Pages
Categories
Archives
- August 2008
- July 2008
- June 2008
- May 2008
- April 2008
- March 2008
- February 2008
- January 2008
- December 2007
- November 2007
- October 2007
- September 2007
- August 2007
- July 2007
- June 2007
- May 2007
- April 2007
- March 2007
- February 2007
- January 2007
- December 2006
- November 2006
- October 2006
- September 2006
- August 2006
- July 2006
- June 2006
- May 2006
- April 2006
- March 2006
- February 2006
- January 2006
- December 2005
- November 2005
- October 2005
- September 2005
- August 2005
Meta
Autor: Writer
~ 18/09/06
Hundreds of opponents of the Central American Free-Trade Agreement with the United States (CAFTA) saw Friday’s Independence Day holiday as a prime occasion to protest the agreement.
Protestors, including students and union leaders, marched peacefully behind the Independence Day parades in San José and gathered in the Plaza de la Democracia to speak against the agreement and President Oscar Arias, who supports it.
Protestors organized various cultural activities, including a concert with local musicians, to express their fear that the agreement would threaten the country’s individuality. Many also expressed concern that CAFTA could harm Costa Rica’s environment.
Jesús Vásquez, president of the High-School Teachers’ Association (APSE), said that on the anniversary of Costa Rica’s independence from Spain, all Costa Ricans should be aware that their country is “on a very dangerous track.”
“Today, surrounded by our national culture, we wanted to sound an alarm so that people will realize the dangers that come with this agreement and the polarization we are living through in Costa Rica,” Vásquez said.
Costa Rica is the only signatory country that has not ratified the agreement, which is being considered by a Legislative Assembly commission.
Meanwhile, President Oscar Arias addressed the nation Friday. His speech not only lauded the country’s achievements but also pointed out the hard work required for Costa Rica to get ahead, according to a statement from Casa Presidencial.
Costa Rica “is still not totally free because it remains wrapped up in old beliefs of former policies that, though they were effective at the time, have stopped serving the best interests of the country,” Arias said.
Costa Rica “has not gathered the force necessary to separate from the past those traditions and values worth conserving from those that have become heavy chains for the advancement of our society.”
Creating security among citizens, investing in education and implementing fiscal reforms are steps Arias said are necessary for the country to advance.
-ACAN-EFE and Tico Times
Autor: Writer
Costa Rica is a first-world country when drinking and agricultural water is studied.
Most of Latin America is fraught with danger for those who would unthinkingly brush teeth or accept a soft drink over ICE.
Yet the growing population here may change that situation.
The issue is newsworthy today because the United States is facing an epidemic of E. coli bacteria believed linked to packaged spinach, produced in California. More than 100 persons have been sickened, and two deaths have been linked to the outbreak.
Even though some packages carried the label “Dole,” all the spinach involved is reported to have come from California. Costa Rica exports tons of vegetables to the United States, and there have been few recent problems. U.S. consumers purchase over 2 million bags of Dole salad every day, the company said.
E. coli comes from only one source: sewage, either human or animal. And such an infection can be fatal for toddlers or the aged or infirm.
Dole Food Co., Inc., has announced that it supports the voluntary recall issued by Natural Selection Foods of packaged fresh spinach that Natural Selection produced and packaged. Some of it was under the Dole brand. The suspect spinach carries the best-if-used-by date of Aug. 17 through Oct. 1, 2006, said Dole.
One argument that has been advanced in favor of rebuilding the Central Valley sewer lines is to take sewage out of the surface water. The current system dumps untreated sewage into tributaries that eventually flow into the Río Tárcoles and then the Gulf of Nicoya. Agricultural irrigation that uses water from the Tárcoles might contain E. coli or worse.
Those who have traveled elsewhere in Latin America or in Eastern Europe or Asia know that living in Costa Rica is a luxury. At least within the Central Valley the water that comes from the tap is drinkable. Scotch can be drunk on the rocks. And teeth can be brushed and mouths rinsed with tap water.
Some prefer bottled water that comes from springs. And that is available both as home-delivery and as individual bottles in restaurants and stores. But bottled water is not madatory as it is elsewhere.
In some Latin countries lettuce is a luxury. That leafy vegetable is hard to clean, and parboiling to remove E. coli or amoebas destroys the taste.
Caracas, Venezuela, used to have two restaurants run by North Americans who advertised that their lettuce was irrigated from deep wells. North Americans used to flock there to eat whole heads of crispy lettuce. It was a treat in a land where most of the fresh food is contaminated. The dense population of the Caracas area polluted most of the streams that farmers later used for irrigation.
Most home gardeners know that using fresh manure for vegetable fertilizer is a bad practice. The bacteria stays alive and reproduces. A child’s death in Maine was traced to E. coli from calf manure that his mother added to the family garden, according to Colorado State University. Bacteria will even survive a freezing winter, and composting plus four to six months of curing is recommended, the university said.
There is some scientific evidence that E. coli can enter plants via the root system.
E. coli also is found in milk, undercooked hamburger, other fresh vegetables and unpasteurized fruit juices. Cheese and ICE cream also can be vectors of the bacteria.
A description of other parasites that might invade the body through drinking water or food would fill a large textbook. Fortunately many are rare in Costa Rica.
The Central Valley sewer project appears to be hung up in the Asamblea Legislativa where lawmakers have to decide if they will accept a $130 million loan from the government of Japan. Health officials and water company executives are pushing for the measure, but the $130 million is only about a third of the cost. So lawmakers have to decide if they will come up with the rest of the money.
The project would include building a major sewage treatment plant and installing new lines throughout the central valley, including in areas where such lines do not now exist.
Autor: Writer
The porteadores or contract drivers plan another demonstration for Tuesday, and transport officials are ready to crack down by ticketing and towing the vehicles.
The porteadores are the drivers who rely on a clause in the commercial code to keep their work legal.
Unlike licensed taxi drivers, the porteadores are supposed to take people from door to door and not find customers on the street.
A measure in the Asamblea Legislativa would eliminate the commercial code clause and make the work of the porteador illegal. Taxi drivers like this idea and have staged road blockages in support of the measure.
Porteadores say 7,000 families all over the country depend on their income.
With higher gasoline prices and higher tax fares, customers are fewer, and taxi drivers are feeling a pinch. They blame the porteadores and call them nothing more than piratas.
Porteadores staged a protest Sept. 5 where they shut down or constricted major traffic routes. A similar effort is expected for Tuesday, and officials from the Policía de Tránsito and the Ministerio de Obras Pública y Transporte say they will respond with vigor.
Autor: Writer
and the A.M. Costa Rica wire services
Costa Rica is not a banana republic. It is an Apple republic, according to President Óscar Arias Sánchez, who spoke Sunday in Denver at a gathering of some 3,000 youngsters.
Arias said that pineapple is the third biggest export of Costa Rica. Bananas are second. But in first place, he said, are computer chips made here by Intel which find their way into Macintosh products, whose logo is the apple.
Arias used the apple metaphor to show that Costa Rica has made an investment in education and the modernization of its production. And, said the Nobel Peace Prize laureate, this has been possible because in 1948 Costa Rica eliminated the military.
Arias told the youngsters, who came from many countries for the event called Peace Jam, that the United States spends at least $1 trillion a year on military and that just a fraction of that would be enough to provide clean drinking water to the 1.6 million around the world who do not have it.
Other Nobel laureates, including the Dalai Lama were at the Denver, Colorado, event.
The word security has been kidnapped by a perception that arms guarantee the welfare of people, said Arias. “The biggest killer of human beings is not Saddam Hussein, the ex-dictator of Iraq, but heart attacks. Malaria and AIDS together kill more people than al Qaeda,” said Arias.
The president is off to New York today for the General Assembly of the United Nations where he will urge adoption of his proposal to approve a treaty that would keep track of the international sale of weapons.
Casa Presidencial said that Arias obtained support from various Nobel laureates to back his resolution.
President George Bush also is on the list of world leaders and government ministers gathering in New York this week for the annual U.N. General Assembly debate. This year’s event takes on added significance, with negotiations on the sidelines to determine who will be the world body’s next secretary-general.
For Latin American countries, there is the added question of what country will occupy one of the non-permanent seats on the Security Council. The U.S. backs Guatemala, but Venezuela also wants the seat.
The debate begins Tuesday, and over seven days, more than 80 heads of state and government will address the assembly. Bush will speak at the opening session, along with the leaders of France, Finland, Poland, South Africa, Pakistan and Brazil.
Iran’s president, Mahmoud Ahmedinejad, is slated to speak late in the day, but he will not cross paths with Bush.
The Assembly debate has become an occasion for bilateral and group meetings among world leaders, as well as for forums and conferences. Bush’s schedule includes a one-on-one chat with Secretary-General Kofi Annan, and private meetings with several of his fellow heads of state.
Autor: Writer
~ 16/09/06
Saying that the only way for the Americas to get ahead is by embracing globalization, President Oscar Arias inaugurated the Americas Conference, a business and political forum sponsored by The Miami Herald, in Miami, Florida Wednesday night, according to a statement from Casa Presidencial.
“Only if we open ourselves up will we be able to develop dynamic production sectors and create enough high-quality jobs for our youth,” Arias said.
Lauding Chile’s economic growth and development achieved by opening its markets to the rest of the world, Arias called for the rest of the region to adopt this attitude of globalization.
He attributed a worldwide decrease in poverty during the past two decades to India and China adopting globalization philosophies and opening new markets, the statement said.
Arias also emphasized the need for better education systems in Latin America, saying statistics show one in three young people in the region do not attend school. More investment in public education, as well as disarmament and demilitarization, are crucial for Latin America to get ahead, he said.
Arias, a Nobel Peace Prize winner, is back on his home soil today for Costa Rica’s Independence Day celebrations, but he will depart for the United States again tomorrow to attend Peace Jam in Denver, Colorado. The event, held by the nonprofit PeaceJam Foundation, brings together young people and Nobel Peace Prize winners to discuss issues such as violence and tolerance; Arias is attending as a guest of honor.
-Tico Times
Autor: Writer
By Blake Schmidt and Katherine Stanley
Tico Times Staff
The naming of a new executive president for the Costa Rican Electricity Institute (ICE) this week drew fire from labor unions and rekindled controversy surrounding the administration’s highly anticipated proposal to break up the state-run monopoly and open up parts of the telecommunications market to competition.
The proposals are part of a massive restructuring of Costa Rica’s service markets required under the Central American Free-Trade Agreement with the United States (CAFTA), under consideration in the Legislative Assembly, and are already being compared to legislation that set off weeks of violent protests that brought the nation to a state of near paralysis six years ago (TT, March 24, 2000).
The two proposals – one of which would strengthen and modernize ICE and the other which would gradually lift the state monopoly on telecommunications – are now being reviewed by members of the ICE Board of Directors, who will then provide the Executive Branch with recommendations before the bills are sent to the Legislative Assembly for debate. Some legislators are criticizing the administration of President Oscar Arias for taking so long to send the bills, though Environment and Energy Minister Roberto Dobles, who oversees ICE, told The Tico Times the drafting and revision process has been completed “in record time.”
In 2000, the Legislative Assembly’s approval in first debate of ICE modernization plans known as the “Combo ICE” brought thousands of Costa Ricans to the street for 19 days in protests that resulted in violence and blockades that eventually forced the government to withdraw the bill. This week’s developments, which came as CAFTA opponents planned protests to coincide with today’s Independence Day celebrations, prompted union leaders to accuse the administration of seeking to privatize ICE, and have jolted one of the country’s largest government-run agencies.
In With the New
On Monday, Jorge Gutiérrez announced he was resigning from his post as head of ICE. His resignation letter to Arias, which was distributed to the press Tuesday along with copies of a note from Gutiérrez’s doctor, cited health reasons as the cause of his decision.
The ICE leader, who, like Arias, took office in May, and whose last day of work is today, denied that his resignation has anything to do with differences of opinion with the administration over telecommunications reform and modernization plans for the institute.
“I made the decision Sunday with my family, after I had a hypertension crisis,” said Gutiérrez, 60, who said his high-stress 18-hour days as ICE president, along with his struggle with diabetes, were taking a toll on his health.
President Arias expressed his sadness about Gutiérrez’s departure and announced his choice of Pablo Quirós, 68, as the new president of ICE at a press conference Tuesday at Casa Presidencial.
“He believes in what we said during the campaign: ICE has to be modernized,” Arias said of Quirós, reiterating his stance that the institute has no reason to fear competition. He added that “it’d be difficult, I think, for anyone to know as much about telecommunications” as Quirós.
The President’s Cabinet must still approve Quirós’ nomination before he takes office – they were expected to do so at last night’s special Cabinet meeting in Cartago, east of San José – but he has already faced clashes with union leaders who criticized the nominee for his “attitude of privatization” and promised to fight his appointment, not ruling out the possibility of strikes.
“We don’t trust you,” ICE union leader Fabio Chaves told Quirós at a press conference Wednesday that became heated when Chávez took the microphone. Chaves – who, as the head of the Association of Costa Rican Electricity and Telecom Institute Employees (ASDEICE), represents the institute’s 12,000 permanent employees – said Quirós’ background, which includes work with multinational companies and the World Bank, shows he supports a policy of privatization.
Quirós also founded ICE’s National Operation System for Telecommunications in the 1960s, according to a copy of his resume provided by Casa Presidencial.
“Pablo Quirós is privatization incarnate… he’s an economic mercenary,” the union leader told The Tico Times.
A Battle of Semantics?
Fueling the debate over privatization is a difference of opinion about the meaning of the word itself. Both Arias and union leaders say they are against privatizing ICE, but administration leaders appear to define privatization as selling ICE, while unions define it as privatizing the industry by allowing other companies to compete.
In a recent interview, Rodrigo Arias, the President’s brother and spokesman, told The Tico Times “we don’t want to privatize ICE… We want ICE to be strengthened so it can play in a competitive market.”
Arias, the Presidency Minister, said there is a difference between what Costa Rica is doing and the “privatization” policies other Latin American countries have carried out, in which they sold publicly owned public service agencies to private companies.
The two-part project would open up the most lucrative parts of the telecommunications market to private competition – ICE’s monopoly on cellular phones, Internet and business telecommunications services would be lifted, as CAFTA demands, though the institute would retain control of the less profitable land-line market – while at the same time streamlining and “strengthening” ICE to prepare it for competition.
Earlier versions of the bills were considered during the administration of President Abel Pacheco (2002-2006), but without success; Arias announced his administration would revise the legislation after he took office. The new versions of the Law to Strengthen and Modernize ICE and the General Telecommunications Law have been in the works for four months, according to ICE General Manager Teófilo de la Torre, and have passed through the hands of as many as 100 administrators, executives, lawyers, engineers and politicians.
De la Torre told The Tico Times the General Telecommunications Law would restructure ICE, the Public Services Regulatory Authority (ARESEP) and the Ministry of Environment and Energy (MINAE), while giving private companies equal opportunities to offer Internet and telephone services to consumers. Dobles said MINAE would become the Ministry of Environment, Energy and Telecommunications. This change wouldn’t sideline the government’s environmental protections, he said, because the law establishes “new funds” for the ministry’s expanded responsibilities.
Now, ICE has a grip on Costa Rica ’s $1.5 billion telecommunications market, providing cellular services to 1.5 million Costa Ricans, land phone lines to 900,000 and Internet services to 45,000, in addition to the services provided by Radiográfica Costarricense S.A., the state-owned Internet provider and an ICE subsidiary. RACSA provides 105,000 individual and 7,000 corporate accounts in addition to other services, according to spokesman Mario Zaragoza.
The latest draft of the proposal puts ARESEP in charge of television and radio frequency concessions – now handed out by the National Radio Control Office – as well as cellular frequency concessions, which don’t exist under today’s system. ICE, along with private companies, would have to go through ARESEP for these concessions.
ARESEP would also charge consumers a 6% tax on services that ICE would use to set up phone and Internet services in Costa Rica ’s most rural, marginalized communities.
The other bill would strengthen ICE, streamlining bureaucratic processes that the state monopoly must go through to contract labor and equipment and obtain credit, according to de la Torre, who helped revise the proposals. ICE would have to create a marketing department and learn how to commercialize its products, he added.
The Politics of Reform
Dobles said he expects the bills to reach the assembly within a week or two, and that the process has taken months because it involved the participation of so many people. However, legislators from the opposition Citizen Action Party (PAC), Libertarian Movement and Social Christian Unity Party (PUSC) say this isn’t fast enough.
Leda Zamora of Citizen Action told the daily La Nación the government might have a “fantasy that this bill will move quickly,” but that its discussion and approval will take time.
Chaves said at Wednesday’s press conference that strikes to protest Quirós’ appointment are possible, though he told The Tico Times in a later phone interview that any protests will likely focus on CAFTA. Union-led anti-CAFTA protests are planned for today (see separate story).
PAC legislators hearkened back to the 2000 “Combo ICE” conflict in a statement released Wednesday, calling the new bills the “Mega Combo II.” Anti-CAFTA activists often refer to the Combo protests as an example of what public opposition can accomplish.
The public opposition to the ICE Combo, controversial in part because it would have allowed companies to develop hydroelectric and geothermal projects in national parks, caused former President Miguel Angel Rodríguez (1998-2002) to suspend the controversial bill, later taken out of consideration completely when the Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme Court (Sala IV) ruled that the assembly had violated its own procedures in its handling of the project.
CAFTA, however, revived the issue because it requires Costa Rica to lift state monopolies on telecommunications and insurance.
Rodrigo Arias said the government is anticipating protests as the telecom reform and CAFTA bills are discussed in the assembly.
“It’s the government’s responsibility to respect the assembly’s decision, to see to it that there is order and no violence in the streets,” he said. “But we can’t let threats from unions make us decide not to move forward with (the CAFTA agenda).”
Autor: Writer
By Blake Schmidt, Tico Times Staff
Business leaders who have been waiting for months to hear more about the Arias administration’s fiscal reform plan have finally received a plate full.
Finance Minister Guillermo Zúñiga spoke to members of the Costa Rican-American Chamber of Commerce (AMCHAM) last week at the Costa Rica Marriott Hotel in Belén, northwest of San José, to inform business leaders on parts of the nine-part fiscal reform plan as it begins to trickle in to Congress for debate.
“The clock is ticking … We hoped to see the plan come through already, but a lot of things are going through (the assembly) at the same time,” said Lynda Solar, general manager of AMCHAM. AMCHAM is a group of some 400 national and multinational affiliated businesses that promotes development and investment in Costa Rica ’s productive sector.
For months, the business community has been critical of the new administration’s tight lips as it put together the first pieces of its fiscal reform plan.
As the plan begins to come to light – with three parts of the project already sent to the assembly and the Finance Ministry and the Executive Branch hustling to streamline the income tax project – business leaders are decrying parts of the plan that would tax companies’ offshore holdings and all financial transactions, and are calling for fiscal reform that would bring transparency to taxation and formalize the economy.
The administration is trying to revive a tax plan that failed in the last administration after the Sala IV ruled the way the assembly approved the legislation was unconstitutional (TT, March 24). It is now trying to push through fiscal reform as the Legislative Assembly is already debating the polemic Central American Free-Trade Agreement with the United States (CAFTA) and its accompanying legislation.
![]() |
|
Explaining the Tax Plan: Finance Minister Guillermo Zúñiga. Mónica Quesada | Tico Times |
Zúñiga told members of AMCHAM that the fiscal reform plan could generate as much as $675 million for a budget-starved government trying to fund massive education, infrastructure and security projects.
So far, a 13% value-added tax, an annual $200 tax on licensed businesses and a tax on luxury homes that would be used to eradicate shantytowns are the projects that have been sent to the legislature. Zúñiga admitted that parts of the tax plan face “strong opposition” in the assembly and in the financial community. He said the three projects that have been presented have the least opposition of all the projects. Also, the administration has taken back an income tax proposal it sent to the assembly to restructure and “simplify” it, according to Zúñiga.
Facing a room full of Costa Rican business leaders Sept. 7, Zúñiga admitted that the income tax and a tax on financial transactions, which has not yet been sent to the assembly, are the “most polemic” of the tax plans.
The financial community “would like to look for alternatives to a tax on financial transactions,” he said, “and we’ve been conversing with them to do that.”
AMCHAM president Hernán Pacheco called a tax on financial transactions a “step back.”
“I like that project the least … that idea has been tried in other countries and resulted in a poor outcome in terms of collection,” he said.
Furthermore, Pacheco said, a tax on financial transactions would encourage informal transactions in an economy that is already largely informal.
He added that part of the income tax, which would globalize taxation to include taxes on companies’ offshore holdings, would be difficult for tax authorities to enforce.
“Not even the most Draconian of tax collectors has been able to control that,” he said.
Solar said AMCHAM supports a tax plan that would bring simplicity and transparency to Costa Rica ’s tax system.
“Here in Costa Rica, taxes aren’t used for what they were created for, for example, the gas tax isn’t used for roads,” she said.
Zúñiga said he has been advocating transparency in fiscal reform. He said part the tax plan would attempt to “close the holes” in the country’s tax laws by giving incentives to those who pay taxes and implementing a census that would attempt to expand the scope of tax collection. He said he supports a proposal that would eliminate taxes without a clear destination.
Zúñiga said the nine-part tax plan also includes a reform of the Code of Norms and Procedures, reform of free zones, and redefinition of the rights and duties of the taxpayer.
Autor: Writer
The telephone company says it has begun the job of transforming the nation’s 8,000 pay phones into uniform devices that accept money, phone card with an embedded chip and two other types of phone cards. The initial work has begun in Tres Rios, said the Instituto Costarricense de Electricidad.
Phone users have been frequently frustrated by telephones that would not accept phone cards with chips or those that would not accept coins.
The company announcement said that 2,000 of the new phones would be set up to send text messages, a service that is now only available from cell phones.
The work will mean that some phones will be out of service, the state monopoly said. The company said that vancalism was taking it toll, too.
Autor: Writer
Opponents of an underwater tuna farm in southwest Costa Rica brought their arguments to the Asamblea Legislativa Thursday for a hearing of the Comisión Especial de Ambiente.
Opponents have filed a Sala IV constitutional court appeal to stop the project. They argue that the environmental studies were incomplete.
That is the same argument that Denise Echeverría of Vida Marina gave the committee Thursday.
Noah Anderson of the Asociación Protectora de Tortugas Marinas said that his group also has filed a complaint with the Tribunal Ambiental y Secretaría Técnica Ambiental of the Ministerio de Ambiente y Energía, the environmental ministry.
A man identified as Guillermo Baltodano of Punto Bravo said that the residents of the area were never notified of the project and that publication of legal notices in the official La Gaceta was not sufficient.
A representative of the Cámera de Turismo also said that this group opposes the project. The firm Granjas Atuneras de Golfito S.A. plans on having underwater cages of some 2 kilometers long below the ocean surface to feed captive yellowfin tuna.
Opponents argue that the tuna will generate waste and scrap food, attract predators and generally degrade the pristine Gulfo Dulce.
Committee members said they would call in government environmental workers to add more information. The committee has the option of creating legislation related to such projects.
Autor: Writer
~ 14/09/06
Foreign Minister Bruno Stagno and Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul yesterday announced that their countries will resume diplomatic relations, according to a statement from the Foreign Ministry.
The two ministers are both in Havana, Cuba, at a meeting of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM). They met and discussed topics “of bilateral interest” including diplomatic relations and policies, commercial cooperation and investment, the statement said.
They also discussed plans to reopen embassies in both countries in the near future.
Stagno recently expressed interest in gradually increasing relations with moderate Arab nations following Costa Rica’s decision Aug. 16 to move its embassy from Jerusalem to Tel Aviv in compliance with U.N. resolutions (TT, Sept. 8).
Costa Rica and El Salvador were the last countries in the world with embassies in Jerusalem, a territory contested by Israel and Palestine; El Salvador also announced plans to with draw its embassy at the end of last month.
Stagno said resuming relations with Egypt will “allow for better political and diplomatic relations with the Arab and Islamic world in general, in addition to opening commercial opportunities with these markets.” Resumed relations with Egypt will also “speed up” plans to resume diplomatic relations with Jordan, he said.
-Tico Times
