January 21, 2008

   
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Conjoined no more: Yurelia Rocha (second from right), who at two years old was surgically separated from her twin sister Fiorella (third from the left), seen with physical therapists Richard Gee (left) and Sandra Rizzuto (right) and their mother, María Elizabeth Arias. Having recovered from the November operation at Lucile Packard Children's Hospital in Palo Alto, California, the Costa Rican twins – born attached at the abdomen and chest, with connecting livers and hearts – are ready to come home.

Photo provided to EFE
by the Lucile Packard
Children's Hospital.

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Let the games begin: Henry Castro, 20, polishing off his hurdle jump at the National Stadium in La Sabana Park, in west San José. Castro will represent San José canton in the track and field competitions of Costa Rica's National Games, which officially inaugurated yesterday but the games begin today in Heredia.

Ronald Reyes | Tico Times

German to swim length of Costa Rica's Pacific coast
Renate Herberger is determined to raise awareness of the harm being done to the endangered creatures of the oceans. To make her point, she's preparing to swim the entire Costa Rican Pacific coast – more than 1,000 kilometers.
See More...
Cops strike down on crime town
In the Costa Rican capital of San José, police raided what they said were known hang-outs for street thugs and criminals, rounding up at least 245 suspects last week, a statement from the Public Security Ministry said Friday.
See More...
Endangered birds stolen from Nicaraguan zoo
Five armed men broke into a zoo in Managua, Nicaragua, Friday and stole 15 endangered birds and a raccoon.
San José could have its own 'Barrio Chino'
What began with the 19th-century wave of Chinese migrant laborers and has recently grown into cozy bilateral relations and aid packages, including a Chinese-funded sports stadium, now looks likely to culminate a Chinatown in the heart of the Costa Rican capital.
TV Dance Contests
Reveal Cultural Surprise

I can't believe it, and I've lived in Costa Rica for 17 years. I don't know how I'm going to make you believe it.

 

German to swim length of Costa Rica's Pacific coast
By Hannah Thompson
Special to The Tico Times | editorial@ticotimes.net

Renate Herberger is determined to raise awareness of the harm being done to the endangered creatures of the oceans. To make her point, she's preparing to swim the entire Costa Rican Pacific coast – more than 1,000 kilometers.

Herberger, 52, a German living in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada, will begin her extraordinary challenge Feb. 1 at Punta Burica on the border with Panama. She will swim eight hours a day, five days a week, for more than two months, she says, until she reaches her destination at Bahía Salinas on the Nicaraguan border.

“My project is about promoting gentler practices out at sea,” Herberger told The Tico Times. “So much life is lost through unsustainable and wasteful commercial fishing practices, such as shark-finning, long-lining, trawling and drag-netting.”

Herberger is garnering support – funds and places to dry off and rest along the way – through her Web site www.costaricamermaid.net.

Read next Friday's print edition of The Tico Times for more on this story.

Cops strike down on crime town

In the Costa Rican capital of San José, police raided what they said were known hang-outs for street thugs and criminals, rounding up at least 245 suspects last week, a statement from the Public Security Ministry said Friday.

The sweeping raids – combined efforts by migration officers and agents from the Transit Police and the Judicial Investigation Police – resulted in 69 arrests in the neighborhood of La Tabla de Desamparados, 85 in San Sebastián and 90 in the so-called “Tierras Dominicanas,” the police statement said.

Two vehicles were also impounded.

In San Sebastián, officers dismantled a toll system that, according to police, crime rings had set up to extort money from anyone passing through and to deter police from entering.

The arrests come a week after an unnerving report in the daily La Nación that cited 600 repeat criminal offenders at large in and around the Costa Rican capital.

-Tico Times
Endangered birds stolen from Nicaraguan zoo

Five armed men broke into a zoo in Managua, Nicaragua, Friday and stole 15 endangered birds and a raccoon.

Police are investigating the robbery of the raccoon, five bi-colored toucans, nine parrots and a macaw kept in the zoo's rescue center, zoo director Marina Argüello told U.S. newswire The Associated Press.

The thieves managed to get past a security guard in the rear of the zoo and headed straight for the rescue center, she said.

The toucans had been prepared for mating, she added.

The loss was “incalculable,” said Argüello, but the birds can gross up to $1,000 each in the underground market.

-Tico Times

San José could have its own 'Barrio Chino'

What began with the 19th-century wave of Chinese migrant laborers and has recently grown into cozy bilateral relations and aid packages, including a Chinese-funded sports stadium, now looks likely to culminate a Chinatown in the heart of the Costa Rican capital.

In a joint plan put forth by the Municipality of San José and the China-Costa Rican Chamber of Industry and Commerce, the area of Paseo de los Estudiantes, between calle 7 and calle 11, would boast gastronomical and cultural delights from the Eastern country, giving San José a new tourist attraction, according to the daily La Nación.

San José Mayor Johnny Araya told the daily the idea of a Chinatown ( Barrio Chino in Spanish) here is a no-brainer, seeing as Chinese restaurants already abound and specialty food markets and shops related to the Asian country keep sprouting up.

“The idea is to create a Barrio Chino that would stimulate private investment, which then would prompt the opening of new cultural centers, restaurants and other types of business,” said Araya.

The barrio would have a revamped boulevard, lined with Chinese-style storefronts and restaurant facades.

“The Chinese culture is centuries-old and will be attractive for San José. Other cities around the world have a neighborhood like this and it seems like a very interesting thing for Costa Rica to have,” the mayor said.

However, he added, the idea is still in its infancy but it nevertheless has received positive feedback from Chinese community leaders.

-Tico Times

TV Dance Contests Reveal Cultural Surprise

I can't believe it, and I've lived in Costa Rica for 17 years. I don't know how I'm going to make you believe it.

Some months ago, I found myself in the United States just in time to catch the last month of “So You Think You Can Dance” on television – a special treat for a dance fanatic like me.

With a couple of small exceptions, what I saw was an inspiring level of professionalism on all sides: dancers, choreographers, presenters, judges, pace, etc. There was a great deal of laughter, tears, hard sweat, triumph and failure. There was never conflict, negativity, gloom or bad health. Of course not. It was national television.

Well, we know that all kinds of stuff went on behind the scenes, where, needless to say, it was kept quiet.

Then I came back to Costa Rica to the finale of “Bailando por un sueño” (“Dancing for a Dream”) to find the whole country crazy about it.

The format for this program, coming from Mexico, was different. Instead of individuals, the contestants were couples, one of whom was a “famoso/a” (celebrity) and the other the “soñador/a” (dreamer). The couple was not trying to win money, but rather to achieve a benevolent dream, which might have been anything from an operation for a sick child to the building of a new school in an impoverished area.

Good, I thought, I get to do it again.

Well, not exactly.

There were some notable differences, and a surprise – a cultural one.

First of all, the finale, when it came, lasted some four hours. Now, I have no problem watching four hours of dancing, but this ended up being an hour and a half of dancing and two and a half hours of talking and other, rather puzzling activities. As for sticking to the schedule, ¡ni hablarlo!

But this was not the surprise.

Second, the quality of the dancing was nowhere near the quality I had seen in the States. All right, this is understandable. Costa Rica is a tiny country where parents generally don't have the money to send their children to expensive dance lessons.

But this was not the surprise.

Winners were decided by a combination of judges and public input. In the end, there remained only two couples dancing, one of which was Ricardo (the soñador) and Shirley (the famosa). The other couple won with the public by a narrow margin.

But it didn't end there.

It turns out that “Bailando por un sueño” leads to one of the couples, for some reason not necessarily the winning one, participating in the first international competition, “Bailando por el mundo” (“Dancing for the World”), to take place in Mexico. Before the final program, the Costa Rican judges decided that the couple to enter the international show would be Ricardo and Shirley.

Though it was called an “international” dance competition, it was a new program, so only nine countries showed up. Seven were from Latin America: Mexico, Argentina, Colombia, Paraguay, Ecuador, Panama and Costa Rica. Astonishingly, two were from small European countries: Romania and Slovakia.

But this was not the surprise.

The principal presenter was diminutive and dynamic, and his counterpart, a great horse of a woman, created a comic contrast. The presenter would call a couple from a particular country on stage, command them to position themselves and then, with a dramatic gesture, call out “¡Música, Maestro!” The audience would bellow it with him, and away the dancers went. When they finished, the presenter inevitably roared, “¡Qué bárbaros!”

But this was not the surprise.

Latinos make fun of Gringos for the way they dance Latin numbers because they move their shoulders and arms about, wiggle their bottoms (it's in the legs and sometimes in the hips, not the rump) and take big steps. Be that as it may, it is pure anguish to watch Latinos, their upper bodies rigid, trying to dance disco and rock and roll. This aside, the quality of dance and choreography was not what I expected to see on an “international” level. At times, in fact, it was so bad that I was embarrassed to watch.

But this was not the surprise.

The winner of the competition was determined by a panel of nine judges, one from each country. The scoring went from one to 10. If any country scored the lowest points three times, not necessarily in a row, that country was out of the competition.

But this was not the surprise.

The surprise was… Let's just say it was like Jerry Springer meets “American Bandstand.”

I'm out of room here. You'll just have to wait until next time to find out what the surprise was.

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