February 27, 2008

   
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BUY ¢493.29 SELL ¢499.08

FARC patrol: Panamanian police yesterday securing Jaqué, in the Darien province near the border with Colombia, after President Martín Torrijos announced he wouldn't permit any illegal organization from any country to operate on his territory, alluding to six FARC fighters arrested in Panama over the weekend.

EFE

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The hunchbacked jester: Baritone Omar Camata sings the title role of Rigoletto in Giuseppe Verdi's opera masterpiece, which opens Friday at San José's Teatro Melico Salazar and runs through Sunday.

Harmony Reforma | Tico Times

Israel postpones meeting with Costa Rican
Prez to protest Palestine recognition
Israel canceled a meeting scheduled for today between Israel's Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Majalli Whbee and President Oscar Arias, weeks after Costa Rica recognized the Palestinian territories as a “state.”
See More...
Interpol arrests 'America's Most Wanted' suspect in Costa Rica
Agents from Interpol and the Immigration Police arrested Lonnie Ted Crabtree, 41, a U.S. citizen wanted for attempted sexual abuse of a 15-year-old minor in Kentucky in 2002.
See More...
President Torrijos: Panama-Guatemala free trade a ‘historic step'
Panama's government has signed a free-trade agreement with Guatemala, Central America's biggest economy with 11 million residents.
Costa Rican artisans craft unity to strengthen their trade
Craftsman from across the country met in San José yesterday to formally create the Network of Costa Rican Artisans. The organization will in turn form part of the Regional Network of Central American and Caribbean Artisans.
Read This Chunche or
You're Just a Chúcaro

A word is not a thing in itself. It is a symbol that stands for a thing or a quality or an idea. Thus, it is arbitrary. I may refer to my vehicle as a “car,” “carro,” “macchina,” “voiture” or, for that matter, “Henry.” It doesn't matter, as long as the person with whom I am trying to communicate is in agreement with the symbol I am using. This is logical.

 

Israel postpones meeting with Costa Rican
Prez to protest Palestine recognition

Israel canceled a meeting scheduled for today between Israel's Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Majalli Whbee and President Oscar Arias, weeks after Costa Rica recognized the Palestinian territories as a “state.”

“We would like to express our disappointment over this regretful decision of the government of Costa Rica to establish full diplomatic relations with ‘the state of Palestine,'” Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Arye Mekel told the Associated Press. “This act of Costa Rica totally contradicts the traditional friendship that characterized its relations with Israel.”

Costa Rican Foreign Minister Bruno Stagno said he was trying to reschedule the meeting.

The American Jewish Committee, an advocacy group based in New York, also criticized Costa Rica's decision to recognize the “Palestinian state.”   

“The timing of this decision is both odd and painful,” the group's executive director, David A. Harris, said in a statement this week. “Odd because there is not yet a Palestinian state. Painful because” Costa Rica had appeared to be a loyal ally of Israel.

Christian Guillermet, policy director at the Foreign Ministry, said the recognition would help level the playing field in negotiations between the Israeli and Palestinian governments.

“We came to this decision after much reflection,” Stagno said. “It could displease certain sectors, and that is understandable and logical.”

-Tico Times
Interpol arrests 'America's
Most Wanted' suspect in Costa Rica
By Nick Wilkinson
Tico Times Staff | nwilkinson@ticotimes.net

Agents from Interpol and the Immigration Police arrested Lonnie Ted Crabtree, 41, a U.S. citizen wanted for attempted sexual abuse of a 15-year-old minor in Kentucky in 2002.

The arrest was made on Feb. 15 when Crabtree was traveling by bus from Puntarenas to San José, a press release states.

The specific charges against Crabtree, originally from Michigan, include importuning, attempted unlawful sexual conduct with a minor and attempted compelling prostitution.

Crabtree was living in Cobano, in Puntarenas province, with his wife and five children, and he offered English and martial arts classes to minors, authorities said.

The Web site America's Most Wanted, an organization that started as a TV program and focuses on helping law enforcement authorities catch criminals, claimed an anonymous tip to their offices led to Crabtree's arrest.

The Web site said the 15-year old named “Brooke” that Crabtree thought he was soliciting for $130 per hour was actually a detective.

“Crabtree then sent ‘Brooke' a picture of himself, and asked if they could meet that day to engage in sexual intercourse,” the Web site states. “He even offered to pay her $130 an hour since she was a virgin. ‘Brooke' agreed to meet him at a local fast food restaurant. Much to his horror, when he arrived at the restaurant he found not a 15-year-old girl, but a group of detectives.”

Authorities plan to extradite Crabtree to the United States.

President Torrijos:
Panama-Guatemala free trade a ‘historic step'

Panama's government has signed a free-trade agreement with Guatemala, Central America's biggest economy with 11 million residents.

Panamanian President Martín Torrijos called it a “historic step,” observing his trade minister, Alejandro Ferrer, and Guatemalan Finance Minister Juan José García sign the treaty yesterday during President Alvaro Colom's visit to Panama.

“We've achieved an equal bilateral negotiation,” said Torrijos of the Guatemalan alliance. He continued, “We can attest to the fact that a real deepening of Panama's commercial relations with Central America is already a total reality.”

He called the pact “key” for integration, one that will “allow a stronger Central America and will allow us to move forward.”

President Colom, for his part, characterized the accord as “realizing a sincere friendship between Panama and Guatemala.”

Trade between the two countries in 2007 grossed $120 million.

As far as free trade with its region, Panama is on a roll. Yesterday's signing came on the heels of another pact with Costa Rica that took effect last week. Panama green-lighted free trade with Central America in 2002, signing a protocol that allows it to enter bilateral partnerships with countries throughout the region. Looking beyond the isthmus, Panama is also on track for free trade with Chile in March.

-ACAN-EFE
Costa Rican artisans craft
unity to strengthen their trade
By Rob Bartlett
Tico Times Staff | editorial@ticotimes.net

Craftsman from across the country met in San José yesterday to formally create the Network of Costa Rican Artisans. The organization will in turn form part of the Regional Network of Central American and Caribbean Artisans.

By working together as a trade organization, the sector hopes “to promote and contribute to the development of artisan firms to raise the competitiveness and living standards of artisans and make inroads into national and international markets.”

The group is particularly looking to influence the nascent negotiations for a free-trade agreement with the European Union as well as benefit from the country's burgeoning trade relations with China.

Opening the meeting, Economy Vice Minister Eduardo Sibaja stressed the importance of forming industry associations, especially in the context of these growing markets, as “they help us negotiate better.” He went on to emphasize the importance of quality products, drawing comparisons with the country's coffee industry. “As a country and a government, we aim to facilitate commerce…for your benefit. You have the opportunity to make handicrafts into a big industry.”

The General Administration for the Support of Small and Medium-sized Businesses (Digepyme), the Center for the Promotion of Micro and Small businesses (Cenpromype) and the Economy Ministry (MEIC) are all supporting the meeting.

At the time of writing, elections to the leadership of the organization were taking place.

Although there are no official statistics relating to the handicraft sector in Costa Rica, according to a press release issued jointly by MEIC, Digepyme and Cenpromype, the craftwork industry involves thousands of people and is of key importance to the country, economically, culturally and socially.

Read This Chunche or You're Just a Chúcaro

A word is not a thing in itself. It is a symbol that stands for a thing or a quality or an idea. Thus, it is arbitrary. I may refer to my vehicle as a “car,” “carro,” “macchina,” “voiture” or, for that matter, “Henry.” It doesn't matter, as long as the person with whom I am trying to communicate is in agreement with the symbol I am using. This is logical.

Until, that is, I sit down to write a poem and find that I can go through five or 10 different words before I find one that gives me that “Aha!” feeling. Against all logic, I can't tell you why, when there are several other words that stand for the same thing. It's a mystery – and thank heaven for it.

Likewise, against all logic, certain words and expressions in everyday language have more charm than others. Here are some of my favorites in Costa Rican Spanish, many of which won't be found in a standard dictionary. (Note that “pura vida” is not one of them.)

¡Acharita! or ¡Charita! “What a shame!” But we have to say it with a certain rhythm: ah-char-EEEEE-ta!

¡Guácala! or ¡Huácala! Yuck!

¡Ojo! Literally, “Eye!” It means, “Watch out!”

¡Suave! Literally, “Soft!” It means, “Wait a minute!”

¡Upe! It's what Ticos say (or yell) when they knock on the door, much better than our moronic “Is anybody home?”

Acurrucarse. It means “to cuddle up” or “to curl up.” The charming part is that it imitates the sound a mother hen makes when she gathers her chicks around her.

Arroz con mango. When we mix things that don't go well together, be it in a party list or the soup of the day, we have created “rice with mango.”

Bocaracá. A horrible poisonous snake with a beautiful name.

Cabanga. Nostalgia for something. It's a tiquismo, so it's not in the dictionary.

Chúcaro. Wild, untamed, skittish. Best of all, it can describe a person as well as a horse.

Chunche. Thingamabob. Chunches means “stuff.”

Con las manos en la masa. Literally, “with hands in the dough.” It means “red-handed.” Lo sorprendieron con las manos en la masa (they caught him red-handed).

Consuegro, consuegra. My daughter-in-law's mother (or my son's mother-in-law) is a good friend of mine, but what a way to have to describe her! In Spanish, I can simply take the word suegra (mother-in-law), add con-, and in one word describe my relation to her. Mi consuegra es buena amiga mía.

Culindingo. It's not in the dictionary, either. Apparently, it's a word that is no longer used, but my husband uses it all the time. It refers to a person who is fussy about any and everything.

Dar a luz. Literally, “to give to light.” It means “to give birth,” but oh so poetically.

De mala muerte. Literally, “of bad death.” It means “crummy” or “lousy,” but it is not used to describe just anything. Comimos en un restaurante de mala muerte (we ate in a greasy spoon). Es un hotel de mala muerte (it's a crummy hotel).

Escarabajo. Beetle. I swear this means “it is face down”: es (though it should be está), “it is” + cara, “face” + abajo, “down.”

Estar de chicha. To be in a foul mood – as if hung over. Oh yes, chicha is booze brewed from corn.

Estar en la luna. “To be on the moon,” to be distracted or “spaced out.”

Güiri güiri. This is pronounced “gweary gweary” – well, more or less. It means “hassle,” and is usually used with mucho. No quiero hacer eso – mucho güiri güiri (I don't want to do that – too much hassle).

Llave maya. “Mayan key.” No, it's not some esoteric doodad for entering the spirit world. Called variously “travel drive,” “memory stick” and “removable disk” in English, it's that little USB device that plugs into a computer and allows us to carry data from one computer to another. Come to think of it, maybe it is an esoteric doodad after all.

Pagar los platos rotos. When we have to take flak for something that isn't our fault, we are the ones who, as the saying goes, “pay for the broken plates.”

Para el tigre. Anything that is no longer useful, be it food, furniture or failed romance, is deemed para el tigre (for the tiger). A tigre, in this part of the world, is a cougar or a jaguar.

Pata caliente. Literally, “hot paw.” it refers to a person who runs around a lot instead of staying home.

Patas arriba. Literally, “paws up.” It refers to disorder or dysfunction. La casa está patas arriba (the house is a real mess).

Pelo de gato. Literally, “cat hair.” It's the fine misty rain we call “drizzle.”

Ruedacaca. Literally, “wheel poop.” It means “dung beetle.”

Vacilón. Something hilariously funny, a great time, as in ¡Qúe vacilón!

Yuyo. Pronounced “ju-jo,” it literally means “foot fungus,” but it also refers to a bothersome person, someone we might call a “pain in the neck.” I think “foot fungus” gets it better.

I'd love to hear some of your favorites. Please e-mail them to me at kategalante@yahoo.com.

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Tired of Taxistas?

Have you had a bad experience with Costa Rica’s taxi drivers?

If so, please tell us about it. And don’t leave anything out.

Send your tales of taxista woe to Tico Times reporter Sophia Kelley, skelley@ticotimes.net.

Deadline for submissions is Friday, Feb. 29.

Please remember to include your full name, e-mail address and phone number.

   
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