Sunday, April 12, 2026
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Being old in Costa Rica

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This is an excerpt translation of an article by Alfonso J. Palacios Echeverría published in ElPais.cr

A national newspaper brings the news that threatens the peace and tranquility of we who are seniors. It notes the following: old man disappears after being dragged by the sea (while wetting his feet), that is, no walks on the beach; senior hit by a car when walking by the side of the road, that is, no strolls, unless in a park; seventy year old man dies in fight, which frightens us so we best not claim our rights; assault kills dream of living out old age in the mountains, is it not normal that they intern us in a retirement home and nothing about living alone and less in far away places.

costa-rica-elderly-2011-03-29-15This reminded me that I have lived out four of the five years on the waiting list at the Calderón Guardia hospital for cardiac catheterization I urgently needed, according to the cardiologist that treated met at the time, though I doubt they will call me one day, for the young lady who received my medical documents did not formally put me on the list, saying that, if there was any space she would call me immediately and recommending me to go the emergency room, with my symptoms of heart disease, I would be treated immediately. Sure, she seems to forget what blood chemistry is, essential in a stroke. What if I am unable to pay the more than one million colones the treatment costs at a private hospital, what happens, I die just like that, waiting for treatment?

In the view of this young lady, ignorant and full of malice, she implied an attitude of contempt towards the elderly, in the sense that the old must give way for the young in the health system, because they (the young) are still able to produce, forgetting that for at least the last forty or forty-five years we produced. And we have rights as much or more for all we have given the country.

Our pension was earned by our contributions to the disability, old age and death fund and not a gracious concession they are giving us. And we have the same rights to the health system as any younger citizen.

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More and more stories come to light of the elderly being abused, neglected and abandoned or as in my case, put aside on a waiting list for a treatment that a specialist deems urgent and having to see the right hand and left discuss who is responsible.

Generally, the elderly are people who for many years contributed with their work or with their experience, only to face oblivion and become a nuisance to society, which does not allow defects like being a failure, being poor, disabled, fat or “old”.

All pass the ball, the government, charities and the unscrupulous who profit from the poor “grandparents” and so on. Growing old is almost a conviction, and is a topic that no one wants to talk about, and is not just a problem experienced by the elderly who are poor.

In this country we underestimate the elderly. Not everyone is sick in the head to as to treat them as such and talk to them like children. Having difficulty to walk does not mean they can not do small tasks that make them useful. The decrease in hearing ability that does not mean they can not have an interesting conversation. Being 70 or 80 years of age does not mean they stopped having dreams.

Many seniors are disconnected from the world because they are terribly alone, because they are marginalized of any family activity, because young people do not give them room. We do not make the time to walk a little slower or to hear a slurred phrase. The elders have to be listened to with patience. They are the ones who have left us everything to pass on to those who come after us. The decline would be less painful if everyone who has a relative, friend or neighbour who is a senior to begin by paying attention to them, by treating them as an equal who has things to say, be it with just a greeting or a smile and not underestimate them.

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The abandonment of families can come from external problems to them, who may want to care or look after their elderly. However, there are often difficulties in doing so and feel powerless to realize this, and the lack of support for their loved ones.

Some of the obstacles are as follows: the current lifestyle, and lack of time, since the family is dedicated to work, study or attend their “own family”. Lack of economic opportunities, as family members now have families of their own and have to work to keep it in the first instance. On the other hand, there are family problems as merely seeking “revenge” on the part of the children, taking advantage of the weakness of the elderly, in response to the abuse they received from their parents, or, some people abandon their families “in hospitals, where they are admitted for minimum conditions, but they turn away from their families almost immediately, because they do not visit, do not worry about their evolution and often leave no correct data to locate” for convenience only. This in turn has been the product of prejudice facing the elderly, lack of empathy and breaking inter-generational coexistence.

In today’s society, he who does not produce is left behind, as if old age was a hindrance to progress and modernization, which is false, but it’s that the media, for example, has been commissioned to create the negative image of the elderly in society, even in today’s culture. As noted by Diana Cohen Agrest, it is now clear that the demographics indicate a world grown old, and yet culture has fostered more than idolatry powered by external beauty and youth media for “eternal” hiding and even going to reject both the ugliness and old age.

Being old and ugly does not make me less intelligent, educated, experienced, and able to contribute something to society.

To define the effects this demographic change will cause, Oliver Azuara the author clearly states this process is changing the needs of the population since before he was given priority in care for children, from now on the aging population will demand more health services and social security. The adult population has an epidemiological profile with high incidence of chronic degenerative diseases, whose treatment is more prolonged and expensive. This requires more and better trained personnel, infrastructure construction, and increased spending on medicines. In sum, the real resources necessary to maintain the aging population are increasing and will continue over the next years. The aging population will force a substantial allocation of resources, not only in the demand for health services, but also in the area of ​​social security, especially pensions.

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The solution begins to change perspective, stop seeing seniors as a problem and see them as an opportunity. Lacking is promoting education and a mindset that instills respect for the elderly, and to stop ignoring the needs for quality of life and dignity of our elders. Raising public awareness about this opportunity, and stop attacking it through the media, accept aging and regain the admiration and the symbol representing wisdom and experience and that the elderly are fully capable of providing.

Young people should not distance themselves from the elderly, our education should promote generational empathy, to maintain good relations within the family and thus reduce the amount of abandoned of the elderly by their families.

One of the main causes for the abandonment of older people, which is beginning to be seen as another example of social violence, is that the older person and does not have a useful working life and start generating expenses in the family. A situation that causes tension.

Another common case is when the family takes possession of the goods or materials of the elderly, taking advantage of their weakness, forgetfulness or dependence.

I confess that I am old, I am about to turn seventy, but I’ve never felt better intellectually, but my body is showing signs of physical deterioration, and was shocked to see that others like me are abandoned in hospitals when the holidays come, because the family wants to enjoy (the holiday time) without the discomfort of carrying their grandparent with them or send them to the streets to beg so that they bring something (financial) to the house. In most extreme cases, they face physical aggression.

The absence of public policies related to the aging population is one of the barbarities of all governments that have we had so far, the insensitivity of the legislators, criminal distraction of political parties, and the lack of interest by those who gave everything to the country and today we are discriminated against.

Photos courtesy of GlobalPost.com

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Tico Road Humour

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Caption: With the cost of the tolls, I have nothing left for gasoline in my car…

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From CRhoy.com

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MOPT Minister Was Legal Advisor To OAS

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The online news source, ElPeriodicocr.com, reports that the minister of Public Works and Transport (MOPT), Pedro Castro, was a legal advisor to the OAS, the Brazilian company awarded the San José – San Ramón road concession.

Andres_Castro_OAS_MonchoAccording to publication, Castro has “professional” connecions to the international company, a company alleged to have been involved in corruption in other countries, including its own of Brazil.

In 2012, Castro, on his ministerial appointment, told the media that he would be abstaining from any decision having to do with the OAS.

For Manrieque Oviedo, legislator for the Partido Acción Ciudadana (PAC), the appointment of Castro as minister of the MOPT, was “very regrettable”.

For the legislator, although Castro says he will play a neutral role it is impossible,  for it will be he (Castro) who heads the transport ministry and oversee the OAS work and contract complaince.

“Deifintely a bad sign”, says the Oviedo.

For Costa Ricans the MOPT is akin to corruption. Minister after minister has stepped down following allegations of irregularities. The latest major project that is still being question is “La Trocha”, the northern border road.

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San José – San Ramón Road Concessionaire Questioned For Corruption in Other Countries

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The Brazilian company, OAS, that was awarded the concession contract for the San José – San Ramón section of the Interamerican highway (Ruta 1), has been widely questions in other Latin American countries for presumed low social environmental responsibility and corruption.

generalcanaOn Monday the government of Laura Chinchilla announced the approval of the contract by the Contraloría General de la República (CGR)- Comptroller’s office of the awarding to OAS a 30 year concession.

Reports since indicate that OAS has been invovled in “administrative irregularities” and alleged payments of bribes to politicians in Brazil, Peru, Ecuador, Bolivia and Chile.

In Brazil, OAS has been accused of committing irregularities in large urban works. According to the daily JusBrasil, irregularities were uncovered in the construction of the Rotary Foundation in Brasilia. In addition to other Brazilian companies, OAS is linked to strong allegations of corruption and influence peddling in Brazil.

The daily Globo Noticias in Brazil reports the corruption led to the collpase of a railway terminal.

Similar charges of corruption are alleged to have occurred in Peru and Ecuador, where OAS was involved in an engineering project of high environmental importance.

In Costa Rica, OAS is expected to begin work on the 58 kilometre section of the Ruta 1, between San José and San Ramón, within six months. The work that will take some 30 months to complete, when the Autopista General Cañas (La Sabana to the airport) and the Bernardo Soto (airport to San Ramón) will be a toll road with five toll stations, costing users up to ¢4.000 colones.

Currently the road had two toll stations, one on the Cañas, immediately east of the airport (Alajuela bound) which costs uses ¢75 colones (¢100 voluntary for using the left express lane) and southeast of Naranjo (San José bound) where drivers have to hand over ¢150 colones.

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Diablo masks reflect Costa Rican rainforest

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By  Susan Rife, Herald-Tribune / Centuries ago, Borucan Indians in the rainforest of Costa Rica carved “diablo” masks from native cedar trees to ward off the Spanish invaders.

The masks were effective, allowing the Borucans, whose village is in southwest Costa Rica, to retain their own culture. Today, artisans from the village carve and paint masks reflecting more ecological themes, capturing the brilliant colors of rainforest flora and fauna. And now they primarily use balsa wood, a fast-growing native tree that goes from seedling to harvestable in three years; each tree can yield as many as 30 masks.

For the past nine years, Selby Gardens has collaborated with the Borucan artists for an exhibit and sale of the masks. Collectors now jam the rooms of the mansion at the gardens on the opening night of the show, snapping up carvings by their favorites. At last week’s opening, volunteers were writing sales tickets as fast as they could; by the time Marilynn Shelley, manager of community classes and exhibits, gave a lecture on the masks and her trips to Costa Rica on Wednesday, red “sold” dots were everywhere in the exhibit. The masks range from about $225 to close to $1,000 each.

Among the avid collectors is Carl Keeler, gallery director at the Manatee County Cultural Alliance. Keeler taught biology at the then-Manatee Community College from 1964 to 2000.

Click here for the photo gallery.

3048558“One of my specialties was tropical forest ecology,” and Keeler, who made two trips to Costa Rica after he retired.

But his first exposure to the Borucan masks was at an early exhibit at Selby.

“Oh boy, jaguars, parrots and macaws,” said Keeler, who has bought three masks at each of the past five exhibits.

Keeler collects by subject matter rather than artist, preferring the ecological style over the “diablitos” that depict fearsome fanged creatures. A third style combines the “diablito” images with the ecological.

“What impresses me is the detail, how they can take a tree trunk and kind of visualize what’s in it, visualize it in 3D and just carve it,” he said.

The exhibit showcases the work of 16 artists, some of whom have descended from generations of wood carvers. Brothers Pedro Rojas Morales and Francesco Rojas Morales, who have represented the village’s artisans at the gardens for several years, are fourth-generation artists.

The brothers began carving about a decade ago; Pedro limits himself to carving alone, while Francesco designs, carves and paints his masks.

Proceeds from sales of the masks benefits the gardens’ sustainability research and the artisans themselves. Pedro Rojas Morales said the money helps feed, educate and clothe the villagers.

The several hundred masks in the exhibit represent a year’s worth of work by the villagers, he said.

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Costa Rica Hummingbird Rescue

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Sin: If You Can’t Beat’em…

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For a lawmaker, it is as natural as breathing. Sin: if you can’t beat it, tax it. Actually, there already is a tax on those pay-by-the-minute motels and rooms, but it is nearly uncollectable.  National Liberation Party lawmaker Annie Saborio wants to simplify it.

no-tell-motel-dvdShe maintains that the current 30% tax on for limited use rooms just isn’t turning up the revenue for the government. So she has turned in a bill that would tax hotels and motels with a flat rate for the number of rooms instead of occupancy.

A flea-bag hotel, a strip joint with a cubby hole for fun and games, or a no-tell motel will under-report the number of guests who seek entertainment there, but there is no way the management can hide the number of rooms, she says.

And when the same room is used by several guests several times in the same night? Other than stationing a counter on the fire escape and one in the lobby, there’s just no way the tax collectior can tell.

The current tax system works for legitimate tourist hotels because they have have everything they need to back up their use figures — passport numbers and such. But sleazy hotels and motels — not so much.

This is not the only bill Saborio has presented. Another one under examination by lawmakers would force all motels to install a mechanical or electronic device on the door to each room.

Revenues produced by the new bill, should it become law, would be directed to the alleviation of poverty.

From iNews.co.cr

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Hotel Operators Looking Forward To Filling Their Rooms For Semana Santa

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161334_vacaciones-turismo-hotel-gThe country’s hotel operators are expecting Easter to save the season, looking forward to at least a average 80% occupation rate between Sunday March 24 and Sunday March 31.

The favourite for many is to head to the beaches during Semana Santa (Easter Week), Guanacaste and the Central Pacific hotels expect an 89% occupancy rate, while the Caribbean coast hotels expect to see up to a 85% rate.

Hotel operators in the Central Valley are looking to attract customers and expect a 71% occupancy rate.

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Medical Tourism Conference April 24-26

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meditourTourism remains an important source of income for Costa Rica. And one sector that is growing at a fast pace is, medical tourism.

In 2011, Costa Rica saw around 48.000 tourists who came for some type of medical treatment, investing some US$338 million collars.

The majority of tourists coming to country for medical purposes are from the United States and Canada. Denstistry, orthopedics, plastic surgery and preventive medicine are some of the services sought out by foreigners. The major factor for the increase in medical tourism is cost. A treatment in Costa Rica can be half of the same treatment up north.

To boost medical tourism, Costa Rica is hosting a medical conference between April 24 and 26 at the Marriot hotel in Playa Herradura.

The objective is to increase the number of tourists to 100.000 in 2014, whose principal reason for travelling to Costa Rica is medical services.

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San José – San Ramón Road Will Cost Commuters ¢80.000 Monthly

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The announcement Monday of the approval for the concessioning of the Ruta 1 – the Interamericana Norte –  has residents west of the airport concerned, as tolls can be as high as ¢80.000 colones monthly for commuters.

San Ramón, Palmares, Naranjo, Grecia, Poás and Atenas, among others, are communities that house thousands who daily work in Alajuela, Heredia and San José who face tolls of up ¢4.000 daily to get to and from an work, multiplied by at least 20 work days per month.

Currently on the Ruta 1, made up of the autopista General Cañas from La Sabana to the airport and the Bernardo Soto from the airport and San Ramón , there are only two toll stations: one westbound ahead of the airport that costs ¢75 and the other east of Naranjo, San José bound, that charges ¢150 colones.

The start of construction is expected within six months and expected to take 30 months to complete, when commuters will be forced to bear the added expense of using the toll road or take the old road to Alajuela, which would add up two hours or more to daily travel.

According to plans released by the Ministerio de Obras Publicas y Transportes (MOPT) on Monday the concession road will have five toll stations and reduce the time to travel the 58 kilometres between San Ramón and San José to about 20 minutes, as compared to almost three times that now.

The MOPT said Monday that the contract as awarded to the Brazilian company OAS, which will construct the road and maintain it under a 30 year concession contract, a contract that has been approved by the Contraloría (Comptrollers office) and forms part of the original plan called Autopistas del Valle.

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Traffic Cameras To Start Rolling April 15

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Although later than expected, the traffic surveillance cameras will start fining speeding drivers next month, according to the director of the Consejo de Seguridad Vial (COSEVI), Silvia Bolaños.

161229_camaras-080911Bolaños confirmed on Monday on national television that the traffic cameras system will fully operational on April 15.

The director explained that they have worked out the technical issues to not repeat the same mistakes made in the first attempt two years ago. This time around, the traffic law in effect on October 26, 2012, requires drivers to register their contact information for notification purposes and as such, there is the legal system to notify speeding drivers picked off by the cameras.

Bolaños explained that the new system will no longer be of fixed monitoring points, but rather one of a “controlled route”. Without too many details, the director said that traffic will be monitored by the use of multiple cameras on a specific route, like the autopista General Cañas (from La Sabana to the airport), allowing drivers to keep a constant speed.

With the fixed camera location drivers would slow down while crossing the cameras and then speed up again.

For now, the COSEVI will, in addition to the General Cañas, maintain camera surveillance on the Circunvalación and the road to Cartago.

Bolaños said that in six months they will evaluate the possibility of adding cameras to the San José – Limón (Ruta 32) and the San José – Caldera (Ruta 27).

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San José – San Ramón Road Expansion To Start In Six Months

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Road will be a toll road under concession for the next 30 years

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The extension and reconstruction of the San José – San Ramon road will start in the next six months, announced presidenta Laura Chinchilla on Monday.

The presidenta emphasized that an integral part of the contract is road maintenance, as Costa Ricans deserve better roads.

The San José – San Ramón work is divided into five stages that runs from La Sabana in San José, at the start of the autopista General Cañas to San Ramón in the province of Alajuela.

According to the ministro de Obras Públicas y Transportes (MOPT), Pedro Castro, the cost is US$523 million dollars and take 30 months to complete. The work includes the intervention of 8 bridges and the building of 10 overpasses, including some sections being expanded to four lanes and in the case of the Juan Pablo II bridge to eight lanes.

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The 58 kilometres between La Sabana and San Ramón will be a concession road, similar to the Ruta 27 (San José – Caldera),  with five toll stations and under the management of the Brazilian company, OAS, for the next 30 years. The cost of the toll is expected to be ¢3.800 colones.

Besides having a ‘world class’ highway, minister Castro says that travel time between San José and San Ramón will be greatly reduced. It currently takes – without traffic congestion – about 45 minutes to travel the distance.

Although presidenta Chinchilla was positive and expressing satisfaction on achieving a goal that she says was a priority for her government, she predicted that the first objections will start appearing in “less than 24 hours”.

Ruta 1 or the Interamericana is the busiest road in Costa Rica. The section between the Juan Pablo II bridge and the airport was expanded to six lanes some years ago, doing away with shoulders and with two four lane bridges acting as bottlenecks.

Editor’s Note: The news of the approval clears up why literally and without explanation the reconstruction of the Bernardo Soto portion (airport to Recope) of the Ruta 1, came to a standstill several months ago. It also explains the MOPT’s feet dragging with the repair of the “platina” bridge.

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Caja To Be In Full Operation For Semana Santa

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The Caja Costarricense del Seguro Social (CCSS) announced on Monday that it will keep all of its services open and running during Semana Santa (Holy Week) this year.

The state medical system said all emergency services, clinics and hospitals across the country will be fully open, including financial services, drug delivery, laboratories and specialist consultations.

Semana Santa begins on Sunday, March 24 and end on Sunday, March 31.

The Thursday and Friday of Semana Santa are legal holidays in Costa Rica.

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Gas Price Drop Approved, Hike Around The Corner

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Despite that a gas price hike is being considered, the Autoridad Reguladora de Servicios Públicos (Aresep) approved Monday a decrease of ¢6 colones on each litre of fuel that will take effect in the coming days.
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The decrease will see the price of a litre of super gasoline drop from the current ¢735 to ¢729, regular from ¢693 to ¢688 and diesel from ¢656 to ¢650.

Kerosine, natural gas and aviation fuel prices will also drop once the approval is published in the official government newsletter, La Gaceta.

María Angélica Carvajal, spokesperson for the Aresep, said the drop was approved despite a request by gasoline station operators to increase their profit margin on the sale of fuels by 37%.

Fuel prices and the margins earned by gasoline retailers are controlled by the Aresep and in effect at all gasoline stations across the country.

The reduction won’t last long, however, as the Aresep is processing a request for an increase of ¢29 colones per litre on all fuels.

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Poll Indicates No Winner if Presidential Elections Were Held Today

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If the presidential elections were held today there would be no winner for Costa Ricans, less than a year before the 2014 elections, say they do not know who to vote for, according to the latest post by UNIMER for La Nación.

The poll results show that 32 percent of voters do not know who to vote for and 22 percent say they will not vote.

Costa Rica elections rules call for a candidate to obtain at least 40 percent of total voter, failing a runoff election is held between the two top candidates.

The last time a runoff election was held was in 2002, when Abel Pacheco went on to beat Rolando Araya in the second round.

According to the UNIMER poll, the PLN’s Johnny Araya has 27 percent support from potential voters, while the PAC’s Epsy Campbell only 4 percent and the Libertario’s Otto Guevara, 3 percent.

The poll was conducted between January 24 and February 4, taking in the response of 1.200 people across the country.

At the time of the poll, neither Rodolfo Hernández of the PUSC, nor José María Villalta of the Frente Amplio parties had announced their presidential run.

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Costa Rican Papaya Will Be At Agitrade 2013

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papayas_platThe papaya GoldenPerfecta® is exclusively produced in Costa Rica and belongs to the Pococi hybrid variety, whose seed is protected and regulated by the Ministerio de Agricultura y Ganadería (MAG) – ministry of Agriculture.

It is characterised by an intense inner red colour, its flavour and aroma, with a high Brix level, of up to 11. Besides, “its long shelf life and resistance make it especially suitable for long distance maritime exports,” explains Stéphane Martin, from the firm EICSA.

Although they have a good presence in the Canadian market, the goal now is to find a way to introduce their papaya in Europe, competing against Brazil.

“We entered the Canadian market 7 years ago, and even since production and exports to that country have constantly developed.
We trust that the experience gained will help us reach our current goal of successfully introducing the GoldenPerfecta® in Europe, where it will directly compete with Brazilian papayas, as their weight varies from 1 to 2kgs per unit,” affirms Stéphane.

“Our GoldenPerfecta® papaya is grown following strict production and harvest protocols in order to obtain the best possible quality and meet the GlobalGap certification rules,” he adds.

As for the promotion of the papayas, EICSA S.A. will seek to advertise their health benefits among consumers.

“We believe that the exceptional nutritional qualities of papayas must be better advertised, so that they are seen not just as an exotic fruit, but also as an ideal option for a healthy lifestyle, explains Stéphane.

Agitrade 2013 is being held at Antigua, Guatemala, on 14 and 15 March 2013.

Source: Fresh Plaza

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Infosys opens new delivery centre in Costa Rica

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Infosys-Technologies35Infosys announced it has expanded its presence in Latin America with a new delivery centre for its business process outsourcing subsidiary, Infosys BPO, in San José, Costa Rica.

The centre’s 100-plus employees initially will provide key services in the strategic sourcing and procurement area for Procter & Gamble, the world’s largest consumer packaged goods company, the Bangalore-headquartered IT major said in a statement.

Infosys will soon offer the entire range of BPO services in Costa Rica for its global clients, in areas including finance and accounting, human resources management, analytics, legal processes, customer relationship services, marketing, and supply chain management.

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One Third of Costa Rica Households Headed By Women

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great-energy-challenge-grantees-seachar_42917_600x450Data from the Ministerio de Trabajo (Ministry of Labour) shows that almost one third – 31% – of households in Costa Rica are headed by women. In fact, 4% of those women have two paid jobs.

The total work force in Costa Rica is made up of 45.2% women.

According to the Encuesta Nacional de Hogares (National Household Survey), the behaviour of employment rates of women between 2000 and 2012 has risen from 32.6% to 40.6%. So, if in 2000 the number of employed women was 449.938, 2012 the numbers rose to 759.953.

The Instituto Nacional de Estadística y Censos (INEC) – National Institute of Statistics and Census – numbers confirm the Labour figures, in that at least one in three households in the country has a woman as the head of the family. Important to note that though women work outside the home, they do not let family chores slide, according to the report.

At least one Costa Rica bank, the Banco Popular is directing their products at women. The bank, by way of its BP Empresarias (businesswomen), in a program launched in March 2012 has placed more than ¢2.25 billion colones of credit in micro, small and medium sized businesses run by women. BP Empresarias accounts for 5% of the gross profits for the bank.

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App Allows You To Leave Message Bypassing Conversation

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Do you ever wish that when you call someone, you could just skip the conversation and leave their mobile phone a voicemail?

mzl.ymhfazuv.320x480-75While watching a recent episode of Rules of Engagement where the wife is frustrated that her calls to her husband, who is partying it up in a local bar to avoid baby furniture shopping, go straight to his voicemail. The wife then learns about “Shy Dial”, calling her hubby one more time knowing well the result and leaves her hubby a message about her old college roommate and fulfilling his long awaited fantasy of a threesome…you have to see the episode for the ending.

By now you asking what is Shy Dial? A Google search led me to the iTunes (Apple) store that, to my surprise, lists an app “Go2TheirVM“.  Could not find this version at the Android Market, though there is a listing of similar services.

Simply, the app allows you to call someone and skip the conversaton and their mobile phone a voicemail. But, does it work?  I quickly downloaded the app – it’s FREE – and was quickly voicemailing (if such a word exists) away. Well almost. Unfortunately, the App does  NOT WORK IN COSTA RICA.Not yet, anyways. Once I have this figured out, I will update this post.

So, for those of you in the U.S. with Go 2 Their Voicemail UNLIMITED, you can connect directly to a mobile phone’s voicemail box, with NO advertising, as many times you want!

WHEN WOULD YOU — USE THIS APP?
Anytime you want to skip the conversation and just leave someone a voicemail.

– When you are short on time and don’t have time for a conversation.
– When you don’t want bother someone because you know they are busy.
– When you have more to say then you can fit in a text message.

HOW DOES IT WORK?
Before you are able to use the App, you first need to enter in your iPhone mobile number. You can do this by clicking the Settings button and entering in your iPhone mobile number. Once you enter this information, you CAN NOT change it, so be sure to double check that all information is correct.

Then select the contact you want to leave a voicemail for or enter in the U.S. mobile phone number manually. We will connect you directly to their voicemail box so you can leave them a voicemail.

It does not work to landlines, prepaid mobile phones or to those using a third party voicemail system.

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“Bueyes” Filled The Streets of Escazú Sunday

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The traditional “Boyero” parade took place in San Antonio de Escazú on Sunday, with more than 200 oxen and carts participating in celebration of the Día Nacional del Boyero.

The strong midday sun was no impediment to the crowds that took in what appeared reminiscent of an Escazú of the not so distant past.

More than a few lining the sidewalks of San Antonio de Escazú (south of downtown Escazú, up the mountain) is sure to have lived in the “city of witches” when the oxen and cart were the major means of transportation and for many their daily bread.

The traditional parade was not just Boyeros, mixed in were the mascaradas (masquerades), the cimarrona and dancers performing national dancers.

Not be left out were the baby team of oxen and the dogs.

The Boyeor parade is a tradition that was started back in 1983. In 1988, the government declared the second Sunday in March the Día Nacional del Boyero.

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Costa Rica’s Aging Population Multiplies Number of Seniors Driving

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In Costa Rica, there are 185.231 people over the age of 65 with a active driver’s licenses, according to the Ministerio de Obras Públicas y Transportes. Furthermore, Costa Rica does not have an age limit for driving.

The country’s aging population multiplies the number of vehicles driven by seniors. And the risk of accidents.

Last year, the Policia de Tránsito (traffic police) fined 38.591 drivers over the age of 65 and report that seniors were involved in 373 traffic accidents.

According to  Silvia Bolaños, director of Consejo de Seguridad Vial (COSEVI), the lack of respect and courtesy on the country’s roads can make it difficult for seniors to drive.

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The abnormally low speed, sudden lane changes and driving in the wrong direction are some of the risk factors associated with old age, according to international publications.

While many seniors are safe drivers, statistics show that a driver older than age 75 is just as likely as a teenager to be involved in an automobile accident. According to the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety – a U.S. non-profit organization – a senior citizen is more likely than a younger driver to be at fault in an accident in which they are involved.The most common violations include failure to obey traffic signals, unsafe turns and passing, and failure to yield the right of way.

The Institute says that seniors are seen by some as among the safest drivers on the road, as they generally do not speed or take risks, and they are more likely to wear seat belts.

Signs of impairment

The following are considered sign that an elderly person’s driving may be impaired:

  •     Confusion while driving somewhere
  •     Having two or more minor accidents in a short period of time
  •     Thinking the speed limit is too high
  •     Others not feeling comfortable riding in a vehicle with the driver

Aging individuals should consider the following questions:

  •     When you are driving, do objects such as parked cars or pedestrians catch you by surprise?
  •     Do you have difficulty seeing other cars before the driver honks? Do other drivers honk at you for reasons you don’t understand?
  •     Do you have limited neck rotation?
  •     Are your reflexes slower and reaction time longer than they used to be?
  •     Do you ever feel momentarily confused, nervous, or uncomfortable while driving?
  •     Has a family member ever suggested that you stop driving?
  •     Do you have low-contrast sensitivity? For example, do you have trouble seeing a gray car at dusk, a black car at night, or a white car on a snowy roadway?
  •     Is your visual acuity on a 20/20 scale below the minimum level required by your state?

 

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More Taxes on Motels Proposed

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Motels operators face paying more taxes if legislators approve a bill which would charge a tax based on the number of rooms; the more rooms, the bigger the tax bite.

The bill was presented on February 27 by Partido Liberacion Nacional (PL) legislator, Annie Saborio.

Currently motels pay a flat 30% tax on the use of a room. The tax money is destined for the Instituto Mixto de Ayuda Social (IMAS) – Institute for Social Assistance. But, the legislator says there is not way of verifying if the declaration of use by operators is correct and believes it is low to avoid paying more tax.

With the new bill, the motel operator will have to pay a daily use tax – a percentage calculated on the base salary of a clerk, based on the number of rooms.

The current base salary is ¢362.000 colones and motel with up to 20 rooms would pay a 9% tax; 21 – 50 rooms, 10%; 51- 100 rooms, 11% tax; and more than 101 rooms, a 12% tax.

The bill is accompanied by another bill, also presented by Saborio, which would see the placement of a device to record the entrances to the garage of the rooms.

Both bills need to be discussed with the Comisión de Asuntos Sociales before it can be presented to the full Legislative floor.

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Costa Rica Attracting Tourists – and Drug Cartels (Video)

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WSJ.com/ Renowned as a tourism hub for its lush jungle and coastline, Costa Rica has become part of the pipeline for drug traffickers hauling cocaine northward. WSJ’s Leslie Josephs reports.

 

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Costa Rica Becomes Major Drug Transit Point to U.S.

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WSJ.com/ Mexican and Colombian cartels have already turned parts of Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador into a major drug-trafficking corridor, while driving up homicide rates. They are now pulling in Costa Rica, Central America’s standout economy and democracy.

While its tropical beaches, cloud forests and proximity to the U.S. are selling points to millions of tourists, Costa Rica’s location has also attracted traffickers hauling cocaine from Andean nations northward.

“Our geography has us prisoner,” said President Laura Chinchilla, in an interview.

The U.S. State Department said in an annual narcotics report released last week that Costa Rica is facing drug violence and crime due to its “inadequate resources and complicated bureaucracy.” It said Costa Rica should enact laws that target criminal groups.

Costa Rican antidrug police seized 15.5 tons of cocaine last year—worth more than $2 billion on the U.S. street—more than double the amount the year before, the Public Security Ministry said recently.

About a fifth of those seizures happened at this bustling border crossing with Nicaragua. Peñas Blancas’s ramshackle police station, a front line in fighting Costa Rica’s cross-border drugs trade, underscores the country’s uphill battle.

There are three checkpoints here, two for a long line of trucks that stretch for miles in both directions, and one for people crossing the border on foot. Drivers sling hammocks underneath truck beds to snooze during the some half-day waits to cross the border.

The checkpoint for thousands of people who cross the border on foot each day is a rickety wooden rain shelter manned by a sole police officer at a picnic table.

“It is very rustic. It is old,” said an antidrug police official. “It makes [their work] more difficult. There isn’t enough good equipment.”

Shifting patterns in the drugs trade in the 1990s and 2000s due to the weakening of Colombian cartels and Mexico’s war on its own cartels are prompting drug gangs to step up their activity in Central America, an isthmus of mostly small and weak governments.

Antidrug seizures peaked in the late-2000s, as Costa Rican authorities captured large hauls of cocaine from boats off the Pacific Coast. Public Security Minister Mario Zamora said that crackdown prompted cartels to seek other routes and ways in which they more frequently evade detection.

“The technique was to carry large quantities [of cocaine]. Now they use small amounts,” he said in an interview. Cartels “take other routes where they are fewer police. They are always studying to find the alternative route.”

Still, more than 80% of the South American cocaine trafficked to the U.S.—the world’s biggest cocaine consumer—was moved through Central America, according to the State Department’s report last week. That is a change from the 1980s, when most cocaine was shipped through the Caribbean.

The White House included Costa Rica on its list of major illicit drug transit or producing countries in its most recent report on the subject. It was the third time this tiny nation earned that distinction, which included 22 nations, most of them in the Americas.

Ms. Chinchilla, who took office in May 2010, is one of a growing number of regional leaders who have called for debate on the legalization of drugs to help curb demand and reduce violence.

U.S. officials have so far rejected those calls.

Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua and Guatemala are bearing the brunt of the assault by narcotraffickers. Overall, the U.N. says Central America is the world’s most violent noncombat zone. Honduras, for instance, has a per-capita homicide rate of 92, compared with about five per 100,000 residents in the U.S.

But now, Costa Rica a relatively peaceful and prosperous country compared with its neighbors, is under assault. It is a major concern for a government that prides itself on its high marks for literacy and health care. Costa Rica abolished its military in 1948 and its citizens enjoy the benefits of heavy social spending.

But it is hard-pressed to match the power and stealth of drug cartels including Mexico’s Sinaloa cartel, which Costa Rican law-enforcement officials say is the biggest threat.

“It is easier to smuggle up through Central America than try to get it directly into the U.S.” by airplane or boat, said a senior U.S. law-enforcement official. “They can also avoid detection or being investigated by U.S. law enforcement.”

Along with the increased flow of drugs has come a rise in homicides: between 2005 and 2010, homicides in Costa Rica rose 71% to 518. The killings have declined slightly over the last two years, with 394 murders in 2012.

To help fight violent crime, Costa Rica last year boosted its police budget by 11% from 2011 to $351.5 million—slightly less than the police budget of Baltimore—to fight drug-related and common crime.

Since 2009, Central America has received nearly $500 million from the U.S. under a security initiative to fight drug traffickers.

But Costa Rica is looking elsewhere for more aid, and recently received a $20 million from China for Costa Rica’s new police school, Mr. Zamora said.

Some say the country is by far the best prepared in the region to deal with the problem, but it must act fast.

“The levels of violence and criminality have not reached the level that have in the north” of Central America, said Adriana Beltrán, a senior associate at the Washington Office on Latin America, a think tank. “They can address this without it having get to that critical point.”

Original report at http://online.wsj.com

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Chepito Celebrating His 112th At Fridays!

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José Delgado, known as “Chepito”, celebrating his 112th birthday at Fridays last year. Today he celebrates his 113th, continuing to be the oldest man in Costa Rica.

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“Chepito” Celebrates His 113th Today!

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At 113 José Delgado Corrales, “Chepito” as he is known affectionately, has only a few years to go to top the Guinness world record for the oldest man in the world, a title currently held by Japan’s Jiroemon Kimura, who is 115 years old (born April 19, 1897).

Born on March 10, 1900, Chepito is Costa Rica’s oldest man. According to the Tribunal Supremo de Elecciones (TSE), Chepito was also the oldest voter in the 2010 presidential elections and looking good for 2014 elections next February.

In the past year Chepito lost most of his hearing, after losing his sight the year before. Despite this he is “all with it”, according to nuns of the Santa Ana old age home. In fact, Mother Superior, Dadiamy DiMatteo, tells how Chepito scaled the “porton” (gate) a few months back to take his daily jaunt.

Chepito loved take his morning walks, the neighbours always gave him fruit, some even would invite him for lunch. Due to his physical restraints, the nuns at the home had to restrict his daily escapades, though continues to keep active with  his other 21 elderly at the home.

The octogenarian still bathes himself, move about freely – never leaving his ‘tenis” (shoes) too far and is the first on the dance floor when the music kicks up.

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Costa Rica Immigration CAN Detain Foreigners

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Costa Rica’s Immigration Police have the right to detain foreigners and hold them for 24 hours while their agency investigates their travel documents, ruled the Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme Court (Sala IV) this week.

In doing so, Sala IV rejected a 2011 constitutional challenge of 13 articles of the Immigration law. The court heard testimony recorded by the Landerholm Immigration, A.P.C. from several unions and associations representing foreign workers.

Sala IV judges refused to consider most of the articles but did debate Article 18 of the law and Article 31. They permit detention of foreigners in order to examine their migratory status.

If their status appears illegal they can be held up to 30 days, the court ruled. Acting Immigration director Freddy Montero said the ruling gives his police time check for illegal traffic of human beings, and false immigration papers.

(This country has a strong desire to halt human trafficking within its borders but but sometimes lacks the legal tools to follow up its humane inclinations.)

But Montero pointed out that the ruling should not raise fears of high-handed mistreatment of foreigners. Immigration cannot, says Artile 24, hold a passport indefinitely without a time limit placed on the confiscation. Only the courts have that power.

Immigration can hold a passport longer than 24 hours only if important considerations force it to do so and only with a formal resolution. Again, the courts may do this, but not Immigration.

From iNews.co.cr

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The Cell Phone: A De Facto Companion in Costa Rica Schools

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cell_phoneEducators hate them, most school principals prohibit them in theory, but the cell phone continues to be a constant companion in school, even during lectures. This was the finding of the national newspaper La Nacion.

Reporters visited a number of schools and found out that the administration has all but given up the fight. A few still throw chalk to get student’s attention or snarl a lightning question, but most say it’s a lost cause.

Even high Education Ministry official Mario Fung calls shutting them down in class “improbable” and says most students simply ignore administrational bans on their use. Not even confiscation works.

In fact, he has become a convert to allowing the cell phones — always if the student has finished his assignments, of course. If the phone helps the student with his school work, so much the better.

The same experience exists with teachers at both public and private schools. Indeed, teacher Lourdes Juarez at Luis Dobles Segreda High School in the Sabana says that it can even become a teaching tool.

Indeed, Fung says that parents are partly at fault, buying phones “in case of emergency” for their child. But Fung says the phones have become a social device, not a lifeline.

The paper found that the phones have taken over in a big way, much to the delight of cell communications companies. Kids use them before they learn to tie their own shoes and older students may ignore the safety of condoms but have cell phones tucked to their cheeks.

But Fung obviously thinks it has become an addiction. This is why he doesn’t favor confiscation, he told La Nacion, saying that without them, students often become “desperate.”

What about the students who don’t have cell phones? “We have to train those who have them to share,” says Fung.

From iNews.co.cr

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Carlos Vives In Closing Ceremony of San Jose Games

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Grammy Award and three-time Latin Grammy Award-winning Colombian singer, composer and actor, Carlos Vives will perform at the closing of the 10th Central American Games in San José, informed the organizers.

Vives, who used to sing that he played soccer with Carlos “El Pibe” Valderrama in Barranquilla, confirms that he cares for both sport and music, particularly his famous vallenato.

Johnny Araya, Mayor of San Jose and president of the Organizing Committee of the Games, said the closure will be “a tribute to the youth”, with several shows and the Vives concert.

The program includes the musicians Son de Tikizia, Ligia Torijano and her group, José Pablo Vargas, and extreme sports athletes such as BMX bicycle acrobats.

In the regional sports event are taking part about 2.700 competitors from Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Belize and Panama, and the host country, Costa Rica.

The closing ceremonies will take place on Sunday, March 17 at 7:00pm in the National Stadium. The event has been named “Festejemos” (let’s celebrate).

Tickets for the event can be purchased at Special ticket: www.specialticket.net.

Price starts at ¢12.500 to ¢20.500. Customers of Banco de Costa Rica (BCR) and Banco Nacional (BN) get a 20% discount.

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Ruta Caldera One Way To San José Today Sunday

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The Autopistas del Sol announced that that the Ruta 267 (San José- Caldera) will be one way to San José between 1pm and 6pm today, Sunday, between the Pozón (Orotina) toll station and Cuidad Colón (Santa Ana).

The objective is to allow visitors to the Pacific coast this weekend a speedy return to the Central Valley.

The change will force drivers headed to the Pacific to use the old road, the Cerro del Aguacate or the Cambronero (the Interamericana) to Puntarenas.

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Six Arrested In Alleged Attacks on Tourists In Caribbean

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In the early hours of Saturday morning authorities arrested members of a gang suspected of attacks in the southern Caribbean, including on a number of tourists visiting the country.

Authorities say they have in custody five men and a woman suspected of at least one violent robbery in the area near the Panamanian border.

The raids were made on several homes in the areas of Bribri, Hone Creek and Sixaola in the province of Limón, that included nine judges, including several from San José, accompanying police.

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Chinchilla: “I Didn’t Come To Give Opinion On Who Will Replace Chavez”

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Presidenta Laura Chinchilla, with Sebastian Pinera (Chile), Raul Castro (Cuba), Evo Morales (Bolivia), Daniel Ortega (Nicaragua), and Rafael Correa (Ecuador), in a honour guard next to the coffin of President of Venezuela, Hugo Chavez, during his state funeral at a military academy in Caracas.

In Caracas, dressed in formal mourning and hurried by Venezuelan officials, amid the diplomatic crowd gathered for the funeral of Hugo Chavez, presidenta Laura Chinchilla avoided referring to the inauguration of Nicolas Maduro as president of Venezuela.

Although the Venezuelan constitution states that the president of the National Assembly, Diosado Cabello, is to take power on the death of a president, vice-president Maduro was sworn in as interim president, until the elections on April 14.

“I did not come comment on  the internal aspects of the organization to replace Chavez. Ours is a presence of solidarity, love and appreciation to the Venezuelan people in this time of grief”, said Chinchilla while under escort by officers of the red beret.

Both Chinchilla and Costa Rica’s Foreign Minister, Enrique Castillo, advocated that Venezuela solves its current situation within the framework of its constitution.

“I do not understand this step (the decision to swear in Maduro as president), but would have to see what justifications the government of Venezuela has. What I hope is that all will be without internal conflicts”, said Castillo to reporters.

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27 March 2026 - At The Banks - Source: BCCR