half hour to check some emails. And at US$2/hr.
Upper end hotels have wi-fi in the rooms, so I am told, but be prepared to spend $300 a night. I chose to rent a one bedroom apartment found on Airbnb, in the nice area known as Vedado, next to Veija Havana, a few blocks of the Malecon.
Updating the Q is almost impossible. It would mean sitting at the park bench across the apartment building (a 5 storey walk-up) when the wi-fi doesn’t reach the steps of the building with my laptop, and dealing with dropped connections, low speeds (about 56kbps) and many sites, including many parts of Google.com, with denied access.
There may and wikiley be some posts as I can get a good connection. The Q will return in full starting the 24th of June.
My Cuba experience will be available on the Q and my new travel site coming soon, Sandunderyourfeet.com.
In the meantime, please take the opportunity to browse our archives for great stories.
The traffic lights installed at the intersection on the autpista, east of the San Jose airport, is cuasing more congestion
The traffic lights installed at the intersection on the autpista, east of the San Jose airport, is cuasing more congestion than ever. Transport officials say the lights are to prevent accidents at the intersection. In the photo by the Telenoticias cameras traffic coming from Alajuela headed to San Jose, backing up past the airport.
QCOSTARICA – The intersection east of the San Jose airport has been a nightmare of years for drivers of the Alajuela – San Jose direction and the scene of numerous spectacular accidents of the autopista, the main road into San Jose
The solution? Install traffic lights.
In its first day of operation, Wednesday, the traffic congestion was beyond description. The backlog of traffic was all the way to Dos Pinos, a few kilometres from the intersection.
This morning, Thursday, at 6:00am, the congestion was no better. The backlog reached Villa Bonita and according to Waze, traffic on the autopista and the radial de Alajuela (the road from Alajuela to the autopista) was moving at top speed of 8 km/h (5 mph).
The Ministerio de Obras Públicas y Transportes (MOPT) says the traffic lights were installed to prevent more traffic accidents and will be evaluated during the next 15 days, to determine the impact on traffic in the area.
That means that in the meantime, and although the traffic police will be monitoring the situation and will be on hand to alleviate congestion, the nightmare continues on this road with volume of more than 100,000 vehicles daily – an average of more than 4,000 vehicles per hour.
For some the alternative could be to Ruta 27, a road that has its own challenges from the La Guacima tolls to the Circunvalacion, in the San Jose direction in the morning and the Alajuela direction in the afternoon.
Many of the drivers interviewed by the media had a common sentiment, “it’s no secret that the area needs an overhead bypass”.
Recommended is to avoid the intersection especially in the mornings and all together if possible.
Paramedics rushed the six month old infant to hospital after crashing through the windshield of the car that killed her mother. The baby died minutes later in hospital. Photo Rafael Murillo, La Nacion
QCOSTARICA – A short distance away was the pedestrian overpass, a young mother of 18 years of age, carrying her 6 month old baby in arms, was struck down by a motorist when she tried to cross the busy lanes of the autopista General Cañas.
Senseless deaths. The woman was killed on impact, while the baby crashed through windshield. Paramedics did their best to save the injured infant’s life, taking the baby girl, with signs of life, to the nearby San Rafael de Alajuela hospital, where doctors where able to stabilize her and then moved to Chidlren’s hospital in San Jose, where she died minutes after arrival.
There was nothing the driver could do to avoid hitting the young woman and her infant. Photo Shirely Vasques, La Nacion
This all occurred before 7:25pm Wednesday night, some 200 metres from the Alajuela toll booths.
When ambulances arrived at the scene there was nothing they could for Irma Gonzalez, who was now lying on the pavement, lifeless. The baby landed inside the vehicle, due to the force of the impact. According to Rándall Picado, regional director of the Fuerza Publica (police), the infant was found on the floor of the back seat of the vehicle.
Apparently the woman, originally from Nicaragua and with only 15 days in Costa Rica, tried to cross the lanes of the busy highway, a few metres away from the pedestrian bridge.
Traffic on the autopista General Cañas came to halt while authorities investigated.
El Proyecto Hidroeléctrico Reventazón es la obra de infraestructura más grande del país. | ALONSO TENORIO.
The Reventazón hydroelectric project is the country’s largest infrastructure work and second Central America, after the Panama Canal expansion. Photo Alonso Tenorio, La Nacion
QCOSTARICA – A giant cement structure rises from the river in the middle of Costa Rica’s Caribbean tropical forest, and its turbines spin, each rotation putting the Central American country closer to its goal of relying only on renewable energy.
The US$1.4-billion Reventazon Hydroelectric Project is the second-biggest infrastructure work in Central America after the just-finished expansion of the Panama Canal, and following six years of construction, it’s nearly fully online.
Three of the facility’s four turbines are now functioning, each pumping out 73 megawatts of electricity, with the fourth set to join them in August.
“On a high-demand day, the three turbines operate at full capacity with no problem. That makes us very happy,” Luis Roberto Rodriguez, an engineer tasked with building the plant, told AFP.
Water from the Reventazon River sets the turbines spinning. The Instituto Costarricense de Electricidad (ICE), the country’s state energy provider, built a seven-square-kilometer (2.7-square-mile) dam to control the flow according to demand.
When pumping at full capacity with all four turbines, the facility creates enough energy for 525,000 families.
The Reventazon hydroelectric project shut down the Moin I thermal plant located in Limon, a plant using bunker fuel. Photo from ICE.
‘Clean energy’ ambition
Costa Rica is very close to realizing its ambition of creating only “clean” electricity.
In 2015, according to ICE, 99% of its electricity was from renewable sources, making its grid one of the cleanest in the world.
Hydroelectric installations account for three-quarters of that energy production. Geothermal facilities using heat from Costa Rica’s numerous volcanoes contribute 13 percent, wind is 10 percent, and biomass and solar power each represent less than one percent.
Just one percent of Costa Rica’s electricity last year came from thermal sources, burning fossil fuels such as diesel or bunker fuel.
“We hope that this (Reventazon) plant will further reduce the need to generate power from the fossil-fuel plants,” ICE’s CEO, Carlos Obregon, told AFP.
However there is one small problem Costa Rica is facing in its reliance on water to create electricity: dry spells that limit how much H20 is available.
Last year, the country suffered one of its driest periods in recent years, and its hydroelectric plants — both ones using dams and ones tapping into normally flowing rivers — had a water deficit for their turbines.
With wind and sunshine also contingent on nature’s whims, Costa Rica finds it necessary to “complement” its clean energy generators with fossil fuel ones to meet demand, Obregon explained.
As water levels in Costa Rica’s dams were so low at the start of 2016, fossil-fuel power took up the slack and will probably account for around three or four percent of national production over the year, he said.
The rainy season, which begins in May each year, has since brought up the water levels however, meaning fossil-fuel electricity production has been virtually nil in recent weeks.
New hydroelectric project
Despite the inherent uncertainty in depending on rains for hydroelectric power, Costa Rica is betting big on its myriad rivers to guarantee its energy future.
The Legislature in June approved a draft law to build an electric train line linking the main urban centers across the middle of the country, from east to west, by way of the capital San Jose located inland.
Legislators are also debating tax breaks to encourage the use of electric cars to reduce the number of gasoline-powered vehicles on the roads, which are the nation’s primary cause of global-warming gas emissions.
To handle the growing demand for electricity, Costa Rica is planning to start construction in 2018 on yet another hydroelectric plant that will be even bigger than Reventazon, with more than twice the output.
But that Diquis Hydroelectric Project faces a challenge because it would involve a dam that would flood indigenous lands.
Indigenous communities in southern part of Costa Rica have already mobilized against the planned facility, saying it would destroy rivers they depend upon for fishing and to move around.
Obregon, however, stressed the need for the Diquis project if Costa Rica is to attain its goal of all-clean energy.
“If the country wants to follow its line for clean energy generation, adding solar and wind plants and tapping geothermal ones, it needs a plant like Diquis,” he said.
“If it doesn’t have it, the system will be in deficit, with high availability in the rainy season and low availability in the dry season — and when there is no energy balance we would have to turn to thermal.”
Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim poses for a photo with his daughter, Johanna, after speaking about a new educational application during a news conference at the Museo Soumaya in Mexico City, Wednesday, June 15, 2016. The application, titled Aprende, is free and is currently used around the world. (AP Photo/Nick Wagner)
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/wires/ap/article-3643822/Mexicos-Slim-launches-free-online-educational-platform.html#ixzz4BjGm5Asj
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Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim poses for a photo with his daughter, Johanna, after speaking about a new educational application during a news conference at the Museo Soumaya in Mexico City, Wednesday, June 15, 2016. The application, titled Aprende, is free and is currently used around the world. (AP Photo/Nick Wagner)
Q24N – Mexican billionaire telecommunications tycoon Carlos Slim, owner of America Movil (Claro), launched an “aggressive” program on Wednesday to collect used smartphones and donate them to schools, in order to provide students free access to educational materials.
Aprende.org, using the Spanish word for learn, integrates educational materials already offered for a price online by his foundation, Fundación Carlos Slim.
Slim said at an event the platform gives anyone who can connect access to knowledge and training. Data charges will not accrue if they connect via Slim’s Telmex or America Movil.
The businessman said he was looking to create a secondary market for smartphones used for a year or two, “giving them an economic value,” and then passing them on for free to public schools.
The firm plans to offer its clients a 500-peso credit ($26) for each smartphone returned in good condition, Slim said.
He added that he hoped his competitors in Mexico, which include Spain’s Telefonica (Movistar) and U.S.-based AT&T, followed his lead in offering free access to educational materials.
America Movil is the largest mobile phone brand in Latin America. Under the Claro brand it provides wireless service in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguya, Peru, Puerto Rico, and Uruguay.
Telmex , headquartered in Mexico City, provides telecommunications products and services in Mexico, Argentina, Chile, Colombia, Brazil (Embratel), Ecuador, Peru, Venezuela and other countries in Latin America. Telmex is still the dominant fixed-line phone carrier in Mexico.
In January 2010, América Móvil made an offer to buy Telmex and Telmex International in order to better compete against Spain’s Telefonica and Malaysia’s Telekom Malaysia. América Móvil was once the mobile arm of Telmex, but in 2001, América Móvil was split off and grew larger than the former parent company
Cecil who turns 105 in October, with his younger wife Iris, 86, says “Love is what has led him to live a long life”. Photo La Nacion
QCOSTARICA – On October 10, Cecil Augustus Griffiths Ingram will be 105. From his home in La Trinidad, Limon he spoke to La Nacion of his longevity and without hesitation shared his recipe for a good and long life.
Love is what has given him a long life.
“The family I had all cared and loved me very much,” he said.
Don Cecil has an impressive lucidity and until recently tended to his garden, made bread and cookies and in the mornings out for a swim. He is still autonomous in almost everything, he just needs help to get around in his wheelchair inside the house.
“My legs no longer put up with me,” he explains.
“Cecil is a master at dominoes. He challenges anyone,” says a devoted helper at the elderly day care centre in Limon.
Cecil lives in a comfortable house with his wife of 51 years, Iris Shand.
“I visited her at her home, and knew immediately she was the woman of my life,” Don Cecil says of his much younger wife. Both were widowed when they met.
Iris, 86 years of age, said she was looking for a “good” man for her and her children. “I not only found that, but also very handsome,” says Doña Iris.
What may be the key to Cecil’s longevity is that he never smoked. ” He drank a little once in a while. In his diet, never pork, nor lobster, turtle or beans and just a little rice,” says Doña Iris.
Doña Iris added Don Cecil’s true weakness was dancing and his passion is for cricket.
Today Don Cecil spends most of his time at home, loves major league baseball on television. He is a big fan of the Chicago Cubs .
“May God be with you everywhere you go,” is Don Cecil’s advice for a long life.
Almost one in every 10 children in Colombia is subjected to illegal child labor, especially in rural areas where more than 15% work rather than going to school, according to a recent study.
While child labor is hardly visible in the country’s main cities Bogota, Medellin and Cali, it is still very much prevalent in the countryside and in cities in marginalized areas like the borders, the study of the Bogota-based Rosario University said.
Cities with most child labor
Sincelejo – 16.8%
Neiva – 13.9%
Cucuta – 12.5%
Pasto – 11.6%
Florencia – 11%
For example in Sincelejo, a city in the northern Sucre province, researchers found than 16.8% of children worked.
The researchers found four main reasons for the children to work.
They want to
Their support is crucial for their family’s livelihood
To “stay away from vices”
To pay for education
While child labor in Colombia is slowly becoming less prevalent, the researchers called on increased efforts to provide adequate education to the children.
However, widespread education in both education and child welfare has been impeding many children’s possibility to go to school.
Child labor is illegal in many of the world’s countries because it severely affects the development of the children’s physical and mental abilities.
Drug tourism is a common phenomenon for anyone in the Netherlands and Colombia. Drugs are easily available in both countries. The difference is that in Colombia the tourists are yet to come.
A Dutchman in Medellin, I hear complaints about coked-up Israelis already, while Colombia is currently possibly at only a fraction of its tourism potential. The country received 2 million visitors last year.
With the “Has Armed Conflict” label removed, Colombia could reach tourism levels exceeding those of the Netherlands and can just as easily overtake my native country as the world’s top drug tourism destination.
Amsterdam, the capital of the Netherlands alone, received 7 million tourists last year. According to a local juvenile crime expert, between 500,000 and two million were drug tourists.
The city has a population of 700,000.
Pills and powders
While Amsterdam is mostly famous for its marijuana, it’s the pills and the cocaine that attract the tourists. When you go to a festival or club, you don’t smoke a Dutchie, you snort coke or pop E’s.
And this is where the trouble begins, because unlike marijuana, selling pills or any other kind of drugs is illegal. Consequently, these rackets are run by criminal organizations.
These organizations obtain their dealers from the marginalized sectors of society where, even in the Netherlands, plenty of kids lack opportunity.
The Dutch street dealers aggressively sell drugs to tourists, the profits are then laundered through a chain of, for example, ice cream shops, and enters the legal economy and the hands of the big boys.
Meanwhile, legal enterprises gladly making money off the drug tourism industry are the hostels and the airlines.
“Maybe half of the cheap flights to Amsterdam are really drug flights and at least one third of the thousands of hotel beds will be shelter for drug tourists. It’s not the underworld corrupting the normal world, but the normal world of hotels, festivals and airliners profiting of an often well-organized criminality. With the city as a market manager.”
Erik Heijjdelberg, Organization for the Protection and Reintegration of Youth
The street dealers of the Dutch crime groups, exactly like the “chiclets vendors” at Medellin’s Parque Lleras, push their drugs, openly marketing their goods to potential tourists.
“coke, xtc, hashish,” is more common to hear for an Amsterdam commuter than “goedemorgen” and often considered rather intimidating.
I wouldn’t worry about the hippies
A lot of people in Colombia talk bad about the drug tourists, the easy target, especially on flip-flops. But my main concern is the pushers, the ones causing most trouble and violence in Amsterdam.
If Colombia’s microtraffickers are going to operate a drug tourism industry the size of Amsterdam, things are likely to get uglier than they are in my former capital.
Colombian crime groups have already aggressively been creating a domestic consumption market and are aggressively pushing cocaine, weed, poppers and 2CB to local youth.
Now, who do you think they will target when tourism really picks up and Colombia begins receiving hundreds of thousands of drug tourists annually with a budget dedicated to drugs and partying?
At that point, cities like Bogota, Medellin and Cali will be annually be dealing with hundreds of thousands if not millions of drug tourists, neatly flown in and out by United Airlines and sheltered by AirBnB hosts or hostels.
The occasional overdose aside, it won’t be the druggies who will be the problem.
At that point tourist consumption of cocaine will become a much bigger market than locals’ consumption and an interesting alternative to exporting cocaine. It could become a game-changer for Colombia’s drug traffickers.
No lessons from Amsterdam
Amsterdam has been dealing with drug tourism since the 1960s and has not been successful in curtailing it, mainly because the private sector and crime groups share the same interests.
Colombia’s cities have possibly been worse at public security management and will find themselves with their backs against the wall once a mature drug tourism industry has evolved and begins “protecting” its customers and business.
Tourist areas could become the battleground for turf wars now held near the “plazas” for local youth, while local club and hostel owners could increasingly become victim of extortion.
While reading up on drug tourism in my own country, I found that the Dutch have yet to find an answer, and that the situation is getting worse. Colombia could actually prepare for the phenomenon we all know is going to get bigger and bigger.
But rather than just bitching about the gringos, we need to start figuring out how the hell we are going to deal with the sellers and the possible increase in violent crime.
By Lisa Sullivan, (Consortium News) Amid a reassertion of U.S.-backed neoliberal policies in Latin America, Venezuela’s socialist government totters at a tipping point, beset by a severe economic crisis, but Lisa Sullivan sees a ground-up struggle of Venezuelans to survive.
For 32 years I have called Venezuela home. Its mountains have given me beauty, its barrios have given me music, its struggles have given me purpose, and its people have given me love. Its Bolivarian Revolution gave me hope.
How could I not feel hope when most of my neighbors –ages 2 to 70, were studying, right in our little potato-growing town in the mountains of western Venezuela. How could I not be hopeful when 18 neighbor families received new homes to replace their unhealthy, crowded living spaces?
How could I not be grateful when my partner received life-saving emergency surgery? Or when my blind friend Chuy had his sight restored. Both for free.
But today, this is what I see from my porch: neighbors digging frantically in barren, already-harvested potato fields, hoping to find a few overlooked little spuds. Rastreando they call it. It is an act of desperation to find any food source to keep the kids from crying, because for months, the shelves of the stores have been bare.
How did this happen? That is the question that I bolt awake to every morning. As I watch Juan Carlos claw the fields for potatoes; as I embrace a tearful Chichila – up and waiting in line since 2 a.m., searching, unsuccessfully, to buy food for her large family; as I see the pounds shed before my eyes from 10-year-old Fabiola. I am glad that my mangos are ripening now. They take some of the empty glare from Fabi’s eyes.
It is often in the deep of the night that I am kept awake by the burning question: When and how will all this end? Followed by: And what should I be doing?
When I keep thinking it can’t get any worse, it does. When friends from the U.S. write to ask if they should believe the scary articles about Venezuela’s crisis in the press, I want to say no. Because I know that global vultures are circling my adopted nation, waiting for us to fall. Venezuela is, after all, home to the planet’s largest reserves of oil.
Much of their suspicion of the barrage of articles about Venezuela’s crisis is the fact that almost every article begins and ends with the same mantra: Socialism = Hunger. A good example is a recent article in Town Hall entitled: “Venezuelan Socialism Fails at Feeding the Children.” The article goes on to elaborate that between 12 and 26 percent of Venezuelans kids are food insecure (depending on their geography), which would average 19.3 percent childhood hunger in the country.
Just for a comparison, I looked up child hunger in the U.S. and found that most sites use the figure one in five. Or 20 percent. So, in the world’s most prosperous nation 20 percent of children face hunger, while in Venezuela the number is 19.3 percent . Since these statistics are so close, I suggest that Town Hall publish a more accurate and equally urgent article entitled: “US Capitalism Fails at Feeding the Children, and Venezuelan Socialism Does only Slightly Better.”
But most of our caution with these stories comes because we smell danger. How many times have we seen the first step on that well-traveled road to U.S. intervention paved by these heart-wrenching stories rammed 24/7 by the media. They lay the groundwork, help to justify almost anything.
However, in spite of awareness of why we are being bombarded with stories of Venezuela’s crisis, out of respect for friends, neighbors and family in Venezuela, I must acknowledge that this crisis is real and is brutal. It is a crisis of critical shortages of food and medicine. Its reasons are extremely complex and fall on many shoulders. And it threatens the health, well-being and future of too many Venezuelans today, especially the poorest ones, such as my neighbors.
What Happened?
How did the nation with the world’s largest reserves come to this, a nation of hungry and desperate people? Well, that depends on who you ask. The opposition blames President Nicolas Maduro. Maduro blames the U.S. The press blames socialism. Maduro’s ruling party blames capitalism. Economists blame price controls. Businesses blame bureaucracy. Everyone blames corruption.
Most would agree, however, that the underlying culprit is a three letter word. OIL – the source of 95 percent of Venezuela’s exports. OIL – the cash cow that funds easy, cheap imports. OIL- the export giant that deters domestic production.
Living in a rural community that actually does produce food, and having also traveled extensively in this lush and fertile country, it is sometimes hard to believe that Venezuela imports more than 70 percent of its food. But I shouldn’t be surprised. Quite simply, for decades, it has been much cheaper to import food than to produce it.
At least that was the case when oil prices were up. And they were up for a long time. As recently as two years ago, the price of oil was about $115 per barrel. This February, Venezuelan crude plummeted to barely $23 a barrel. That is only $3 more than the approximately $20 cost of extracting it.
So, when the profit per barrel of oil goes from $95 to $3, it’s like your salary going from something like $50,000 a year to $1,600. Could you feed your household?
Well, if you were wise, you would have saved for a rainy day, or not put all your eggs in one basket, or at least grown some food in your backyard in case you couldn’t get to the supermarket. Indeed, the late President Hugo Chavez talked a lot about this. And he even took some steps to set this in motion.
But somehow, economic diversification never happened. Oil became a larger share of the economy under the Bolivarian revolution. Imports grew. Some say this was because Chavez was too preoccupied with the task of providing healthcare, education and shelter to a previously-abandoned household before launching on major home repairs.
Some say because chavismo made it very hard for businesses to produce (although in reality, most large businesses in Venezuela don’t actually produce, they just import things already produced. And, then – to boot – they actually purchase them with dollars provided almost for free by the government.) That puts a little perspective on their rants.
With oil prices crashing to the basement this winter, Venezuela could no longer afford to import food. And to make matters worse, most of the imported trickles of food and medicine that do reach Venezuela these days, never actually reach the average person. Especially the average poor person. A good chunk of this food and this medicine ends up in the greedy hands of corrupt businesses, bureaucrats, military, ruling party members, and black-marketers.
Scarcity almost always leads to hoarding and scalping products. But add to that mix the fact that most basic food and medicines are price-controlled by the government. A kilo of corn flour costs about 2 cents at the regulated price, and can easily fetch at $2 – or much, much more – on the black market. Who wouldn’t want to get their hand in this business of hoarding and reselling? Especially considering that the salary of even an engineer hovers around $30 – $40 a month.
And I haven’t even talked about the dysfunctional currency system that contributes to the diminishing power of salaries. There is only too much bad economic stuff to stomach.
The Harsh Reality
No matter what the reason, the result that matters now is this: Venezuela depends almost totally on imports for most items of basic necessity, and it has almost run out of money to buy these imports, which these days mostly end up in the wrong hands anyway.
Obviously, getting the motors of domestic agriculture and production up and running is the long-term solution. But while all this will take years – perhaps decades – Fabi is hungry.
So, is it true that Venezuela is about to go over the edge? Well, it may, even before I finish this article. My partner just texted to say that roads to our town are blocked with hunger protests and he is returning to the city.
But to me, the extraordinary thing is that Venezuela has not exploded until now. This crisis is now several years old really, depending on how you measure it.
The fact that the upper echelons of Venezuelan have not exploded is because many have given up on their country and left: two million, mostly young professionals. They are the ones who can qualify for the visas and afford the plane tickets. Some with fewer resources have also left, like those who are paddling to neighboring islands in handmade rafts, including a few whose lifeless bodies drifted to the shores of Aruba.
The fact that those at the lower economic rung have not yet exploded (until now) has different reasons. Venezuelans are an extremely generous people, with a natural sense of solidarity. Whenever those few small spuds are culled from neighboring fields by Rafa, he places a bag of them at my doorstep. I pass bananas to Jenny over my fence. She passes pinto beans to Erica over hers. Erica passes yucca next door to Chichila, Fabi brings me fish that she caught when skipping school, I provide the oil in which to fry it.
This solidarity and natural bartering system that has unfolded in our Venezuela-in-crisis is beautiful, and it is what has allowed us to survive until now. These good-news stories can’t complete with the bad news that the press loves, you have to come and see with your own eyes.
The second reason for delayed explosion is this: Most Venezuelans know that chavismo has (or had) their back, and are very reluctant to give it up. President Chavez very concretely and very pro-actively cared about them. He reduced poverty dramatically and created the most economically equal society in the Americas.
In contrast, the opposition is widely perceived as caring only about themselves. Probably this is because their only agenda item over the years was to topple the government. Small wonder they rarely won the many national elections over the past 17 years.
The opposition did, however win December’s parliamentary elections. Decisively so. But many see this as less a vote of confidence for the opposition, than one of punishment against the Maduro administration, perceived as tone-deaf to their suffering. Although many share Maduro’s belief that the crisis is caused by the right-wing-led economic war , they wonder why he hasn’t done more to combat it.
But this is my sense of the moment: The majority of Venezuelans today are not fans of the opposition. Nor are they fans of the current administration. However (to the chagrin of the State Department) this doesn’t mean that the majority of Venezuelans are not fans of chavismo).
Solutions, Anyone?
So, what is to be done? The solutions to the crisis are as conflicting as the causes. The three major players (Venezuelan government, opposition, and the U.S.) spend endless amounts of time and resources pointing fingers of blame to one another, while doing a poor job of hiding their real political and economic interests. Meanwhile, the losers are the people of Venezuela, who grow hungrier and hungrier.
Somewhat better solutions are coming from Latin America itself. The region has become far more integrated and vastly more independent from the U.S. than previously (and many believe this to be Hugo Chavez’s greatest legacy). This was clear when OAS Secretary General Luis Almagro tried to set into motion Venezuela’s removal from the organization. He received resounding no from its members, including those of the new emerging right. Instead, the OAS member states opted to give support to an ongoing process of dialogue between the government and the opposition. The idea of government-opposition dialogue is not a bad idea. It’s just not enough.
The long-term solution to Venezuela’s problems must come from all sectors of Venezuela. Not just from two polar opposites who have driven Venezuelans to hunger in their pursuit of political and economic power.
Many, but not all, of those excluded identify with chavismo. But there is no political space for them in the tightly controlled hierarchical ruling party structure, nor room for them on the ballot (the largest political party that identifies with chavismo was excluded from elections because the electoral board did not like their name.) Some identify more with the opposition, especially certain pragmatic administrators willing to listen to and accommodate ideas from across the aisle.
Most of these in-between sectors, that I believe make up Venezuela’s majority, want to see less political rhetoric and more economic action. The currency system must undergo radical change. The poor must be guaranteed access to food, but not by subsidizing the product (which ends up in the hands of the corrupt and not the mouths of the poor), but subsidizing their families.
And finally, there is a treasure trove of creative grassroots initiatives and productive solutions that this crisis has unleashed and that merit attention. While Maduro prays for higher oil prices and markets his nation’s pristine lands to Canadian mining companies in a desperate lunge for dollars; and while the U.S. and the Venezuelan opposition push for social explosion and/or military uprising; the people of Venezuela are busy.
They are busy planting food in their backyards and patios, using alternative medicine, sharing with one another, developing a barter system, and creating hundreds, or maybe thousands of products from recycled or locally-sourced renewable sources . These may not totally solve the immediate food crisis but, in the long run, they may actually be opening the door to the kind of society in which we can all survive and thrive.
And back to that 3 a.m. question of what can I do. I guess just more of the same, writing down my thoughts and ripping up more of my lawns to plant food with my neighboring children. Two more hours and I”ll be up with the dawn, awaiting Fabi and friends with shovel and hoe in hand.
Lisa Sullivan has lived in Latin America since 1977. She was a Maryknoll lay worker in Bolivia and Venezuela for over 20 years, coordinator for School of the Americas Watch and founder of grassroots leadership group, Centro de Formación Rutilio Grande.She has three children, raised in Barquisimeto Venezuela.
The Amigo, a GM car build int Costa Rica. Photo from Autos Cozot
QCOSTARICA – Costa Rica is known around the world for coffee, bananas, pineapples and flowers among other agricultural products, that have been the engine of economic growth. But did you know that Costa Rica was some years ago, also a car producing nation?
It was in the 1970s when Costa Rica’s car production began. However, less than a decade later the “Amigo”, the vehicle assembled in Costa Rica, disappeared.
The pick-up type vehicle, similar to the Toyota Landcruiser of the time, was an initiative by the European subsidiary of General Motors (GM), Vauxhall in the UK and Opel in Germany.
The project was from was named the Basic Transportation Vehicle’s (BTV) andaimed at less developed countries.
In the General Motors promo for the BTV, it said all it took to start a BTV plant is a structure about the size of a large barn, US$50.000 dollars and “the national will to begin industrializing“. The promo also said GM was willing to help people in a country to start up their own BTV assembly plant and believed it was their moral obligation of industrialized societies to help less industrialized countries.
Each assembler could name their vehicle. For example, in Guatemala it was named “Chato”. In El Salvador, the “Cherito; in Honduras, “Compadre; in Ecaudor, “Andino”; in Paraguay, the “Mitai”. Nicaraguans called their vehicle the “Pinolero”, while Costa Rica called it the “Amigo”.
The major mechanical components, which could have proven more difficult to build or source locally, were manufactured by Vauxhall. The vehicle parts were brought in from England, with GM providing the training.
Aesthetically the Amigo was unattractive due to the technical difficulties of each country to produce rounded shapes, thus the chassis was rectilinear.
The Amigo came with a 1,256cc (76.5 cu. in.) gasoline engine with a four speed gearbox. It weighed 1.200 Kg, was 3.5 metres long and could carry a 1/2 ton load.
In Costa Rica, the vehicle sold for ¢980.000 colones. The dollar exchange rate in May 1983 was 44.10 colones, making the sale price in US dollars $22.200. (The Banco de Costa Rica – BCCR – exchange rate history does not go beyond 1983, for those who remember the exchange rate in the 70s, please use the comment section below).
Pablo Garro, a resident of Cartago knows the history of the Amigo, working in agriculture at the time. Pablo told Conozcasucanton.com, he recalls its square form, affordable price and was mainly bought by those who owned large farms, using it to make deliveries.
Pablo says the vehicle had little acceptance because it was very small, only for two people and unattractive.
But it did generate pride among Costa Ricans.
Production of the Amigo ended by the late 1970s.
In Nicaragua it was called the PinoleroIn Guatemala it was known as El Chato
QBLOGS – Sorry! But last week’s tragedies and morose news starting with the Death of Muhammad Ali and ending in 50 people mowed down in Orlando, just says to me there is nothing remotely humorous.
There should always be something interesting and “Duh”, but not now.
Simply read Yahoo New, Washington Post News and Huffington Post and it is filled with sad events, off quotes by sensationalist Trump and real life tragedy.
Solís, gets a pass on last week.
I have nothing to say but give a tear of sadness For the United States.
Driving the Ruta 27. Photo from Cositssweet.wordpress.com
Driving the Ruta 27. Photo from Cositssweet.wordpress.com
QBLOGS – For the eighteen years that I have lived in Costa Rica, the majority of which have been in the Metropolitan San Jose area, I have witnessed some pretty horrific driving habits.
I know that I am not the first to make such a statement, nor will I be the last, however, the transformation of some, what are otherwise mild mannered Ticos in a Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde fashion, does deserve a moment of reflection as to why it may happen.
Costa Rica is frequently held-out to be the happiest Country on the face of the planet in the various surveys conducted. It is strange then for a considerable amount of anger and road rage to be exhibited in the driving habits of Ticos. Some Ticos, when behind the wheel of a vehicle, tend to use the vehicle more as a weapon, rather than a means of transport.
“Line jumping” and “cutting-in” is epidemic.
Men tend to be the more aggressive drivers, but I would hasten to say, that in my experience, ninety-nine percent of the time, it will be a man, rather than a woman, who will give you space to enter a line of traffic.
Where does all this pent-up anger come from that is exhibited in driving situations? Does the motor vehicle provide the necessary anonymity required by Ticos to perpetrate violent driving acts on other drivers without fear of any meaningful reprisal? Could it be that Ticos are really not the happy people that they are reported to be?
Discourteous driving habits, particularly in the Metropolitan San Jose area, seem to be the rule, rather than the exception. I know that there are other countries that can attest to poor driving habits as well, but this certainly does not provide an excuse for such activity to go on virtually unchecked in Costa Rica.
Certainly, the response of the Transit Police to such driving habits is less than satisfactory. I have witnessed the Police themselves, particularly on motorbikes, exhibiting poor driving habits in non-emergency situations, such as passing on the right and creating an extra lane between two marked lanes of traffic.
Leaving emergency lights flashing continually on police vehicles, in non-emergency situations also does not instill credibility in police actions in times of an actual emergency. Apparently, the story about, “The Little Boy Who Cried Wolf”, has not been translated into Spanish.
The Transit Police routinely set-up a radar camera speed trap on the Caldera Highway (Route #27) in Santa Ana, in exactly the same spot each time. There are usually no less than five and sometimes as many as seven, or eight police officers gathered around the radar camera, catching only tourists and people who live at the beach speeding, because all the local residents know where they are. Can this be a prudent use of Transit Police resources?
Loss of life and serious injury resulting from motor vehicle accidents is common place in Costa Rica. I believe that on a per capita basis, the loss of life and serious injury ranks high on a world scale. It would be interesting to see those in authority taking a more serious approach to trying to solve what has become a very costly problem for Society as a whole.
QCOSTARICA – A work accident left three dead at a Santa Ana construction site Tuesday when a crane lifting a concrete slab to be placed on beams, gave way.
The accident occurred around 11:00am in the construction of the new Automercado 100 metres from the Cruz Roja de Santa Ana.
The victims were identified as 27 year-old Ashley Pamela Vargas Hall, an engineer on the site, head of works Edilberto Gerardo Rodríguez Quirós, 52 años, and worker León Luis Silfredo Chaves Quirós, 47.
Apparently, the three were performing an inspection in the area when the accident occurred. Several other people in the area were able to flee the falling concrete, avoiding an even greater tragedy.
The Cuerpo de Bomberos, using specialized equipment to recover the bodies. The recovery was completed by 1:20pm.
Francisco Soto, of the Cruz Roda de Escazu, said the three were hit by four concrete beams, each 6 metres long and weighing some 2 tons. “Four concrete beams were being coupled to form a floor, the workers told us. The three people were below those structures when they gave way,” said the Red Cross official.
Soto added that a small infrared camera was used to detect the location of the bodies under the fallen material.
Relatives of the victims arrived at the site and required medical attention by paramedics due to the impact. None required transportation to a hospital.
The construction company, Edificar, in a statement to the press said it would be providing the necessary support to the families of the victims and will investigate the cause of the accident.
Costa Rica president Luis Guillermo Solis on BBC’s Hardtalk
QCOSTARICA – HARDtalk’s Stephen Sackur talks to the President of Costa Rica, Luis Guillermo Solis. In the 23 minute interview, President Solis talks about he is certain that he will succeed in his mandate and is willing to discuss the legalization of cocaine and marijuana in Costa Rica.
“I am not in favour (of the legalization of drugs) but I believe it is a subject to be discussed,” says Solis.
When Stephen Sackur suggests that Solis has failed in getting the country’s “dangerously high public deficit”, Solis doesn’t quite agree, saying his administration is working on the laws that need to be changes in the Congress, adding “…Furthermore the economy is strong, sans the deficit”.
On China, Solis says the Asian giant has not invested as much in Costa Rica as in Latin America. “…China has not put that much (in Costa Rica), China has put a lot of money in Latin America, but in Costa Rica that has not been the case, China has been investing in one huge road…,” says Solis.
On corruption Solis says there has been no corruption in his two years and when Sackur suggests “that is not what Costa Ricans believe”, President Solis says “the (the people) are wrong”.
On drug trafficking and money laundering, the President says it is a huge problem and Costa Rica is a victim and not part of the problem.
The BBC description with the audio, it writes “They used to call Costa Rica the Switzerland of Latin America; it seemed so much more stable, peaceful and prosperous than its neighbours. But now that image is fading as the country faces a budget crisis, endemic poverty, organized crime and corruption. President Solis came to power promising change, so what’s gone wrong?”