Letter on Faecbook urges people to stop calling President Luis Guillermo Solis an idiot and to look in the mirror first.
TICO BULL – Not everyone in Costa Rica has a bad opinion of Luis Guillermo Solis. Joyce Del Castillo, a young woman decided to write a letter on her Facebook account, for all who criticize everything that happens negative is the fault of the Luis Guillermo Solis.
The letter describes problems especially as traffic chaos and employment.
The young woman, in her follow-up post, says she had noideathat it would have such an impact, “it was not my intention … but it is what it is.”
In her letter, she writes, “Stop calling the president and idiot. Stop calling him useless. If we have traffic chaos is because you are not able to respect a stop sign, or instead of yield to let someone by you accelerate, those of you who make a third lane on a road where there are only two, you have no right to call anyone a fool.”
Del Castillo continues with points like, “to you when a traffic official stops you, you offer ’10 rojito’ (10,000 colones) for coffee; when you have to go to Riteve you change the tires lent to you by your and then return it Don’t be a moron and do not call the president an idiot.”
Del Castillo touches on issues like on littering the streets, using ‘family contacts in government’ to get ahead of a line or a favour or to take cash to avoid paying taxes or speeding through a toll to avoid paying ¢100 colones or crash with the train, “you can call anyone else inept”.
Or if you have no interest in learning English and then complain that you can’t get a good paying job. Or won’t take the job because the pay is too low. Or get a medical leave just to skip out on work. Or read only the news headlines, the gossip instead of learning the facts. Or believe that in 2 years one man can change decades of corruption, “then you are the stupid one”.
The young woman closes her letter with, “If you really want to blame one person for the situation, do yourself a favor, look in the mirror and instead of saying ‘oh the dumbest president” and see your reflection. For a country is not made by only one person (the President). And believe that makes you the real idiot in history. ”
So far this morning, the letter post on Friday had more than 8.9K shares. The comments were positive, agreeing with the woman, but still believe the president is an idiot.
One commentary by Marco Molina said, “If only we all put in a bit for the country, we would be in a better situation, but of course as Ticos we seek the easy way out”.
When a Venezuelan entrepreneur we know launched a manufacturing company in western Venezuela two decades ago, he never imagined he’d one day find himself facing jail time over the toilet paper in the factory’s restrooms.
But Venezuela has a way of turning yesterday’s unimaginable into today’s normal.
The entrepreneur’s ordeal started about a year ago, when the factory union began to insist on enforcing an obscure clause in its collective-bargaining agreement requiring the factory’s restrooms to be stocked with toilet paper at all times.
The problem was that, amid deepening shortages of virtually all basic products (from rice and milk to deodorant and condoms) finding even one roll of toilet paper was nearly impossible in Venezuela—let alone finding enough for hundreds of workers. When the entrepreneur did manage to find some TP, his workers, understandably, took it home: It was just as hard for them to find it as it was for him.
Toilet-paper theft may sound like a farce, but it’s a serious matter for the entrepreneur: Failing to stock the restrooms puts him in violation of his agreement with the union, and that puts his factory at risk of a prolonged strike, which in turn could lead to its being seized by the socialist government under the increasingly unpopular President Nicolas Maduro.
So the entrepreneur turned to the black market, where he found an apparent solution: a supplier able to deliver, all at once, enough TP to last a few months. (We’re not naming the entrepreneur lest the government retaliate against him.) The price was steep but he had no other option—his company was at risk.
But the problem wasn’t solved.
No sooner had the TP delivery reached the factory than the secret police swept in. Seizing the toilet paper, they claimed they had busted a major hoarding operation, part of a U.S.-backed “economic war” the Maduro government holds responsible for creating Venezuela’s shortages in the first place. The entrepreneur and three of his top managers faced criminal prosecution and possible jail time.
All of this over toilet paper.
The entrepreneur is one of the real people behind those zany “there’s no toilet paper in Venezuela” stories that play up the crisis for laughs, and clicks. But to Venezuelans like the present writers, and the entrepreneur, there’s nothing funny about the dark turn our country has taken.
The experiment with “21st-century socialism” as introduced by the late President Hugo Chavez, a self-described champion of the poor who vowed to distribute the country’s wealth among the masses, and instead steered the nation toward the catastrophe the world is witnessing under his handpicked successor Maduro, has been a cruel failure.
Former Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez (Reuters)
Anatomy of a collapse
Developing countries, like teenagers, are prone to accidents. One pretty much expects them to suffer an economic crash, a political crisis, or both, with some regularity. The news coming from Venezuela—including shortages as well as, most recently, riots over blackouts; the imposition of a two-day workweek for government employees, supposedly aimed at saving electricity; and an accelerating drive to recall the president—is dire, but also easy to dismiss as representing just one more of these recurrent episodes.
That would be a mistake. What our country is going through is monstrously unique: It’s nothing less than the collapse of a large, wealthy, seemingly modern, seemingly democratic nation just a few hours’ flight from the United States.
But why? It’s not that the country lacked money. Sitting atop the world’s largest reserves of oil at the tail end of a frenzied oil boom, the government led first by Chavez and, since 2013, by Maduro, received over a trillion dollars in oil revenues over the last 17 years. It faced virtually no institutional constraints on how to spend that unprecedented bonanza.
The real culprit is chavismo, the ruling philosophy named for Chavez and carried forward by Maduro, and its truly breathtaking propensity for mismanagement (the government plowed state money arbitrarily into foolish investments); institutional destruction (as Chavez and then Maduro became more authoritarian and crippled the country’s democratic institutions); nonsense policy-making (like price and currency controls); and plain thievery (as corruption has proliferated among unaccountable officials and their friends and families).
A case in point is the price controls, which have expanded to apply to more and more goods: food and vital medicines, yes, but also car batteries, essential medical services, deodorant, diapers, and, of course, toilet paper.
Juan Requesens, right, deputy of the Venezuelan coalition of opposition parties (MUD), argues with Venezuela’s National Guards at the National Electoral Council (CNE) headquarters in Caracas, Venezuela, April 21, 2016.REUTERS/Marco Bello
The ostensible goal was to check inflation and keep goods affordable for the poor, but anyone with a basic grasp of economics could have foreseen the consequences: When prices are set below production costs, sellers can’t afford to keep the shelves stocked. Official prices are low, but it’s a mirage: The products have disappeared.
When a state is in the process of collapse, dimensions of decay feed back on each other in an intractable cycle. Populist giveaways, for example, have fed the country’s ruinous flirtation with hyperinflation; the International Monetary Fund now projects that prices will rise by 720 percent this year and 2,200 percent in 2017.
There are many theories about the deeper forces that have destroyed Venezuela’s economy, torn apart its society and devastated its institutions, but their result is ultimately a human tragedy representing one of the most severe humanitarian crises facing the Western hemisphere. Here we offer, through a few vignettes, a glimpse of what it’s like for some of the individuals who are living the collapse and seeing no one held accountable.
Who killed Maikel Mancilla Peña?
Finding the basic requirements of daily life has become the main preoccupation of Venezuelan families—and it can be a matter of life and death. At 14 years old, Maikel Mancilla Peña had been battling epilepsy for six years.
His condition was under control, just about, thanks to a common anti-convulsive prescription drug called Lamotrigine. It had long been a struggle for his family to get it, but as the gap between the real cost of the drugs and the maximum pharmacies were allowed to charge for them grew, it became impossible to find them.
On February 11th this year, Maikel’s mom Yamaris gave him the last Lamotrigine tablet in their stash. None of Yamaris’s usual pharmacies had any anti-convulsants in stock.
She worked social media— which in Venezuela these days is filled with desperate people trying to source scarce medicines—but no luck. She drove hours to track down a lead, but came up empty-handed.
In the following days, Maikel experienced a series of increasingly violent epileptic seizures, as his family watched helplessly. On February 20th, he suffered respiratory failure and died.
People walk past shelves mostly filled with the same product at a state-run supermarket in Caracas, Venezuela, January 9, 2015. REUTERS/Carlos Garcia Rawlins
While Venezuelans were dying for lack of simple, inexpensive pills, their radical socialist government was spending tens of millions a year to keep a native son, Pastor Maldonado, competing in the Formula 1 global auto-racing circuit.
You could be forgiven for not having heard of Maldonado—a mediocre driver who managed to win a single race in five years in the sport. Still, Venezuela’s state-owned oil company, PDVSA, spent some $45 million each year to keep Maldonado racing under its logo. Why an oil company without a retail arm and with monopoly rights to Venezuelan oil needs to advertise in the first place was never clear.
Yet Maldonado, whose habit of crashing in race after race earned him the nickname “Crashtor,” was only forced out of the F1 circuit this year, when PDVSA, hit by the oil crash, failed to come up with the sponsorship money.
The breakdown of law and order is so severe that even children are being robbed. At Nuestra Señora del Carmen school in El Cortijo, a struggling neighborhood of Caracas, supplies for the school-lunch program have been stolen twice this year already: Thugs have broken into the school’s pantry late at night after fresh food is delivered. The second burglary meant the school couldn’t feed the kids for at least a week.
Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro speaks during his weekly broadcast “en contacto con Maduro” (In contact with Maduro), in Margarita IslandThomson Reuters
Elsewhere, school food programs have simply stopped working, because the government apparently can’t keep them supplied. In poorer communities, parents often respond to this by taking their kids out of school: They’re more useful standing in line outside a grocery store than sitting in a classroom.
Still, some politicians seem to have found the bright side of their citizens’ hunger: The opposition-controlled National Assembly alleges that government officials or their cronies stole some $200 billion in food-import scams alone since 2003.
The crime outbreak feeds the zika outbreak
In the midst of all this, Venezuela is facing one of the worst Zika outbreaks in South America, and it’s an epidemic the country can hardly measure, much less respond to. The Universidad Central de Venezuela’s Institute for Tropical Medicine is where the crime and public-health crises collide.
The institute—ground zero in the country’s response to tropical epidemics—was burglarized a shocking 11 times in the first two months of 2016. The last two break-ins took place within 48 hours of one another, leaving the lab without a single microscope. Burglars rampaged through the lab, scattering samples of highly dangerous viruses and toxic fungal spores into the air.
Conditions like those make it virtually impossible for institute researchers to do their work, crippling the country’s response to the Zika outbreak. And attempts to repair the damage are undercut by the same dysfunctions that afflict the rest of the economy: There’s just no money to replace the expensive imported equipment criminals have stolen.
Other aspects of state collapse feed back on the Zika crisis as well. Venezuelan cities’ water infrastructure is crumbling after nearly two decades of neglect. That would be hard at the best of times, but this year’s El Niño has brought an acute drought to most of the country. Water utilities have responded to falling reservoir levels with harsh rationing measures.
Neighborhoods and shantytowns can go for days and even weeks with no piped water. Most people adapt by filling several buckets when service is provided, in preparation for the dry periods. Of course, storing water in buckets is precisely what you shouldn’t do when facing a mosquito-borne epidemic: The containers double as breeding grounds for the bugs that transmit the Zika virus, as well as others like Chikungunya, dengue, even malaria.
Children fill plastic containers with water from a well on a street, close to a neighbourhood called “The Tank” in the slum of Petare in Caracas, Venezuela, March 17, 2016.Reuters
No Power, no justice
The same drought that’s forcing water rationing has seen water levels at the country’s electricity-generating dams fall alarmingly. Blackouts used to at least spare the capital, but these days they’re nationwide, as the public utilities struggle to keep enough water in the reservoirs to prevent a complete collapse in the power grid.
It didn’t have to be this way. Since 2009, hundreds of millions of dollars have been devoted to building new diesel and natural gas-burning power plants. The new plants were meant specifically to relieve pressure from the aging hydroelectric network.
Following Venezuela closely means hearing any number of stories like these. The happy, hopeful stage of Venezuela’s experiment with Chavez’s 21st-century socialism is a fading memory. What’s been left is a visibly failing state that still leans hard on left-wing rhetoric in a doomed bid to maintain some shred of legitimacy. A country that used to attract fellow travelers and admirers in serious numbers now holds fascination for rubberneckers: stunned outsiders enthralled by the spectacle of collapse.
To the Venezuelans who live its consequences day after day, the spectacle is considerably less amusing. Our toilet-paper-seeking industrialist found very little mirth in it. After being arrested on absurd charges of hoarding, he realized that it was just a shakedown: The cops were far less interested in his toilet paper than his money.
“Their opening bid was in the high hundreds of thousands of dollars,” he said. “I thought that was a bit much; we bargained.”
In the end, he said, the cops agreed to drop the criminal charges for a few tens of thousands of dollars.
That time, the regime’s appetite for theft trumped its instinct for repression. Next time, who can tell?
Laura Chinchilla was elected the first woman president of Costa Rica
Laura Chinchilla was in 2010 elected the first woman president of Costa Rica.
Q24N- Hillary Clinton seems to be one step closer to becoming the first woman president of the United States. But more than 60 other countries, including Costa Rica, beat the U.S. to that milestone.
In Latin America (South and Central America and the Caribbean), a total of seven countries (Costa Rica, Brazil, Peru, Chile, Nicaragua, Panama and Argentina) elected its first female president
Here’s a list of ALL the countries that had a woman leader before the U.S.
The list is sorted by the date each country elected or appointed its first female head of state (president or prime minister). It does not include acting or interim leaders who were not later elected or confirmed.
2010s
Australia: Julia Gillard, 2010
Costa Rica: Laura Chinchilla, 2010
Kyrgyzstan: Roza Otunbayeva, 2010
Slovakia: Iveta Radičová, 2010
Trinidad and Tobago: Kamla Persad-Bissessar, 2010
Denmark: Helle Thorning-Schmidt, 2011
Kosovo: Atifete Jahjaga, 2011
Mali: Cissé Mariam Kaïdama Sidibé, 2011
Thailand: Yingluck Shinawatra, 2011
Malawi: Joyce Banda, 2012
Slovenia: Alenka Bratušek, 2013
Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus: Sibel Siber, 2013
Brazil: Dilma Rousseff, 2014
Mauritius: Ameenah Firdaus Gurib-Fakim, 2015
Namibia: Saara Kuugongelwa-Amadhila, 2015
Nepal: Bidhya Devi Bhandari, 2015
Taiwan: Tsai Ing-wen, 2016
2000s
Finland: Tarja Halonen, 2001
Indonesia: Megawati Sukarnoputri, 2001
Senegal: Mame Madior Boye, 2001
São Tomé and Príncipe: Maria das Neves, 2002
Peru: Beatriz Merino, 2003
Macedonia: Radmila Šekerinska, 2004
Mozambique: Luísa Diogo, 2004
Germany: Angela Merkel, 2005
Ukraine: Yulia Tymoshenko, 2005
Chile: Michelle Bachelet, 2006
Jamaica: Portia Simpson-Miller, 2006
Liberia: Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, 2006
South Korea: Han Myung-sook, 2006
Moldova: Zinaida Greceanîi, 2008
Croatia: Jadranka Kosor, 2009
1990s
Ireland: Mary Robinson, 1990
Lithuania: Kazimira Danutė Prunskienė, 1990
Nicaragua: Violeta Barrios Torres de Chamorro, 1990
Bangladesh: Khaleda Zia, 1991
France: Édith Cresson, 1991
Poland: Hanna Suchocka, 1992
Burundi: Sylvie Kinigi, 1993
Canada: Kim Campbell, 1993
Rwanda: Agathe Uwilingiyimana, 1993
Turkey: Tansu Çiller, 1993
Haiti: Claudette Werleigh, 1995
Guyana: Janet Rosenberg, 1997
New Zealand: Jenny Shipley, 1997
Latvia: Vaira Vīķe-Freiberga, 1999
Panama: Mireya Elisa Moscoso Rodríguez, 1999
Switzerland: Ruth Dreifuss, 1999
1980s
Dominica: Eugenia Charles, 1980
Iceland: Vigdís Finnbogadóttir, 1980
Norway: Gro Harlem Brundtland, 1981
Malta: Agatha Barbara, 1982
Philippines: Corazon Aquino, 1986
Pakistan: Benazir Bhutto, 1988
1970s
Argentina: Isabel Perón, 1974
Central African Republic: Elisabeth Domitien, 1975
Portugal: Maria de Lourdes Pintasilgo, 1979
United Kingdom: Margaret Thatcher, 1979
1960s
Sri Lanka: Sirimavo Bandaranaike, 1960
India: Indira Gandhi, 1966
Israel: Golda Meir, 1969
List from CNN Politics, update June 9, 2106. Click here for the original article at CNN.
QCOSTARICA – Following rumours that Burger King would be back in Costa Rica, it is now a reality. The U.S. hamburger restaurant chain is back.
The first restaurants (located in the San Jose area) will open next Tuesday, June 14.
“El secreto ya no es secreto” (the secret is no longer a secret) is the notice sent to the media on Friday.
In a preview of what is to come, the chain says all the restaurants will have the same design and menu and will operate with standards similar to the restaurants in the United States.
The closing of the franchise last year was mainly due to the previous operator’s falling behind on standards set by the parent, including lack of publicity and failing to renovate the brand during the last months of operation. Last October, the Burger King Corporation in the United States ordered the closure of the 29 BK brand restaurants in Costa Rica, leaving 434 people out of work.
Since, some of the old BK locations have been absorbed by other fast food franchises like KFC, Popeye’s and McDonalds. The La Sabana BK is now a car rental office.
QCOSTARICA – Two years after taking office on the promises of change, many today are upset (to put it lightly) with President Luis Guillermo Solis.
The social media is filled with memes, satire articles, cartoons, etc. of the Prez and his…
The latest is the video “La Cancion de Luisgui: Todo Era Mentira” (Luisgui’s song, everything was a lie), posted on the Pura Vida Mae Facebook page this past Tuesday.
In the video, that appears to be recorded in front of Casa Presidenical in Zapote, the unknown singer – with the “El Me Mintio” (He Lied To Me) song by Amanda Miguel – relates the story, in words and images, of the lies told by the President. As of this posting, the video had more than 340,000 views.
Q24N – A joint operation involving authorities in Paraguay, Spain and France has broken up a multi-country sex trafficking network, illustrating some of the lesser-known international dynamics of this illicit business.
In a recent press release, the Paraguayan Attorney General’s office announced that the National Police, in conjunction with their French and Spanish counterparts, had broken up an operation that trafficked Paraguayan women to Europe for the purpose of sexually exploiting them.
EASIER TO SMUGGLE THAN COCAINE. Amnesty International defines human trafficking as “the possession of people by improper means, such as force, threat or deception, for the purpose of exploiting them”, improper means defined by UN Protocol as anything from “violent coercion… abduction… fraud… [or] deception”. Human trafficking covers many forms of exploitation, from sex work (including prostitution of minors) to enforced/domestic labour, and even the non-consensual removal of human organs.
The suspected traffickers allegedly lured women from one of Paraguay’s poorest areas, the department of Caaguazú, and from the criminal hotspot of Ciudad del Este by offering them false promises of well-paid jobs in Europe. Once they were in Europe, the women were coerced into prostitution at private residences in France and massage parlors in Spain.
A June 3 press release from the European Union law enforcement body Europol, which supported the investigation, stated 15 victims were identified for protection and 14 suspects were arrested, some of whom are also being investigated for money laundering and drug trafficking.
According to the investigation, the trafficking ring was based in Ciudad del Este and was led by the Aquino Arca family, whose members include current and former members of the local police force.
Despite its relatively small population of less than 7 million people, Paraguay serves as a major source country for sex trafficking in Europe.
In a recent interview with Ultima Hora, Irma Pérez Vecvort, the director of the Association for the Prevention, Reinsertion and Attention to Prostituted Women (Asociación para la Prevención, Reinserción y Atención a la Mujer Prostituida – APRAMP), said over a third of women working as prostitutes in Spain are Paraguayan. According to a December 2015 report from APRAMP, many of these women fell victim to schemes similar to the one described above.
The factors driving the sexual exploitation of Paraguayan women in Europe are complex. Poverty and lack of opportunities in Paraguay make it relatively easy for traffickers to lure with false promises of future employment. But the Paraguayan government’s general lack of attention to this issue has also likely contributed to the persistence of the problem.
The most recent Trafficking in Persons report from the US State Department (pdf) found that the government “does not fully comply with the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking,” and that the “law enforcement response in some parts of the country was severely limited or delayed.” The report also described measures aimed at identifying and protecting victims of human trafficking as “uneven.”
However, the report recognizes Paraguay is “making significant efforts” to comply with international standards, a statement reinforced by this recent international action.
Q24N – The recent arrest of a Salvadoran mayor, charged with using his position to provide favors to gang members in exchange for political benefits, illustrates the deep ties that can exist between criminal and political actors in El Salvador.
The Salvadoran Attorney General’s Office (Fiscalía General de la República – FGR) confirmed the arrest of José Elias Hernández, the mayor of the San Salvador-area municipality of Apopa, in a June 5 message posted on its official Twitter account.
The FGR alleges that Hernández headed a criminal structure, which offered goods and employment to gang members — paid for with public funds — in exchange for the gang members’ votes and promises to reduce violence levels.
Prosecutors have also accused the mayor of ordering the November 1, 2013, murder of a gang member named Carlos Arroyo, alias “El Humilde.” The motive for that alleged crime remains unclear.
Hernández has denied wrongdoing, suggesting the charges against him are politically motivated since he belongs to the opposition ARENA party.
A June 6 press release from the FGR announced that 15 municipal employees had been arrested in connection with the case. A June 7 press release stated 14 gang members were also arrested, and that charges had been brought against 22 gang members who were already in prison.
Citing an unnamed official, La Prensa Gráfica reported a total of 97 people face charges in connection with the case.
According to a source in the police consulted by InSight Crime, who is knowledgeable about the case and who requested anonymity due to its sensitive nature, preliminary investigations found that Hernández may have been paying several thousand dollars per month to the MS13 gang and to a faction of the Barrio 18 gang known as the Revolucionarios, or Revolutionaries, from the municipal budget.
The source also said evidence indicates a city council member acted as a middleman between the mayor’s office and the Revolucionarios faction of Barrio 18, which appears to have been the main beneficiary of the corrupt activities.
The director of the National Civil Police (Policía Nacional Civil – PNC), Howard Cotto, stated the municipal government purchased cell phones, vehicles and fuel for gang members that facilitated their involvement in extortion, to which the local government turned a blind eye. The gang members were also allegedly allowed to use a municipally-owned garage to service their vehicles.
Police director Cotto also indicated that the mayor’s office provided employment to gang members. InSight Crime’s source says this allegedly included hiring gang members as municipal street cleaners, and employing a gang member as the head of the local slaughterhouse.
Additionally, Cotto has stated that the mayor’s office permitted gang members to use public spaces for concerts and other gang-related recreational activities.
In an interview with the news program Frente a Frente, the former Attorney General of El Salvador (2006-2009), Félix Garrid Safie, predicted similar cases would arise in the future.
“It seems to me that [the Apopa mayor’s office] will not be the only one of the 262 mayor’s offices [nationwide] that has this type of intimate relationship with the gangs,” said Safie. “I think other cases are coming.”
InSight Crime Analysis
The allegations against Hernández, as well as dozens of municipal employees and gang members, is a worrisome indication of the extent to which criminal groups can penetrate local institutions and cultivate political clout in El Salvador.
But the nature of that relationship remains murky. While gang members were apparently given free reign to extort the local population in Apopa, using vehicles and telephones paid for by the municipal government, there was not any clear quid pro quo. Was it business or was it politics that motivated the mayor?
InSight Crime’s source said the mayor may have been receiving money from the gangs’ extortion activities. But he may also have exchanged municipal money for votes and promises to reduce violence. If that’s the case, it’s not clear the gangs held up their end of the bargain. Official statistics show Apopa’s murder rate has risen in recent years, and InSight Crime’s source says the gang members hired as street cleaners often shirked their duties.
In some ways, this local case mirrors recent developments at the national level. The Salvadoran government is currently prosecuting ex-officials linked to a controversial, officially-mediated gang truce from early 2012 through late 2013. The truce has been credited with contributing to a dramatic reduction in El Salvador‘s homicide rate. And while it did have an effect on violence, it has also come under criticism amid indications that gang leaders were provided with perks like guns, cell phones and prison yard “porno parties” in exchange for their participation.
Still others, like InSight Crime contributing writer Héctor Silva Ávalos, have pointed out the seeming hypocrisy of the current government prosecuting former officials for alleged ties to the truce, even as evidence surfaces indicating members of the current presidential administration previously sought political support from gangs and to use the lower murder rate to their political advantage.
The nexus between crime and politics is hardly new or unique to El Salvador; criminal organizations around the world continuously seek to forge mutually beneficial relationships with powerful political actors. However, the type of scheme seen in Apopa may point to an increasing sophistication and ambition on the part of Salvadoran gangs, which, according to some analysts, are attempting to use their political cachet in order to further their illicit activities. Untangling the mixed political and economic motives behind these relationships may prove equally troubling.
Venezuela, regrettably, paid the full price of the so-called 21st century socialism. (Ideas de Babel)
Venezuela, regrettably, paid the full price of the so-called 21st century socialism. (Ideas de Babel)
The catastrophe of 21st-century socialism in Latin America could have been worse — except for Venezuela, who was completely destroyed by it.
Since 1990, the insane political project has taken over almost the entire continent. It was a “new era,” as Brad Pitt put it when he visited Ecuador.
Former President of Brazil Lula da Silva organized the Sao Paulo Forum that year to seek a new revolutionary pathway in the region — a plan that was turned out to be politically successful without a doubt. The left — formerly characterized by insurrections, declarations, and violent acts — transformed into a wolf in sheep’s clothing and began preaching about democracy.
They coupled their newly-found democratic rhetoric with electoral campaigns to achieve what they never could with old violent methods.
Their strategic shift turned out to be successful. Catalan, French, and Austrian theorists came to aid with an empty and dangerous “neo-Republican” rethoric that was fashionable at the time.
They spoke of “true” and “direct” democracy, a “citizen revolution” to found a “new republic” that is against traditional politics and the corrupt elites — sophistry that fascinated the dim-witted democrats.
This is how Hugo Chávez came to power in Venezuela in 1998, Lula in Brazil in 2002, Néstor Kirchner in Argentina in 2003, Tabaré Vázquez in Uruguay in 2004, Evo Morales in Bolivia in 2005, Michelle Bachelet in 2013, Rafael Correa in Ecuador in 2007, and Daniel Ortega in Nicaragua on and off throughout the years.
We Got Out Rather Cheaply
Cristina Kirchner assumed power in Argentina in 2007 following the death of her husband and governed until 2015. In 2008, Fernando Lugo with the Patriotic Alliance triumphed in Paraguay but was ousted in 2012.
In 2009, José Mujica succeeded Tabaré Vázquez in Uruguay, and Mauricio Funes won with the democratic socialist party of El Salvador (FMLN – Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front).
Dilma Rousseff replaced Lula in Brazil in 2010 and was re-elected in 2014. Keeping it all in the family, Ollanta Humala won in Peru in 2011.
Nicolás Maduro assumed control of Venezuela in an unorthodox manner in 2013 after Hugo Chavez’s death. Once again Bachelet was elected in 2014 and the FMLN in El Salvador kept power with Salvador Sánchez Cerén.
In 2015, Tabaré Vázquez returned to power in Uruguay.
Along the way, fortunately for this ill-fated continent, many of them like Vázquez, Mujica, Bachelet, Funes, and Humala abandoned their revolutionary, populist or raging positions and dedicated themselves to governing civilly.
Others pulled out their authoritarian fangs, breaking the law to keep themselves in office — such as Ortega in Nicaragua and Morales in Bolivia — all the while preserving a dynamic economy.
The Kirchners, meanwhile, are more of a mafia than a political party, with unbridled corruption and authoritarianism at the heart of everything they do. The family decided not to pay the country’s foreign debt, instead faking an economic boom and swindling thousands of bondholders.
Argentina has been unable to free itself from the ghost of Juan Domingo Perón, the immensely popular strongman who managed to destroy a flourishing nation in only nine years. Six decades later, this phantom continues to keep Argentina from holding its head up high.
In Brazil, Lula survived okay during the commodities price boom, but ultimately couldn’t keep up his predecessor’s economic reforms in the face of such a large corruption scheme enriching the leaders beneath him. The recently suspended Dilma Rousseff and the Workers Party benefited the most from this.
Ecuador’s Correa is perhaps the most pathetic. The press has been forbidden from publishing statistics about the struggling economy, which the president damaged in part with his “electronic money” idea to undermine the official currency, the US dollar. He destroyed the middle class, and yet claims there has been a “decade of gain” in the country.
As for Venezuela, we can only pray that future generations get the message and do not have to go through again the shortages, inflation, and death.
Latin American countries must face the challenge of making changes from the ground up if they don’t want populism to make a comeback in the future. The transitions in Brazil and Argentina are being put to the test; their leaders will need to transform the country without losing support.
This Latin American adventure of little despots, corruption, failure, and ideological intoxication has touched almost everyone in some way. There is a lesson somewhere in here for the whole continent. Perhaps it’s this: revolutionaries are hopeless, even if they dress in silk.
The benefit to peeing in the shower? It saves water. And saves money on toilet paper, which in Costa Rica is pretty darn expensive.
QLIFE- Admit to peeing in the shower, and you may get some dirty looks—but really you should be getting a gold star for helping to save the planet. Mic makes a compelling case for relieving oneself in the shower that goes beyond morning laziness.
According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, flushing toilets accounts for 27 percent of America’s water usage. Newer toilets use 1.6 gallons per flush, and older models can use significantly more (as much as 7 gallons). The average adult urinates six to eight times a day, which means that, worst-case scenario, you could be using 56 gallons in the span of 24 hours just by pressing a lever.
As Mic points out, relieving yourself in the shower instead of the toilet is really only helpful if you can multitask. Standing and peeing while gallons of water wash over you—and down the drain—is still wasteful; instead, let it flow while you wash your hair, cleanse your face, or brush your teeth (another water-saving technique).
Bonus: Peeing in the shower also helps you save on toilet paper. And we all know how expensive toilet paper is in Costa Rica.
Still grossed out by the thought? You can rest easy knowing that Glamour sanctioned the practice back in 2009. According to the mag, “Unless you have an infection, urine is sterile and nontoxic.” There you have it.
The Etiquette of Shower Peeing
The five unspoken but very important commandments of shower peeing.
1. Thou must not wee in a dry shower. No matter how bad you have to go, don’t you dare start until the water stream does.
2. Thou must rinse thoroughly. You should make sure you’re washing down a reasonable amount of water after you start your pee. Otherwise your shower’s going to start smelling pretty ghastly.
3. Thou must aim carefully. If you’re going to do it, aim for the drain, not for the walls. You might scoff reading that, but ladies can be just as capable of urine pyrotechnics as men.
4. Thou must not on another. Tandem showering is all fun and games until someone gets peed on. It may be hilarious but it can leave the other person horrified? Yeah, don’t do that. Unless they specifically ask for it. Peeing on another human is not a friendly thing to do. In fact, probably just wait until you’re showering solo.
5. Thou must not pee in a public shower. Come on. This is just good manners.
Over to you. Is peeing in the shower a terrible thing to do? Or totally fine? Use the comments below or visit out Facebook page to tell your story.
The paradisiacal of Costa Rica’s Isla del Coco (Cocos Island) is embodied in a video by the Undersea Hunter Group and shared on social networks this week by the Fundación Amigos de la Isla del Coco (Faico) – Foundation Friends of Cocos Island.
The video, recorded in 2012 by Ofer Ketter in a helicopter flown by Simon Bratby, capatures the lush vegetation and some of the beaches that characterize the land a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1997.
The Isla del Coco, designated as a National Park off the shore of Costa Rica, that does not allow inhabitants other than Costa Rican Park Rangers, is located in the Pacific Ocean, approximately 550 km (342 mi) from the Pacific shore of Costa Rica, with an area of approximately 23.85 square kilometres (9.21 square miels).
In 2009 Cocos Island was short-listed as a candidate to be declared one of the New7Wonders of Nature of the world by the New7Wonders of the World Foundation, and ranked second in the islands category.
The Caribbean archipelago of San Andrés, Colombia, has been a smuggling hub for centuries, serving as a crossroads for illegal activities between mainland Colombia and Central America. Today, these highly strategic islands remain a favorite stopover point for organized crime.
The sun-drenched island of San Andrés, located 110 kilometers from the coast of Nicaragua and around 720 kilometers from the Colombian mainland, has seen violent crime surge over the past ten years.
Behind this is a deep history of criminal activity. Transnational drug traffickers have for decades used the 52.5km² archipelago of San Andrés, Providence (Providencia) and Santa Catalina, to move tons of illicit goods north to the United States, while contraband products moved in the opposite direction. The repercussions of the trade have hit the local population the hardest.
Pirates, Contraband and Cartels
Colombia’s distant archipelago has been a smuggling hub for at least a century.
“In … San Andrés and Providencia there is a historical memory … of pirates and freebooters, and a tradition of contraband that has its roots at the start of the 20th century, as a result of its proximity to the Panama Canal,” reads a recent report (pdf) called “Multiculturalism and border security in the archipelago of San Andrés and Providencia” by the Friedrich Ebert Foundation (FES).
Decades later, a larger player discovered that the islands were ideal for smuggling drugs north. The Cali Cartel began to establish a foothold in the archipelago in the late 1980s, according to the FES report by Inge Helena Valencia.
San Andrés’ big allure — apart from lax controls over maritime movement and cheaper costs — was to be found in the inhabitants themselves.
San Andrés island
“San Andrés has a peculiarity: its sea is very rocky,” said deputy attorney Gustavo Restrepo Ortiz, who lived in San Andres in the 1980s and 1990s. “The islander is the one who knows what exit route to take, he was the one who would drive the go-fast boats.”
Due to their specialty in navigating the Caribbean waters, locals were hired to transport gasoline out to sea to refuel large ships loaded with illicit cargo. They would eventually move drugs themselves, making the three-hour speedboat journey to Nicaragua or the overnight trip to the Mexican coast.
Locals were generally tolerant of the illegal activities happening on their islands, as these did not have a big impact on citizen security during the early years.
The Cali Cartel continued to dominate trafficking in San Andrés until it was dismantled in the mid 1990s. But the dynamic would change completely with the demobilization of Colombia’s umbrella paramilitary organization (Autodefensas Unidas de Colombia – AUC) in the mid-2000s, which led to the creation of a series of splinter groups that would be labeled “criminal bands” (bandas criminales – BACRIM).
BACRIM Take Over
The BACRIM set their sights on San Andrés’s as part of their new expansion process, according to a 2013 report by Colombia’s Bank of the Republic on violence and drug trafficking in the archipelago (pdf).
By 2012, drug movements through the islands were coordinated by two local families, according to the prosecutor, who worked on a case in San Andrés in 2014. Traffickers from the mainland would get together to organize shipments to the archipelago from the port cities of Cartagena or Barranquilla. One of the two clans would then have their people take the drugs from San Andrés to Mexico, where they were delivered to the Colombian traffickers’ contacts in the Sinaloa Cartel. The drugs would then continue on their journey to the United States, by sea or by land. To ensure the family did not steal the cargo, a relative would travel with the drugs as insurance and return to the islands once the transaction was finalized.
Drug trafficking routes from Colombia, using data from the Colombian Navy (FES report)
For a long time, these two families worked side-by-side without incident.
“The problems began with the arrival of the Rastrojos,” Sarmiento said.
The Rastrojos allegedly decided they wanted to move drugs through San Andrés, but refused to pay taxes to the established family networks. They found a way around this by joining forces with one of the families. The other clan, now alone and without the finances to match their rivals, reached out for an ally.
“That’s when the Urabeños come in,” the prosecutor explained. “It’s also when dead people began appearing in Cartagena.”
According to Sarmiento, the victims of the “barbaric clashes” between the two groups would be killed in San Andrés and dumped in the mainland coastal city of Cartagena so as to not attract too much attention from security forces. Most of the dead were members of the Rastrojos, who would ultimately be defeated, Sarmiento said.
Public prosecutor Victor Arroyave also worked on a case in San Andrés up until 2015. While he was there, Arroyave told InSight Crime, the Urabeños were “the only criminal organization” present on the island.
Trouble in Paradise
With the arrival of the BACRIM in the late 2000s, murder rates and other types of illicit activities began to surge on the previously calm islands.
“The arrival of violent practices from the mainland introduces new dynamics such as fear, threats, torture and assassination,” the FES report says. “Violence is imposed as a new way of resolving conflicts … in a society that had not traditionally been used it.”
San Andrés would be introduced to a modus operandi typically associated with Colombia’s paramilitaries. For the first time, locals were being contracted as “mini-bosses,” assassins, extortionists, lookouts, messengers, and for other “dirty jobs.”
Arroyave said the base salary for a local Urabeños foot soldier was roughly $489 (1,500,000 COP), while transporters could earn more.
As a result, young men from the islands have been the primary victims of San Andrés’ drug trafficking boom. From a population of approximately 77,000, over 300 people in the department are behind bars in the United States and Central America, according to the FES report. Around 100 more have been killed due to “score settling” and over 60 people have perished on the high seas in the past five years.
The impact on the small nearby island of Providence — where traffickers rely on locals to navigate drugs across the high seas — is perhaps even more strongly felt. According to a 2015 BBC documentary, up to 800 of Providence’s men have been lost at sea or imprisoned abroad, which is over a quarter of the male population.
Nevertheless, Sarmiento believes that the situation in San Andrés now is far calmer than it used to be for one reason: “because now there is only one [criminal] group left.”
Drug Money and Modernization
Drug trafficking in San Andrés has had a ripple effect across the island, and a big impact on its economy.
People in Colombia have long associated the archipelago with so-called “San Andresitos“: shopping areas on the mainland that are packed full of contraband and often used to launder illicit money. In the past, criminals would use drug dollars to buy anything from television sets to cigarettes and washing machines in San Andrés’ duty-free zone and re-sell them for Colombian pesos on the mainland.
Nevertheless, San Andrés’ contraband rush only lasted up until the late 1990s when tighter tax controls made it unprofitable, Sarmiento said.
While drug money is now mostly laundered in mainland Colombia, certain practices have had a lasting impact that especially affects San Andrés’ tourists.
As drug money poured in, restaurants, jewelers, casinos, malls and exchange houses popped up.
“San Andrés was modernized using drug money,” Ortiz said.
The Urabeños also control activities such as microtrafficking that finds a ready market in the thriving tourism industry. They tax migrant smuggling organizations that stop in San Andrés on their way to the United States.
As the Colombian Navy know where their ships — and those belonging to their US counterparts — are located, having sailors as moles has long been a crucial asset for Colombian traffickers, Sarmiento said. At least 55 members of the San Andrés police and navy have been dismissed for collaborating with traffickers, according to the FES report.
For young men on the island looking to earn a decent living, there are few alternatives to drug trafficking.
“San Andrés really lacks employment opportunities,” Arroyave said. “Its people live off tourism.”
In Providence, drug trafficking is simply a way of life for many young men.
“The sea is our economy, it doesn’t matter if it’s legal or illegal,” a Providence fisherman told the BBC.
Others blame the adrenaline of the trade. “The rush of making fast money. That’s what … scarred San Andrés,” Ortiz said, adding that before, the standard islander would make do with what they earned from fishing.
Today, the deputy attorney said, there could be between 500 and 800 locals working for trafficking organizations in one way or another.
But in the archipelago’s tight-knit community, local attitudes also have a lot to do with why it is hard to sever the drug trade’s roots on the islands.
According to a 2014 survey, San Andrés was more accepting of drug trafficking than any other Colombian city, with 42 percent of respondents saying they did not have a problem with traffickers in the area. Only 24 percent rejected corrupt practices.
InSight Crime tried to contact a number of locals, but found that people were unwilling to comment on drug trafficking. The apparent lack of cooperation from locals can significantly hinder the effectiveness law enforcement.
“We were forced to leave the island,” Arroyave recalled. During his team’s prosecution of 17 traffickers — the majority from San Andrés — locals threatened to “kick up a stink” at the hearing, so it was moved to Cartagena.
“The community denies the facts,” the prosecutor concluded.
TODAY NICARAGUA – An earthquake with a magnitude of 6.1 shook the northwestern coast of Nicaragua late Thursday night, at 9:25pm, in the northwester part of the country, not far from the Hondura border.
The walls of a church had collapsed in Chinandega, the city closest to the epicentre.
There were no immediate reports of casualties.
Reports say the tremor was also felt strongly in areas of Matagalpa and even in Managua, Nicaragua’s capital.
The epic center of the quake was measured:
17.0 km (10.6 mi) E of Puerto Morazan
25.0 km (15.5 mi) NE of El Viejo
25.0 km (15.5 mi) SSW of Somotillo
26.0 km (16.2 mi) NNE of Chinandega
114.0 km (70.8 mi) NW of Managua
Schools will be closed today in Chinandega and Leon as a preventive measure, given that the country is on “red alert” for aftershocks.
The quake was also felt in neighboring El Salvador.
Pobladores de Chinandega fuera de sus hogares después del sismo 6.1 sentido en Nicaragua.Falta energía en p.Morazán pic.twitter.com/CQbJXj2e86
Rosario Murillo, the coordinator of the Communication and Citizenship Council, told the Nicaraguan news portal El Pueblo Presidente that aftershocks were likely and warned that people should take precautions.
The USGS initially reported that the quake had a magnitude of 6.4 but later downgraded it to a 6.1.
People crossing a street are seen through rain drops on a car window in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Friday, Feb. 19, 2016. The recent heat wave that hit the city has abated with he coming of rain, so the government has announced they will not apply the electricity rationing program that began Thursday, affecting thousands of homes and businesses in the capital and surrounding towns. The city's energy system has not been able to cope with the summer heat wave, leaving lots of people without electricity. (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko)
Image for illustrative purposes.
QCOSTARICA – Troubling is a report by the Institute for Economics and Peace, finding that the majority of countries on the planet are at war. According to the Global Peace Index 2016, Costa Rica is one of only ten countries completely free from conflict.
The other nine are Botswana, Chile, Japan, Mauritius, Panama, Qatar, Switzerland, Uruguay and Vietnam are free from war.
“The index gauges global peace using three broad themes: the level of safety and security in society; the extent of domestic or international conflict; and the degree of “militarization,” the report states.
Though 81 countries improved their level of peace according to those criteria, those gains were muddied by deteriorating peace in 79 other nations. In the last decade, “the average country score deteriorated by 2.44 per cent with 77 countries improving while 85 countries deteriorated, highlighting the global complexities of peace and its uneven distribution.”
As the world descends into a far less peaceful state overall, the staggering cost of militarism and violence becomes painfully clear — 13.3 percent of the globe’s total economic activity, $13.6 trillion in purchasing power parity, concerned violent conflict. That’s the equivalent of “$1,876 for every person in the world.”
Working toward peace will require the international community to promote peaceful, just, and inclusive societies, the IEP urged in conclusion, though such goals aren’t expected to be reached quickly or easily.
Costa Rica is home to the exotic, colorful poison dart frog. On their backs they wear some of the most brilliant colors on Earth, but they are also one of the most highly toxic animals on this planet. The microscopic amount of poison that this frog possesses is enough to make the human heart stop beating. However, the frog only releases it’s poison if it feels threatened.
These colorful amphibians have an average life span of 3 to 15 years. They only grow to be about 2 inches in length, but cradled within that tiny stature is enough poison to kill 10 full-grown adults.
The poison dart frog, or poison arrow frog, got its name from an indigenous tribe in Colombia, the Embera Choco. On the Pacific slopes of the Andes, this tribe used these frogs to tip their blowgun darts or arrows with the intense, devastating poison. The darts and arrows were used for hunting, or fighting, to aid the hunter by further impairing the hunted.
The green and black poison dart frog hunts and sleeps in the trees. To assist the frog in its climbing, they have small adhesive discs located on the end of their toes. These create a slight suction affect as the frog climbs. Here is a photo of one climbing the side of our house:
Neon in color, and small in stature, these adorable frogs are irresistible, to both humans and dogs. Andy and I have come across numerous poison dart frogs during our jungle walks, and I always have to remind myself not to pick them up.
Anyone who reads my blog regularly may remember ‘Sophie and the toads’. When it rains here, many massive poisonous toads swarm the area. Sophie has attacked a few toads, resulting in her becoming very sick. She always pulls through, but never seems to learn a lesson. She has become addicted to the poison and now seeks them out every time it rains.
You would think the smaller poison dart frogs would be less toxic than the huge toads, but they are actually much worse for dogs. Can you see where this story is going? Yes, a few days ago Sophie had her first encounter with a green and black poison dart frog, and it was not pretty, definitely not as pretty as they are.
I happened to be home alone, with no cell phone and no vehicle. She lunged for the frog and had him in her mouth before I even registered what was happening. I grabbed her and shook her until she dropped the frog. He hopped away in one piece, so I like to think he survived the mauling. Once I realized it was a poison dart frog I rushed her inside and googled what to do, while she foamed at the mouth and flung slobber everywhere.
Yes folks, it is 2016. If an emergency occurs, don’t panic…and google it. In this moment of having no car and no phone, I was immensely grateful to finally have working internet at our house. (A special thanks to The Pryors, Monica and Arne, and Mitch and Charlene for your help with this!)
I was able to research how to handle this situation, and I also facebook messaged our friend and neighbor Charlene, who graciously called the vet for me and talked me through what to do. She let me know she would drive us to the vet if it came to that. (At moments like this I am eternally grateful to live in a small village community where neighbors immediately jump in to help when needed. Thanks Charlene!)
Sophie had diarrhea and was vomiting and shaking for a few hours. I was told that if she was walking an hour or two after the incident, that she would survive. So after a few tense hours, I knew she would be okay.
Here is what to do if your dog comes across one of these colorful little animals and cannot resist them:
1) Immediately and vigorously rinse the dogs mouth out, a hose is best. Do this for 5-10 minutes, at least. Rinse the dogs paws as well, in case any poison lingers.
2) If you have any charcoal on hand, crush it up and put some in the dog’s mouth, as this detoxes the poison
3) Call the vet and ask advice. They will advise whether to bring the dog in or not. Try to keep the dog cool and calm. The poison can cause seizures, or can cause a heart to stop beating, so keep a close eye on the dog and do not let them go to sleep.
I have a hippie pharmacy drawer in our house full of multiple essential oils, and I knew that frankincense oil is known to stop seizures in dogs. So I dabbed a few drops on Sophie’s head and kept her in an air conditioned room to keep her temperature down (any excuse to turn on the A/C, right?) Four hours after the incident, she threw up for the last time, and I could tell that she was feeling back to normal.
In my research I read that many people’s dogs have died from an encounter with these toads. I read about pit bulls and golden retrievers dying immediately after ingesting the poison. You would think a small dog like Sophie wouldn’t stand a chance. But she has morphed into a Central American robot with a stomach of steel, a jungle machine who devours anything that moves. Since there are no poison dart frog rehab centers in Costa Rica, it looks like since Sophie is addicted to kissing frogs that she is going to have to go back to being a leash-only dog.
Sorry weenie, no more roaming the hillside freely, in search of your next froggy high.
Image for illustrative purposes. From www.xtri.com
Image for illustrative purposes. From www.xtri.com
QSPORTS – The Toughman Half Iron Series has revealed its third international race, set to take place in Puerto Viejo, Costa Rica on Oct. 21, 2017.
“Puerto Viejo is a small town that has a wide variety of beaches around and surrounded by lush nature,” said Toughman founder Richard Izzo. “…this makes for a great race vacation.”
Qualifiers from the Toughman Costa Rica triathlon will be able to compete in the Toughman Half Iron International Championship in New York in 2018.
“Adding the Toughman Costa Rica to our series means that athletes from Mexico, Chile and South/Central America can compete for a spot at the Toughman NY World Championship race in September,” continued Izzo.
“We continue to grow in both popularity and the number of races because we represent grass roots triathlon but with a standardized format. Athletes that register for a Toughman race know that they will get a safe, great race experience at every Toughman venue.”
QCOSTARICA – The “Spanish of Costa Rica” is the form of the Spanish language spoken in Costa Rica. Despite its small territorial size, each province of Costa Rica has distinctive features in their speech, accent and phonetics.
The province of Guanacaste (north) has a lot of influence from neighboring Nicaragua, Central Valley (Cartago, San José, Alajuela and Heredia) maintain a common line, but still the sayings, expressions and phonetics vary from province to province and change with education and social class of the speaker.
Are Costa Ricans becoming a monolingual gringoized people? Costa Rica was never an American colony. But in recent years American has creeped into the Spanish of Costa Rica. We like to call it the “Agringamiento” (Gringoization) of Costa Rica Spanish.
Click here for the English to the gringoized list?
Feisbuk
Magdónal
Blac Fráidei
Tenksguibin
Guatafoc
Ishiu
Guaréber
Güisqui
Plis
Fon
Mitin
Use the comment section below or post our Facebook page your gringoized Spanish words used in Costa Rica.
Family Court judges order exaggerated amounts in support payments.
TICO BULL – One of the more frequent complaints I hear from foreigners living for some time in the country is the “Americanization of Costa Rica”, the influence American culture on the local culture.
In less than a decade, the influence on the media, cuisine, technology, business practices, or political techniques, among other things, has grown. Just take a look at the development of commercial area like Lindora in Santa Ana or Escazu (in the area of Multiplaza).
Taking a stroll through Multiplaza Escazu is like being in any major mall in North America.
The Americanization of Costa Rica has even spilled into the court system, in particular the Family Courts.
In an article by Crhoy.com, a man with a salary of one million colones was ordered to pay support of ¢550,000 colones (more than half of his monthly salary) for the six-year-old and his mother.
With scolding included, the Tribunal de Familia de La Unión judge accepted the complaint raised by the child’s mother, who asked for a ‘substantial improvement’ in support, going from a previous order of ¢176,000 to ¢550,000.
This leaves the man ¢450,000 monthly to support his current wife and two daughters. The judge argued that the six-year-old child should enjoy the same privileges as the man’s other two daughters he has with his wife.
The man says he has to meet the obligations imposed on him or face losing his home and even going to jail.
Jorge Pita, the Cuba American resident in Costa Rica, at 65 years of age was arrested for not being able to pay ¢21 million colones in owing for support.In his case, Pita is currently ordered to pay one million colones monthly.
Up to his eyeballs, the man sought the advice of the Fundación Instituto de Apoyo al Hombre (Fundiapho) – an institution to support men – to reverse the situation.
“They (the Court) did not consider that the employment situation changed during the process and the man now has a lower wage. The judges dare to make a moral sanction and to question the right of procreation of parents,” said Eugenia Quesada, president of the foundation.
This case is not an isolated one, they are recurring according to the Fundiapho.
One of the more recent and well publicized case was that of 71-year-old Jorge Pita, leading a crusade against excessive support payments ordered by judges.
The same is true of Roberto Madrigal, who earned ¢300,000 colones monthly working at a mortuary and ordered to pay monthly support of ¢240.000.
Or the father of Alejandro Leiva, who spent several months behind bars for not being able to pay ¢1.8 million colones monthly.
While leftist guerrilla groups like the FARC and ELN used to be the main culprit of kidnappings in Colombia, this role has now almost entirely been taken over by common criminals, but also they are losing ground.
The FARC officially ended kidnapping in 2012. The ELN has so far refused to do so, but has been reduced in size to such an extent that it no longer has the capacity to carry out kidnappings on a large scale.
However, small criminal gangs and individuals have continued kidnapping for extortion purposes like they always have albeit to a considerably lesser extent, according to statistics released by the Anti-Kidnapping and Extortion Unit (GAULA) of Colombia’s National Police.
Including the three brief kidnappings of three journalists in the past month, the ELN reportedly carried out no more than six kidnappings so far this year, and only in the relatively small areas where they exercise territorial control.
Criminals not belonging to a particular group have carried out the vast majority of the 64 kidnappings in the first half of this year.
However, this number represents a major drop compared to last year and is approximately a measly 4% of the kidnappings registered in 2000, the year in which most kidnappings ever took place.
Part of this major drop in kidnappings is due to the military offensives carried out in the first decade of this century that pushed the guerrillas away from populated areas.
Kidnappings in Colombia
But the guerrillas’ reduced territorial influence does not explain the ongoing and steep drop in kidnappings by common criminals, who by no means have ceased to exist.
Colombia’s Congress is about to pass a law that will prohibit controversial cosmetic plastic surgery for minors, who in some cases receive risky breast or buttock implants as young as 15.
Apart from reconstructive surgeries or operations required due to physical or psychological ailments, Colombia’s youth will soon have to wait until they are 18 to go under the knife.
The prohibited surgeries will include breast augmentation, buttock enhancement, liposuction, ultrasound skin tightening, and botox among other operations that alter the appearance.
The law will also prohibit the use of minors as models in advertisements for all types of aesthetic procedures.
The president of the Colombian Society for Plastic Surgery, Aesthetics, and Reconstruction, Luz Maria Triana, supports the law, expressing concern over the rising number of Colombian teenagers undergoing plastic surgery whilst their bodies are still growing.
Another representative from the Colombian Association of Plastic Surgery, Ernesto Barbosa, believes that morally, physicians should know these procedures are inappropriate for adolescents.
“How relevant is it to get breasts at 15 years old?” Barbosa asks, “…we are talking about a body that has not completed its physiological development and we would be putting silicone in tissue that is not yet mature.”
However, many youth may respond that yes, (large) breasts are indeed extremely relevant to their lives. Particularly in Colombia, a country whose women have been touted as the “sexiest in the world,” there is an extreme preoccupation with physical appearance, and girls are heavily pressured to fill out the iconic, voluptuous version of female sensuality that is so desired.
Yet doling out breast implants and other invasive procedures to girls still in puberty raises concerns about the psychological impacts that may last longer than the physical scars.
“There are grave implications because if we give the easiest solution, we are creating young people that are more susceptible to a syndrome that leaves them never content with what they do and never feeling that they look good,” said Triana in an interview with Blu Radio.
The senator who introduced the law, Mauricio Lizcano, agrees: “There is a social problem due to fashion, due to world trends and there’s a stereotype of beauty that causing girls to ask for surgeries at 15 years old and of course this caries health and social problems,” he told RCN Radio.
Cosmetic surgery is definitely a trend in Colombia, where an operation takes place every five minutes. In 2014, Colombia ranked eight in the world for the number of operations performed, the most common being breast enhancement surgeries (over 77,000 in 2014) and liposuctions (over 50,000), yet only 200 penis enlargements.
Physically altering your appearance does not carry the same stigma in Colombia as it does in many other countries; the country is renowned for its beautiful women, and there is no shame attached to “fixing ones flaws” to fit in with the desired stereotype.
Prices are low enough that cosmetic surgery is within reach for many of Colombia’s middle class as well. With rates 25%-40% cheaper than those of the United States, foreigners have also begun flocking to Colombia in droves to take advantage of the inexpensive procedures.
For the poorest residents of the city, there is even a university program that provides them with access to free plastic surgery, which also aims to give plastic surgery residents more experience, as reported by the Examiner.
Providing surgeon residents with more practice is definitely a positive; since January, twelve people have accidentally been killed during plastic surgeries in Colombia, and 140 people have been left with irreparable damage.
Lizcano believes imposing the age restriction will also help reduce the mortality rates caused by plastic surgery. At the very least, it will ensure that adolescents are not the making that gamble without understanding the risks involved.
“In one way or another, sixteen year old girls have not yet developed their personality to be able to make a decision like this that is going to change their life….the base of the project is to tell girls, make the decision when you are really an adult,” Lizcano said.
“I had six children, and I had to flee many times from rape,” says Everledis, one of the founding members of the Liga de Mujeres Desplazadas (League of Displaced Women)
TODAY COLOMBIA – Colombia has been experiencing an on-going armed conflict for over 50 years between the Colombian government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia – People’s Army (FARC-EP), one of the largest guerilla armies in the entire Latin American region.
Since 2012, the light of peace was first seen when the start of negotiations for the end of the armed conflict between these two actors was officially announced.
Despite the many criticisms of the process, such as the place for talks outside Colombian territory (in Havana, Cuba), the incessant bilateral fire during negotiations and the non-participation of civil society at the negotiating table, the negotiations to end the conflict are about to reach the signing of a final agreement.
In the midst of this process, the role of women in civil society has been fundamental, not only in demanding the participation of women on both sides of the table but also in the inclusion of proposals from women in the same agreements.
Different local, national and even international initiatives have been carried out in order to make the views and political stake of women visible vis-a-vis the ending of the conflict, and with regard to the challenges that are to be faced in the soon to come post-conflict scenario.
Despite these achievements, a women’s agenda remains absent from the national political agenda, and they are faced with many challenges at the local level, especially those women who have been victims of armed conflict, who have experienced forced displacement and sexual violence.
Recently, multiple threats against women who defend human rights and promote peace have been creating an atmosphere of fear and terror. It is necessary now more than ever to come together and think about the enemies of peace and the resistance of the military patriarchy in envisioning its own end.
Our next webinar seeks to share the gains made by women in the conflict negotiating process in Colombia and, at the same time, create a space for reflection vis-a-vis the challenges that the peace process brings to Colombia and the rest of the Latin American region, and even more importantly to the work of women and WILPF in general.
Join our upcoming webinar on 10 June at 5 p.m. (CEST). The event is free but registration is required. Use this link to register: http://bit.ly/24kK1uO
For more on the Women’s International League click here.
QCOSTARICA – On June 15th Costa Ricans will join a universal movement by demonstrating in front of the Honduran embassy in La Sabana to call for justice for Berta Cáceres.
Cáceres, 44, was assassinated March 3 in the early hours of the morning while she slept in her house in La Esperanza, for her opposition to the hydroelectric project being built on the land of the Indigenous Lenca people.
Cáceres was a social activist for the environment, Indigenous rights and for peace.
She was shot by four men who entered her house in the early morning hours. Her companion Gustavo Castro who shared her environmental and human rights work, managed to escape and was able to flee the country. He reported that Berta had been threatened for several months because of her leadership in opposing DESA, the company building the dam. The four men arrested for the crime had connections with DESA.
The call for justice for Berta has reached around the world. Honduras has been cited by the United Nations and international organizations for its violence. In the five years preceding 2015, one hundred and nine activists have been killed.
Berta Cáceres is not the only person who has been punished for speaking out. In Costa Rica, Jairo Mora, a young environmentalist was tortured and killed while trying to protect turtle nests on the Carribbean coast. Indigenous farmers in Salitre were beaten and their homes burned for trying to reclaim their own land.
In Mexico 43 college students disappeared when they took over buses to attend a memorial demonstration . There is still no sign of them or of what happened to them. Reporters are kidnapped and killed while on the job of exposing crime and injustice to the world. Erick Snowden is hiding out in Russia after telling the world about government spy programs. Wikileaks Julian Assange is captive in the Ecuadorian embassy in London, unable to leave the building after he revealed secrets of torture and high crimes by governments. Malala Yousafzai was shot in the head for advocating education for girls.
We become afraid to speak out, to stand up, blow the whistle, call attention to injustice, to come out and say the emperor has no clothes. It always takes courage to point out the wrongs, the errors, the lies of others, especially when challenging the more powerful elements, government or business. People who speak out, who demonstrate, write letters are investigated, filmed, harassed, and sometimes, like Berta Cáceres, lose their lives.
With each assassination, each kidnapping, torture or disappearance, we become more intimidated. We need whistleblowers. We need honesty. We need transparency. We need to expose corruption and injustice. We need those who stand up and speak out.
The demonstration at the Honduran embassy is not just for Berta Cáceres. It is for all of those, and us, who show up to challenge the wrongs of the world.
When deciding to learn a new language, you probably know that there are many different languages available to you. So, how do you decide which language to choose?
QTRAVEL – Thinking about learning a foreign language? Whether you’re still a student, you’re just looking for a way to improve your career outlook or looking at traveling, the question is, what language should you learn? After all, there are about 6,500 spoken languages in the world.
Here our list of the world’s 9 most common languages?
Chinese – Mandarin
Mandarin Chinese is the most widely-spoken language on the planet with over 1 billion native speakers and growing. With China being the most heavily populated country on the planet, it is no surprise that Mandarin has so many speakers. This is an incredibly tough language to learn due to the variety of pronunciations and tones of words. Learning this language will open you up to work on engineering with over 10% of the world’s minds, so this is a must know in the modern global economy.
‘Need to Know’ Locations: China, Taiwan, Singapore, Asia Speakers: 1 billion +
French
French is spoken by over 120 million people worldwide and it has native speakers in multiple continents with countries including Belgium, Canada, Rwanda, Haiti, and France. If you work around the world, you are likely to come in contact with a native French speaker since they are so spread out across the globe, unlike Chinese which tends to be centralized in Asia.
‘Need to Know’ Locations: Canda, Europe, Africa, Northern South America Speakers: 129 million
Arabic
One of the world’s oldest languages, Arabic is mainly spoken in the middle east where much expansion is currently occurring. Native speakers are found in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Iraq, Jordan, Egypt, and many more. Arabic is also the language of the Koran, so many Muslims around the world know Arabic as well. Surprisingly, Arabic was made the sixth official language of the United Nations in 1974.
‘Need to Know’ Locations: Middle East, North Africa Speakers: 246 million
German
We have all heard of famous German engineering, so it should be no surprise that learning German could help you expand your engineering skills across the world. Germany is also the second largest exporter in the world, and the fourth largest economy worldwide, so if you work in the engineering and technology fields, German is definitely, need to know.
‘Need to Know’ Location: Europe Speakers: 229 million
English
You are probably wondering why English is on a list of top languages to learn for engineers written in English. After all, you should already know English right? Well, even if you know English, communicating effectively and efficiently in the technical world doesn’t come naturally, and you will probably need to work on it. Before you start learning another language, you could try honing your English skills and become a more effective communicator.
‘Need to Know’ Locations: North America, Europe, Australia, Certain African Countries, Parts of Latin America Speakers: 510 million+
Russian
The largest native language in Europe, Russian, is the official language of many smaller European and Asian countries, as well as, of course, Russia. It is widely-spoken in the Ukraine, Latvia, Estonia, Belarus, Kazakhstan and a few other locations. You will most likely want to learn this language is you foresee yourself working in Eastern Europe.
‘Need to Know’ Locations: Europe, Russia Speakers: 225 million
Portuguese
You probably don’t think of Portuguese when you think of the world’s top languages, but it currently ranks number 6 in most speakers around the world, and its speakers spread across many continents. From South America to Europe, learning Portuguese can come in handy for any work you do in these areas. If you frequent South America, it is the second most spoken language, after Spanish of Course.
Need to Know’ Location: Europe, South America (Brazil mainly), United States (USA) Speakers: 213 million
Spanish
Most people in the USA were probably taught a little Spanish in grade school, and there is a good reason for that. Almost every South American and Central American country speaks Spanish, not to mention Spain. The English language has many words based on Spanish origins as well, so if you speak English already, Spanish may be a good starter language to learn.
‘Need to Know’ Location: Europe, Latin America (South America, Central America, Caribbean & Mexico), United States (USA) Speakers: 392 million +
So, what languages do you need? Use the comments section or post to our Facebook page to share your views.
QCOSTARICA – Costa Rica is “on the verge” that its prosecutors and judges are killed by organized crime, as is the case in neighbouring countries in Central America and Mexico, said the Attorney General, Jorge Chavarria, on Wednesday on the Nuestra Voz radio program.
The Attorney General explained that the growth in organized crime and the impact on corruption of public entities in the country is one the main concerns, after meeting with Pope Francis last Friday at the international Judges’ Summit on Human Trafficking and Organized Crime.
Chavarria explained that the lack of budget of the Fiscalia (Prosecutor’s Office) limits its range of action in the fight against drug trafficking.
“It’s very difficult to tell the country that we will succeed with four police officers and a prosecutor in the northern border fighting drug trafficking,” he added.
Pope Francis during the international Judges’ Summit on Human Trafficking and Organized Crime/ Foto: L’Osservatore Romano
According Chavarria, the Pontiff made a call to more than 150 officials from around the world, for prosecutors and judges to remain free from pressure from governments, private institutions, corruption and the “web” of organized crime.
Following the summit, Pope Francis denounced in Evangelii Gaudium and Laudato si’ “the globalized society seeking profit above all else — producing a ‘throwaway culture”, that has generated innumerable marginalized and excluded people.
QCOSTARICA – The video recorded from a helmet camera has gone viral, published on different pages of Facebook and other social media, reaching thousands of views, evidence of a serious social problem in Costa Rica.
The video captures the act of a driver through trash from their vehicle and the motorcyclist who stopped, in the middle of Avenida Segunda, to pick up it and returning to its owner.
The incident occurred Tuesday afternoon, in the area between the Melico Salzar and the National Theatre in downtown San Jose.
“Here, you dropped this,” was the comment by the unnamed motorcyclist, in throwing it back into the vehicle it came from.
Littering is common in Costa Rica.
Authorities are calling for a change, to stop littering, especially during the rainy season, trash increases the possibility of collapsing sewers, resulting in flooding.
QCOSTARICA – Nine out of ten Costa Rican households purchased Dos Pinos products in 2015, the first choice of consumers in Costa Rica.
The data is from the Brand Footprint 2015 survey conducted by Kanta Worldpanel, of 750 homes in the Greater Metropolitan Area (GAM) of San Jose.
According to Alejandra Ortiz, direct of Expert Solutions at Kanta Worldpanel Costa Rica, the households provided proof of the product packaging they purchase every two weeks.
In the world, as in Central America, Coca Cola is the top brand, while in Costa Rica it is third on the top 10 list.
For the “top 10” brand, the study assesses penetration (number of times that the brand was present in a home) and purchase frequency (number of times the brand was purchased during the year) in Costa Rican households.
These are the ten favorite brands of Costa Rican consumers:
Dos Pinos
Maggi
Coca Cola
Pozuelo
Colgate
Numar
Tang
Lizano
Pasta Roma
Coronado
This study seeks to obtain the degree of actual connection between a brand and its final consumers.
Globally, the top 10 consumer brands are: Coca-Cola, Colgate, Lifebuoy, Maggi, Lay’s, Pepsi, Nescafe, Indomie, Knorr and Dove.
QCOSTARICA – There is a saying in Costa Rica, “no hay nada oculto entre cielo y tierra” (there is nothing hidden between heaven and earth); the heroic actions of Gerardo Cruz in reporting the street harassment got him killed.
But he wasn’t killed the uncovering of the actions of a man videoing up a woman’s skirt on the streets of downtown San Jose, but, rather his fame become the perfect alibi for lover scorned.
Photo from OIJ Facebook page
In the early days following the attack on Gerardo on a public street of San Jose, near the John F. Kennedy park, investigators focused on a robbery angle, possibly linked to the street harassment.
After investigators ruled their initial suspicion, they found the “coup de grace”, a mix of jealousy, love and hate, learning of Gerardo’s relationship with a 41 year old woman, who on Monday, along with her 19 year old daughter, was arrested as being the masterminds behind the murder.
Photo from OIJ Facebook page
Investigators believe the woman, identified by her last name Fonseca Fernandez, conspired with her daughter, Valerin Fonseca, to hire hit men for the attack on Gerardo. From wire taps and other evidence, investigators learned the woman was jealous of Gerardo’s relationship with Karolo Zuñiga, who was expecting a child with.
Fonseca apparently had no idea that Gerardo was engaged and soon to be a dad for the second time. He already had a child with another woman.
That was more than she could bear.
The link between the the scorned women, the hitmen and Gerardo. From La Nacion based on OIJ reports.
It’s alleged that Fonseca and her daughter contacted the hired hitmen through a third party, who was responsible for monitoring the events of the attack. Authorities do not know how much was paid, but evidence recovered during the raids on homes in Concepción Abajo de Alajuelita and San Francisco de Dos Ríos reveals they had asked for “hard evidence” of the attack.
That is why the hitmen took his bag and sweater during the attack. This fact misled police into believing it as a common assault, just another street robbery.
Investigators have also learned that the plan for the crime had been made two weeks prior to the attack. But the perfect opportunity (of cover) came with Gerardo’s fame by denouncing the street harassment.
The cover story was perfect. The suspect (the man caught videotaping), an employee of the Ministry of Finance, would be blamed, police thinking he acted in spite for being publicly shamed. And they did, albeit for a short period.
The “viejo verde” (sexual pervert) as he was being called, went public, denying any link to the attack on the young man and publicly apologizing for his behaviour. All the while Gerardo was lying in a hospital bed, in a coma.
The attack on Gerardo occurred on the night of October 7, two days after the street harassment event went viral on the social media, while his way from his job at a bakery heading for an interview with a news outlet, arranged by his former lover with whom he still maintained contact. He never made it. The interview had been a ruse, rather he was intercepted by two men who attacked him with a knife and wounding him in the chest near the heart.
They took his belongings and left him for dead on the street.
Although he was taken quickly to the Calderon Guardia hospital and operated on several times, Gerardo could not pull through from his injuries; 40 days later, on November 19, he died in the hospital’s intensive care unit.
Today, the two women, along with four others are in custody.
Although Gerardo had broken off his relationship with the suspect, she was out for blood, the young man paying with his life for the woman’s scorn.
Luis Milanés Tamayo (left) on June 20, 2008, being escorted to Costa Rica from El Salvador. Milanes was wanted by Costa Rican authorities for fraud.
In the photo, Luis Milanés Tamayo (left) on June 20, 2008, being escorted to Costa Rica from El Salvador. Today, Milanes is a free man after the Appeals Court overturned a 15 year conviction last December.
QCOSTARICA – Luis Milanes, sentenced in December 2015 to 15 years in prison for fraud, related to the closure of Savings Unlimited, in November 2002 and absconding with millions of dollars of investor’s money, is a free man.
The Cuban businessman was related on Monday following a decision by the Criminal Court of Appeal. This was confirmed lawyer Edward Acuña, who represented some 500 victims in the civil lawsuit against Milanes for the loss of US$46 million dollars.
Hugo Navas, representing Milanes in the trial that ended in the December conviction, said the Appeal Court decision confirms the argument made at trial, that his client had already been sentenced to the same offence in another trial, an abbreviated process and included everything related to the financial fraud.
Acuña, in conjunction with the Prosecutor’s office (Fiscalia), said there may be an appeal before the Supreme Court.
For a number of years Milanés operated Savings Unlimited, a money investment house located on the ninth floor of the Centro Colón, in San José, where investors were promised payment of between 2% and 3% monthly on their cash deposits.
The investment house closed its doors on November 25, 2002, months after a similar investment house known as “The Brothers” shut its doors, leaving investors hanging for close to one billion dollars.
Days after the closing of Savings Unlimited, Milanes disappeared. In June 2008, the Cuban businessman was arrested in the El Salvador airport travelling using a false passport and returned to Costa Rica.
orldwide income residents who live at least 183 days a year in Costa Rica will be charged
Global Income Tax (Rental Mundial) would apply to any person who spends at least 183 days a year in Costa Rica.
QCOSTARICA – Under pressure to raise revenue and reduce deficits, the Government of Costa Rica is preparing to collect income tax not only on earnings by persons or corporations within the country, but also on income generated abroad, a global income tax (renta mundial in Spanish).
Currently, in Costa Rica the taxation is based on the principle of territoriality, meaning that all personal income which has a foreign source is tax exempt.
If the proposal announced on Monday is adopted, the tax law would be amended to include A “tax resident” designation that would apply to any person who spends more than 183 days of a calendar year in Costa Rica.
The designation would equally apply to “perpetual tourists” (persons who live in Costa Rica and leave every 90 days to renew their tourist visa).
That is the word from Deputy Minister of Revenue at the Ministry of Finance, Fernando Rodriguez, speaking to legislators of the Commission of Inquiry on the Panama Papers, during the first hearing of the legislative forum.
To avoid double tax collection, Rodriguez explained of the possibility that a person does not have to pay the tax to the Costa Rican government if it has proof that they have paid income tax in the country where it was generated.
In addition, the Ministry of Finance is insisting on the need to create a database of shareholders and final beneficiaries of corporations, to improve its fight against tax fraud.
Earlier this year, a presidential decree, required the state bank, the Banco de Costa Rica (BCR) to open bank accounts to foreigners, allowing the government to identify and tax all foreigners living – legally or illegally in the country.
In an article by Daniel Woodall (www.usexpatcostarica.com) of June 7, 2016, he writes, “the proposed tax law would snare expats who work virtually from Costa Rica for U.S. companies and may claim the Foreign Earned Income Credit, applied on up to $100,800 annually for 2015. Since this income is exempt from federal income tax in the United States, it would be taxed fully in Costa Rica.”
The global income tax proposal is part of the Government’s tax reform package (Reforma Fiscal in Spanish) it is trying to get through the legislative process.
The end of November is likely to be a good time to buy dollars, specifically if you take into account the value of the currency last October.
The Central Bank maintains a favorable level of reserves allows steep moderate or speculative pressures
QCOSTARICA – After more than two years of virtual immobility, the dollar started a rise (more than 5 colones since Monday) this week, which has been linked to changes in external variables, accompanied by a concentration of credit in the US currency.
Accompanying this depreciation of the local currency is an increase in the benchmark rate for dollars, a new indicator that the Central Bank (Banco Central de Costa Rica) started publishing a few weeks ago.
An editorial in La Nacion,”…The new benchmark rate in foreign currency calculated weekly by the Central Bank has gone up. There has also been a slight rise in quotes of the Colón against the dollar in the foreign exchange market. Could there be a relationship between the two movements? ”
It is reported that the reason for the rate hike is “… in the opinion of those bankers who were surveyed … the rise is due to a shortage , or perhaps less abundance, of dollars circulating in our environment.Closely linked to the lower liquidity is the high concentration of credit granted in that currency. ”
The Central Bank sets the reference rates (in Colones and Dollars) every Thursday.
Costa Rica’s Patrick Pemberton (18) dives but cannot make a save on a shot by United States’ Jermaine Jones (13) during a Copa America Centenario group A soccer match against Costa Rica at Soldier Field, Tuesday, June 7, 2016 in Chicago. Charles Rex Arbogast The Associated Press
United States’ Geoff Cameron (20) and Costa Rica’s Alvaro Saborio (9) battle during a Copa America Centenario group A soccer match at Soldier Field, Tuesday, June 7, 2016 in Chicago. The United States won 4-0. Photo Charles Rex Arbogast, The Associated Press
QCOSTARICA SPORTS – “Goleada” (trashing) is what happened last night as Costa Rica’s national soccer team lost 4-0 to the U.S. in Copa America play.
In soccer and other sports, goleada refers to a large number of goals a teams gets to another, especially if there is much difference with the amount of goal.
The trashing began early, the U.S. putting in three goals in the first half. Coming off a loss Friday against Colombia, the Americans “could not have been more sizzling at Soldier Field”, said the LA Times.
Before the game Tuesday, speculation was that the U.S., host to the Copa America, were on their way out. A loss to the Ticos would have meant elimination, the best expected was a tie to stay alive.
In dismantling the Costa Rican team, the U.S. picked up three needed points in the Group A standing and with one group-play game remaining, on Saturday against Paraguay, the U.S. could make the quarterfinals.
Costa Rica’s Patrick Pemberton dives but cannot make a save on a shot by United States’ Jermaine Jones during a Copa America Centenario group A soccer match against Costa Rica at Soldier Field, Tuesday, June 7, 2016 in Chicago. Photo Charles Rex Arbogast, The Associated Press
As to the Ticos, they controlled possession for most of the first half, but a limited defense and no Keylor Navas in the net, the U.S. pounded them. The Ticos only had a couple of opportunities against goalie Brad Guzan.
“The U.S. leaves La Sele in a coma: the aura of Brazil is snuffed out,” was the headline at Telenoticias this morning.
The much awaited “vengeance” (for the March 2013 game in the snow) never happened. In bars across the country and we can safely say across homes in Costa Rica, its was eerily quiet.
Analysts are blaming mostly the defense, calling it a “paper defense with no room for praise” and the “Ticos giving up to the unquestionable superiority of the U.S. team”, a team that has been called the worst in recent years and expected to lose against Costa Rica.
One sports commentator this morning also blamed the refereeing, “it didn’t help in any way”, referring to what are being seen as some bad calls.
With last night’s loss, Costa Rica is at the bottom of the Group A standings. Colombia leads with 6 points, the U.S. is second with 3 points and Paraguay with 1 point, like Costa Rica, but fewer goals against.
The Ticos play Colombia on Saturday, June 11, in Houston, Texas.