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Autor: Writer

~ 19/09/06

By the A.M. Costa Rica staff


Thursday is International Peace Day, and the annual event has special meaning in Costa Rica because the nation was one of the two sponsors of a United Nations resolution to create the day in 2001.

Maribel Muñoz is a member of the Subcomisión Nacional para la Promoción de la Paz Social. She said that the increase in violence and conflict in all sectors of the society makes it important to construct and strengthen a culture of peace.

As part of the day organizers are asking citizens to wear white shirts and blouses. If you put on a red shirt for the Sele, put on a white one for peace, says the day’s slogan, using the term Sele for the national soccer team.

A special ceremony will be held at the Centro Nacional de la Cultura Thursday at 10 a.m.

Attending will be Laura Chinchilla, who is acting president that day; María Elena Carballo, minister of Cultura, Juventud y Deportes, and George Tsai, vice rector of the  Universidad para la Paz.

The Fundación Rasur also is sponsoring the program.

Typically participants dedicate a minute of silence at noon with the hope that peace shall prevail on earth.

Autor: Writer

By Amanda Roberson, Tico Times Staff

Traditional pay phones around Costa Rica are being replaced with new, high-tech phones that accept coins, regular and “chip” calling cards and can send e-mails and text messages to cell phone users, according to a statement from the Costa Rican Electricity Institute (ICE), the state-run telecommunications and electricity monopoly.

Callers will be able to buy rechargeable chip cards that can be inserted into these public phones to make calls, said ICE spokeswoman Vanessa Vallavares.

ICE plans to install 8,000 of these “multi-pay” phones around the country, 2,000 of which will also have the capacity to send e-mails and text messages to cell phones, the statement said. The institute began installing these phones in Tres Rios, east of San José.

Traditional pay phones must be removed in order to be replaced by these new phones, so some communities may experience a temporary lack of public phones, the statement said.