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By Katherine Stanley Foreign Trade Minister Marco Vinicio Ruiz spoke yesterday about the latest developments – or lack thereof – in the Doha trade talks under the auspices of the World Trade Organization (WTO). According to the minister, Costa Rica “has played an active role in the negotiations,” having been invited as a member of the advisory group to the Director General Pascal Lamy. However, the process reached a standstill following an “arduous” three days of talks in Geneva, Switzerland, last week. The success of the process – which has been under way for almost five years and is designed to liberalize trade in the areas of agriculture, industry and services, with developed countries as the principal beneficiaries, according to wire service EFE – now depends on three key decisions, Ruiz said. The European Union and Japan are considering whether to reduce their agricultural tariffs; the United States, whether to reduce its internal agricultural subsidies and the G-20 nations, made up of emerging countries such as Brazil and India, whether to improve access to their industrial markets. None of these countries has taken the plunge. “Developed countries have to facilitate access” for developing countries, Ruiz said. According to a statement from Casa Presidencial, Costa Rica is also pushing for improved access for banana, pineapple, melon and plants in the markets of developed nations. U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs, Thomas Shannon, Jr., said last week during a visit to Costa Rica that the United States is willing to reduce its subsidies and tariffs if other developed nations, such as the European Union, do the same (TT, June 30).
By Leland Baxter-Neal and Amanda Roberson Organizations including environmental and community groups, fishi ng associations and local businesses are speaking out against a proposed yellowfin tuna farm to be constructed near the mouth of the Golfo Dulce, on the southern Pacific coast. The Costa Rican company Granjas Atuneras de Golfito S.A., backed by Spanish and Venezuelan capital, received the final go-ahead for the project, the first of its kind in the world, from the Costa Rican Fisheries Institute (INCOPESCA) June 23, after the Ministry of the Environment and Energy (MINAE) gave the project its approval (TT, June 30). Manuel Arroyo, a fisherman in the southern Pacific port city of Golfito for 75 years, told The Tico Times yesterday that the tuna farm will kill great quantities of fish in the gulf's waters and that the farm's fish food will pollute its waters and ocean floor, upsetting the area's delicate ecosystem. “People haven't realized that they are creating a monster,” Arroyo said. “They're crazy to think you can put a farm here in this gulf that has such strong currents. Any fish that gets near it will get caught and die.” The proposed tuna farm comprises 10 giant circular cages/nets – 50 meters wide and 20 meters deep – grouped together approximately 2.8 kilometers from the coast. Each cage would contain approximately 120 tons of tuna. The environmental organization Foundation Vida Marina denounced the project in a statement it issued in conjunction with other organizations, alleging it would “further the industrialization and destruction of the region … famous for its pristine environment.” These united groups have filed complaints with MINAE's Environmental Tribunal against the Environmental Secretariat (SETENA) – the branch of the ministry that approved the project's environmental-impact study – and the ministry's water department, which also approved the project. According to the statement, the groups also plan to file a suit with the Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme Court “in the coming days.” Arroyo added that opponents plan to march in front of the Legislative Assembly building in San José in the next couple of weeks, though they have not set a day.
The Social Security System (Caja) has called for those travelling around Costa Rica during the rainy season take precautions against dengue, reported the daily La Nación yesterday. Caja specialists recommend that those staying in hotels first inspect the room inside and outside to check for mosquitoes, which carry the disease. Choosing hotels with screen windows and doors and mosquito nets is another important precaution, according to La Nación. Finally, tourists should apply mosquito repellent in the morning and around sunset, prime times for mosquitoes to bite. -Tico Times
Surfers from Guatemala, Nicaragua and Costa Rica are gearing up for the first Central American Surf Championship to be held July 13-15 at Esterillos beach, on the central Pacific coast, according to a statement from the Costa Rican Surf Federation. Guatemala will be represented by surfers Abner Rivera, Noé Antonio, Harvy Gil, Miguel Girón, Cristian Obdulio, Guilner Panazza and Deifry Rafael, while Nicaragua's team will include Augusto Chamorro, Luis Alonso, Roque Calderón, Rex Calderón and Oliver Solís, who range between 13-25 years old. “Surfing has grown a lot in Nicaragua, and this competition is a great opportunity for these young people,” said Nicaraguan Surf Federation President Ricardo Morales. On the home waters, Costa Ricans Federico Pilurzu, Diego Naranjo, Lisbeth Vindas, Luis Vindas and Isaac Vega will surf on their country's national team. The winner of the tournament's Open Division will go home with $10,000, while the winner of the Junior Division will win $2,000 and the Women's Division winner will receive $1,000, the statement said. The tournament will be held in front of Hotel Monterrey del Mar, and events like surf clinics and exhibitions are planned throughout the three days. For more information on the event, visit www.surfingcr.net/centroamericano. -Tico Times Así Es la Cosa: That’s Just the Way Things Are
Some time ago, I wrote an article also titled “Así Es la Cosa.” This is something that the campesinos in the mountains here say to me when I point out problems. It loosely translates, “That’s just the way things are.” The article was about what I saw as a peculiarly accepting attitude on their part toward all the abuses heaped upon them. The article cataloged some of the abuses I have observed in this area: –Buses that don’t stop for them on the Inter-American Highway, though required by law to do so. –Riteve, the Spanish-Costa Rican company and private monopoly (supposedly illegal in Costa Rica) charged with annual vehicular mechanical inspection. Its institution four years ago assured that most poor people, especially those who must drive mountain roads, would no longer be able to afford to have a car. –Lack of telephone service. –A rural electric company that charges for the poles and meters, charges for public lighting that doesn’t exist and refuses to install lines and transformers along the roads, thus forcing people to string long, expensive lines across private property. –Inadequate and difficult-to-access medical care. –Elementary schools that do not provide much-needed courses in English and computers, thus ever widening the breach between the city and the country kids. –Lack of a high school or even help to families who try to send their children out to high schools in town. Finally, I came to the conclusion that since the campesinos have always had less, they expect less. It’s a syndrome, not of the poor in general – poor North Americans complain, protest and rebel, and how! – but rather of the poor in Third-World countries. And there the article sits in my computer. I never published it because I felt like something was wrong or missing. The other day, I found out what it was. It involves a story I’d like to pass on to all of you. About a year and a half ago, EBAIS, the branch of the Costa Rican health system that supplies medical assistance to remote areas, sent a new doctor, actually, a doctora, to this area. Somewhere within the first six months of her placement here, I came to the terrifying conclusion that she was completely incompetent. I won’t enumerate all the reasons. Let just a few examples suffice. My neighbor suddenly began to lose weight for no apparent reason. When the highly competent nurse worriedly pointed this out to the doctora, she laughed and said that everything was “just fine.” A couple of weeks later, a group of Japanese medical researchers decided to use our village for a stomach cancer test area. They found that my neighbor had tumors in her small intestine and saved her barely in the nick of time. I had a case of bronchitis verging on pneumonia. When I went to the doctora, I told her I was allergic to penicillin. Five minutes later, she gave me a penicillin shot and sent me home with a packet of pills of the same nature. I survived the shot but had to go to town and buy my own pills. A good friend of mine was having trouble with high blood pressure. The doctora prescribed some pills. A couple of weeks later, my friend was feeling terrible. She went to a private specialist, who told her she was taking a dose of a dangerous medicine that was three times over the absolute maximum dose. He got her medicine straightened out, but she is suffering permanent effects from the poisoning she suffered at the hands of the doctora. Finally, a few weeks ago, a young woman who occasionally suffers high blood pressure was feeling ill, and her pressure began to rise. She went to the doctora with the problem. It is best to carry out the process of lowering blood pressure gradually to avoid the patient entering into shock. The doctora ordered it done all in one blow, and the woman nearly died. An older or sicker person, in fact, may well have died under those circumstances. And here is my point. On my way up the hill to our house, I ran into her sister. I stopped the car to talk to her. “How is your sister?” I asked. “She’s still feeling dizzy, but she’s going to be all right,” she replied. “You know,” I ventured, angry, but not wanting to come off too critical of Costa Rica, “this doctora we have now is dangerous. I’m afraid she’s going to kill somebody one day.” She responded with a mysterious smile (“Stupid foreigner,” she was probably thinking). Finally, she answered me, “Yes, I know. We have to take care of ourselves.” I drove away confused. It wasn’t until a couple of hours later that the meaning of her answer hit me. She wasn’t angry at the doctora or at the system that had provided her any more than she would be angry at a tree for falling over the road or at a rainstorm for causing a mudslide. And she saw my anger as that of a spoiled child, demanding more of life than can be reasonably granted. As they see it, that’s just the way life is. The powers that be, they say, “ni pican leña, ni prestan hacha”(neither split the firewood nor lend the hatchet). Nothing and nobody is obligated to take care of us. All we can do is be careful and try to take care of ourselves. Sometimes it works out; sometimes it doesn’t. These people aren’t passive or broken; they’re just realistic – at least within the confines of their worldview – and extremely tough. That’s what was missing from my other article. That’s what they are trying to tell me every time they say, “Así es la cosa.” I just didn’t get it. Stupid foreigner. Editorial Cartoon | Weekend | Exchange Rates | Fishing | Culture | Classified Ads Display Ads | Subscribe! | Travel Guide | Archives | Links | About Us | Newsstand Locations Contact Us | Policies
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