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Meta
Autor: Writer
~ 22/06/06
“The government of the United States is very respectful of Costa Rica’s position and will continue respecting that decision,” U.S. Ambassador Mark Langdale wrote in the letter, a copy of which was provided to The Tico Times by the Foreign Relations Ministry. However, “the documents to which you refer are historical documents …even though they are no longer in effect, they form part of the historical registry and can’t be modified or removed.”
The letter stated that U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice had asked Langdale to respond to the Costa Rican government, and that “we regret any confusion these archives may have caused.”
Langdale wrote the letter, dated June 19, in response to a May 17 note from Stagno to Rice, through the U.S. Embassy, asking that Costa Rica’s name be removed from the list (TT, May 26). Stagno’s action, in turn, followed a vote by the Legislative Assembly in favor of formally requesting Costa Rica’s removal.
Legislators José Manuel Echandi and Alberto Salom reacted to the White House’s declaration yesterday by sending a letter to President Oscar Arias requesting that he ask the United States to take Costa Rica’s name off the list.
Costa Rica’s appearance on the list caused controversy and led to a September 2004 ruling by the Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme Court (Sala IV) that the country’s inclusion was unconstitutional. During the same month, then-Foreign Relations Minister Roberto Tovar requested that the U.S. remove Costa Rica’s name from the list.
-Tico Times
Autor: Writer
The Prosecutor’s Office yesterday informed ex-President Rafael Angel Calderón Jr. it has broadened the scope of the investigation against him related to alleged corruption involving the Social Security System (Caja), according to the Judicial Branch.
Calderón now faces charges of illicit enrichment, bribery, conspiracy and embezzlement. He was already under investigation for the first two charges, the daily La Nación reported, but the addition of conspiracy and embezzlement to the list expands the investigation, giving prosecutors twice as long under the law to present formal accusations and increasing the possible jail time from six to 12 years.
The ex-President (1990-1994) was at the Prosecutor’s Office for more than two hours, along with six others under investigation in connection to the so-called Caja-Fischel case, which involves the alleged embezzlement of a multimillion-dollar “commission” on a $39.5-million medical equipment contract between the Caja and Finnish company Medko Medical, represented in Costa Rica by Corporación Fischel.
After the questioning, Calderón – who spent approximately one year in preventive detention, both at his home in the eastern San José suburb of Curridabat and the penitentiary La Reforma, and is now free but prohibited from leaving the country – complained to the press that no evidence against him was presented.
“I asked for the evidence they had and they didn’t give it to me, and I want the country to know that,” Calderón said.
Those under investigation can now present evidence in their defense before authorities file formal charges.
Calderón was linked to the alleged scandal in September 2004 when the local press claimed he embezzled commissions from the Caja loan for the purchase of medical equipment (Oct. 22, 2004). Calderón recognized from the beginning that he received the money, but assured that it was an “incorrect payment” for his services as an advisor to the company.
-ACAN-EFE and Tico Times