August 31, 2006

CELEBRATING AFRICAN Heritage: Song and dance traditional to the Caribbean province of Limón will be part of the Afro-Costa Rican Culture Day celebrations today in San José 's Plaza de las Artes. Robert Goodier/Tico Times

 

Call us at 258-1558 inside Costa Rica or from the U.S. 011 (506) 258-1558 or Fax us at 233-6378 inside Costa Rica or from the U.S. 011 (506) 233-6378, email: info@ticotimes.net

FROM the Ground Up: Greivin Cruz, 8, sits in front of his home in the San José shantytown of La Carpio, one of several areas targeted by a new program to be carried out by the Housing Mortgage Bank (BANHVI) unveiled by Housing Minister Fernando Zumbado yesterday. The program seeks to improve infrastructure in these slums without uprooting families living there. Mónica Quesada/Tico Times

Costa Rica and Nicaragua
Disagree over Naming of
Caldera as E.U. Trade
Agreement Negotiator

The five Central American countries that make up the Central American Integration System (SICA) didn't involve Costa Rica when naming Nicaraguan Foreign Minister as its coordinator to negotiate an association agreement with the European Union...

 
 
International Police Capture U.S. Citizen Wanted for Fraud
  International Police (INTERPOL) yesterday arrested a U.S. citizen identified by the name Michael Forchemer suspected of fraud, according to a statement from INTERPOL.
   

Sexual Harassment Allegations Create Stir in Legislative Assembly

A legislative aid told national media yesterday she is ready to name names and testify in what has so far been an unsubstantiated rumor of sexual harassment in the Legislative Assembly.
 

School Opens Tissue Fertilization Lab

 

The Technical High School of Guácimo, a town on the Caribbean slope, plans to inaugurate a new tissue fertilization laboratory today that will allow 350 students of agriculture and livestock...

   

Liability Insurance
in Costa Rica

Webster's defines liability as “the quality or state of being liable.” What does liable mean? According to Webster's, it means “legally obligated; responsible.”

 

 
   

Return To Top Of Page




¢ 516.87 ¢ 519.14

 
 
 
 
   


Costa Rica and Nicaragua Disagree over Naming
of Caldera as E.U. Trade Agreement Negotiator

By Amanda Roberson
Tico Times Staff
aroberson@ticotimes.net

The five Central American countries that make up the Central American Integration System (SICA) didn't involve Costa Rica when naming Nicaraguan Foreign Minister as its coordinator to negotiate an association agreement with the European Union, Foreign Minister Bruno Stagno said yesterday during a press conference following President Oscar Arias' weekly Consejo meeting.

“At no time was Costa Rica consulted,” Stagno said, explaining that the presidents of Guatemala, Oscar Berger; El Salvador, Elías Antonio Saca; Honduras, Manuel Zelaya; and Nicaragua, Enrique Bolaños, signed an agreement placing Caldera at the helm of negotiations during the swearing-in ceremony of Colombian President Alvaro Uribe July 11.

Stagno offered no explanation as to why the four other countries would make a decision about the association agreement without consulting Costa Rica, which accounts for 60% of the region's trade with the European Union.

Nicaragua, however, tells a different version of these events.

Caldera, an economist with a master's in foreign trade and experience working with the World Trade Organization (WTO), was named coordinator because of his experience and not to represent Nicaragua, said Oscar García, spokesman for the Nicaraguan Foreign Ministry. Each country will be represented during the negotiations by its own negotiating team, he added.

Caldera's naming should have come as no surprise to Costa Rica, since Stagno and Caldera discussed the possibility during a recent meeting, García said.

Meanwhile, Costa Rica “laments that there was a meeting without Costa Rica's knowledge,” Stagno said, adding that it has always been clear that an association agreement between Central America and the European Union would not be possible without the signature of the presidents of all five SICA member countries.

By the same token, Stagno said he does not see the naming of Caldera as coordinator “binding” since it has not been signed by President Oscar Arias.

For more on this story, see this Friday's print or pdf edition of The Tico Times.


Return To Top Of Page



International Police Capture U.S. Citizen Wanted for Fraud

International Police (INTERPOL) yesterday arrested a U.S. citizen identified by the name Michael Forchemer suspected of fraud, according to a statement from INTERPOL.

Forchemer, 51, was arrested as he left his home in Ciudad Colón, southwest of San José. He is accused by a district court in the state of North Carolina of carrying out a fraudulent operation through which he allegedly called people to inform them they had won a prize in a drawing.

Forchemer, claiming to be an agent of a fictitious U.S. Raffle Commission in Washington D.C., allegedly told people he called that they had won $300,000 but that they must first send a “security deposit” of several thousand dollars, which would be returned to them later, the statement said.

According to the statement, many of these calls were made from Costa Rica.

Forchemer entered Costa Rica for the first time Sept. 26, 2002 and later came and entered several times through Nicaragua and Panama, the statement said. He remains under police custody in San José and faces extradition to the United States.

-ACAN-EFE


Return To Top Of Page



Sexual Harassment Allegations
Create Stir in Legislative Assembly 

By Leland Baxter-Neal
Tico Times Staff
lbaxter@ticotimes.net

A legislative aid told national media yesterday she is ready to name names and testify in what has so far been an unsubstantiated rumor of sexual harassment in the Legislative Assembly.

According to various local media reports based on anonymous sources, a legislator – who has not yet been publicly named – allegedly made unwanted advances toward a legislative assistant.

On a trip various lawmakers took to the Caribbean province of Limón approximately two weeks ago, the legislator allegedly flirted with and bothered the legislative aid, at one point forcing a kiss on her, La Nación reported. After the worker refused the legislator's advances, she was dismissed from her position, the witness told the daily.

Before witnesses began talking to the media, some lawmakers had already brought the matter to the legislative floor. Alberto Salóm, a Citizen Action Party (PAC) legislator, called for an investigation into the alleged harassment on Monday.

“I reacted yesterday on the legislative floor because if the press says there is sexual harassment by some legislator, obviously this could fall on any one of us,” Salóm told The Tico Times Tuesday in an assembly abuzz with talk of the accusations. “This has to be investigated.”

However, Legislative Assembly president Francisco Pacheco said he cannot begin an investigation until the victim comes forward and files an official complaint.

Salóm said that even if harassment were proven, there is little that could be done because lawmakers have legal immunity.

“And even if the legislator renounced his position and immunity, there is no punishment in the penal sense,” Salóm said. “The only sanction would be a moral sanction, but I would do it.”

 

Return To Top Of Page



School Opens Tissue Fertilization Lab

The Technical High School of Guácimo, a town on the Caribbean slope, plans to inaugurate a new tissue fertilization laboratory today that will allow 350 students of agriculture and livestock, as well as ecological tourism, to grow seeds free of chemicals and diseases, according to a statement from the Ministry of Education (MEP).

The facility will include a soil lab and a greenhouse for reproducing roots and tubers, such as yucca, from the Caribbean zone.

Students will also have the opportunity to learn new cultivation techniques in the context of environmental sustainability, said Bertalia Matamoros, coordinator of the lab program, in the statement. The infrastructure and equipment for the labs cost ¢32 million ($62,000).

-Tico Times


Return To Top Of Page



Liability Insurance in Costa Rica

Webster's defines liability as “the quality or state of being liable.” What does liable mean? According to Webster's, it means “legally obligated; responsible.”

The purpose of a general liability policy is to protect against lawsuits arising from accidents occurring on insured premises or during an insured activity, producing injury, death, property damage or loss to third parties. Anyone can buy a general liability policy: homeowners, tour operators, hotels, restaurants, shops, manufacturers, etc. In addition to general liability, there are also specific liability insurance policies: automobile, product, professional, etc., but those will not be dealt with in this article.

In North America, liability has gone wild, with people suing each other for all sorts of trivial mishaps, judges handing out huge awards and legal eagles obtaining fat fees. In order to limit legal costs, insurance companies are paying liability claims even before they enter the legal system.

Things in Costa Rica are quite different. The National Insurance Institute (INS) never – or almost never – pays a liability claim before there is a court ruling on the matter. The legal system has a backlog – I have heard up to two years – and this tends to discourage trivial claims.

Most judges seem to believe that everyone should exercise reasonable care and look out for him or herself. I remember reading an article in one of the local papers about a man who sued the owner of a building because he had tripped and fallen on the sidewalk. The judge admonished the plaintiff to mind where he was walking, and dismissed the complaint.

In cases where there is clear negligence on the part of the defendant, the award given to the plaintiff is usually based on redress. In other words, the defendant pays for the amount the plaintiff is out of pocket as a result of the mishap. Awards for pain and suffering and punitive damage, if any, are usually insignificant.

In my opinion, in this country liability insurance is not a great priority for a normal homeowner, and businesses engaging in activities where there is liability risk can buy considerably less coverage than a similar business in North America would need.

Within the liability policy, two types of mishap are covered: injury, disability and loss of life or limb; and damage or loss of property. The general liability policy offers a combined limit of the two, whereby INS will pay up to the chosen limit, regardless of the “mix.”

When determining the amount of coverage you want to buy, INS offers two types of limits for you to choose: limit per event, that is, the maximum INS will pay per accident or lawsuit; or aggregate annual limit, the maximum amount INS will pay out, per year, for claims against the policy.

To determine how much insurance to get, visualize a worst-case scenario of what could happen in an accident, and estimate how much it would cost to put things right – that would be the recommended limit.

The liability policy should be in the name of the person or people who could be sued if there were a mishap: the owner of the house, and/or the tenants if the house is rented; or the person or corporation running the business.

The process of getting the insurance is easy, but slow. INS requires an application form with all relevant information, signed by the applicant with a copy of his or her identification attached – you should meet with your agent to do this. Once the application is received, INS will take several days to nominate the inspector, who, usually after a week or two of drinking coffee (and with no advance warning or phone call), will go to inspect the risk, interview the applicant and corroborate the information on the application. After he submits his report (more coffee!), the rate and premium are determined, and the agent will be authorized to collect the premium. The hard copy of the policy will follow about a week later.

The premium for general liability is a percentage of the insured amount, for homeowners usually a bit less than 1% per year. INS fixes the exact rate on a case-by-case basis, according to the perceived risk. When the INS inspector is due to come to your house, don't wax the floors, put away the pit bull, and make sure the yellow paint on the edge of the stairs is bright and shiny.

For more info, contact the author at 233-2455 or david@InsuranceCostaRica.com. The purpose of this column is to give the reader a better understanding of insurance. The opinions and viewpoints expressed are those of the writer, and do not necessarily represent the official position of INS.


Return To Top Of Page

Click here to subscribe


Daily NewsHome | Top Story | Business News | Central American News
  Editorial Cartoon | Weekend | Exchange Rates | Fishing | Culture | Classified Ads
Display Ads | Subscribe! | Travel Guide | Archives | Links | About Us | Newsstand Locations
Contact Us | Policies