March 13, 2008

   
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Rock a la Panama : Cienfue, seen photographed at the National Theater in Panama, has quickly become his country's top rock idol. Tonight he makes his debut in Costa Rica, with a concert at the Jazz Café in San Pedro. He plays again tomorrow night at the Latino Rock Café in San José.

Courtesy of Cienfue

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A little respect: From left, Hondura's Manuel Zelaya, El Salvador's Elías Saca, Costa Rica's Oscar Arias, Guatemala's Alvaro Colom and Nicaragua's Daniel Ortega regrouped at the San José Casa Presidencial for a summit of Central American presidents, in which they pledged to “respect” the laws of each country. The region's leaders are negotiating a new type of trade “association” with the EU.

Ronald Reyes | Tico Times

Quintavalle ordered to pay bond
Italian Matteo Quintavalle, who is accused of a multi-million-dollar real estate fraud, has until April 2 to pay a $300,000 bond or go back to jail, prosecutor José Martínez said.
See More...

Panamanian rock star Cienfue makes Costa Rica concert debut

High-octane guitar arpeggios pierce through the opening bars of the new song by Cienfue, “Macho de Monte Suite,” the title track on his eagerly-awaited new release.
See More...
World Economic Forum honors rector of Costa Rican biz school
Arturo Condo, the rector of INCAE Business School, has been named one of 2008's Young Global Leaders by the World Economic Forum. The forum honored 245 professionals under 40.
Nicaraguan expats send record remittance money home in 2007
Nicaraguan émigrés last year sent 6% more earnings home than the year before, according to the Central Bank of Nicaragua (BCN), in what amounts to the highest total of remittances in two decades.
Intrigues Abound 'Even in Eden'

If a writer self-publishes a novel, there is usually a reason: It's a bad read.

 

Quintavalle ordered to pay bond
By Nick Wilkinson
Tico Times Staff | nwilkinson@ticotimes.net

Italian Matteo Quintavalle, who is accused of a multi-million-dollar real estate fraud, has until April 2 to pay a $300,000 bond or go back to jail, prosecutor José Martínez said.

A judge initially set the bond on Feb. 14 but Quintavalle's lawyers immediately appealed. The judge rejected the appeal late last week.

Quintavalle has yet to be indicted in the case. He was arrested in July after more than 80 investors filed a criminal complaint, alleging he defrauded them of more than $12 million for real estate developments on the Pacific Coast.

Meanwhile, local and international authorities are still looking to arrest U.S. citizens Christopher Coulther, 37, and Robert Simmons Davis, 44. Both are ex-business partners of Quintavalle who helped him line up investors.

Martínez and Interpol spokeswoman Mercedes Quesada said the hunt was on.

Coulther is in the United States, according to intermediaries who have contacted The Tico Times.

Quesada said the United States and Costa Rica have an extradition treaty but it doesn't allow either country to extradite its own citizens.

“They can't be extradited while they are in their own countries but as soon as they leave, Interpol can have them arrested,” she said.

Panamanian rock star Cienfue
makes Costa Rica concert debut

By Alex Leff
Tico Times Staff | aleff@ticotimes.net

High-octane guitar arpeggios pierce through the opening bars of the new song by Cienfue, “Macho de Monte Suite,” the title track on his eagerly-awaited new release.

Cienfue, the artistic name for versatile Panamanian musician Camilo Navarro, is set to unleash a fresh gamut of sounds on Costa Rican audiences for the first time, for two nights. He is scheduled to play tonight at San Pedro's Jazz Café and tomorrow at San José's Latino Rock Café.

Strong hints of macho in Cienfue go back before his solo career, which debuted with the 2005 album “El Disco es Cultura.” Previous projects include a long run with the band Bodega Sónica. He featured on the group's celebrated last CD, “Las Estrellas se Estrellan,” which Rolling Stone Latinoamérica fondly called “the craziest, most egocentric Panamanian rock album” – but they hadn't heard his solo stuff yet.

Cienfue fuses socially charged messages – sometimes considered offensive – into his lyrics, and sings them over tracks with heavy Latin rock guitar riffs and electronic often hip-hop-like hooks. As reviewers have acknowledged, the result gives a nod to Spanish-French fusionist Manu Chau, while honoring Panama's age-old folkloric style.

“El Disco” delivers nasty lyrics such as “I don't like virgins” and “female dogs bite,” all on one song, “Virgenes.” Another track, “Mi Colombiana,” slams against Colombian people trafficking. Text posted on the music video states that “each year Colombia traffics 2,000 people” outside its borders, adding that Panama had become a preferred destination. He said thousands end up working in the shadows of the sex industry.

His country has praised him, honoring Cienfue in 2006 with three Premios Panama Rock awards, for best newcomer, solo artist and music video (for the track “Medio Alcohólico Melancólico”). Last year he again won the best solo artist prize.

His Myspace profile, http://www.myspace.com/cienfue, contains music videos and selected tracks.

World Economic Forum honors
rector of Costa Rican biz school

Arturo Condo, the rector of INCAE Business School, has been named one of 2008's Young Global Leaders by the World Economic Forum. The forum honored 245 professionals under 40.

Condo has been head of the business school – located in Alajuela, northwest of San José – for about one year. He is one of 21 honorees from Latin America.

The committee that picked Condo is made up of 31 representatives of the global media and includes the publisher of The New York Times and the CEO of Reuters.

-Tico Times
Nicaraguan expats send record
remittance money home in 2007

Nicaraguan émigrés last year sent 6% more earnings home than the year before, according to the Central Bank of Nicaragua (BCN), in what amounts to the highest total of remittances in two decades.

Remittances – the living allowances sent to families by individuals living and working abroad – in 2007 reached a total $739.6 million, while in 2006, Nicaraguan migrants sent home $697.5 million. They sent $615.7 million in 2005 and $518.8 million in 2004.

Remittances are living allowances sent to families by individuals living and working in another country.

During the period of 1994-2003, remittances grossed $2.341 billion, an average of $234.1 million a year, according to the recent BCN report.

The bank predicts faster growth this year, at $800 million, over 8% higher than the 2007 total.

Some 20% of the estimated 5.3 million Nicaraguan population lives abroad, most in the United States and Costa Rica.

The report came after a home survey found that 75% of Nicaraguans claim to have a family member living abroad and 40% receive remittance money.

-EFE

Intrigues Abound 'Even in Eden'

If a writer self-publishes a novel, there is usually a reason: It's a bad read.

The rule, of course, has exceptions. For example, you may be a writer living in Costa Rica, where finding a publisher, especially one for an English-language book, is about as easy as finding a luge instructor.

Such was the dilemma for Albert A. Correia, a Californian transplant to San José. Unable to find a buyer, Correia forked up his own cash and published “Even in Eden” himself.

The book is a delightful tale of greed, power, sex, drugs, betrayal, revenge, murder and goodness, all set against the backdrop of this beautiful, peaceful yet deceptively sweet country we have come to love.

The book tells the fictional story of Gerardo Granados, a recent medical school grad, and his father, Faustino, a nationally beloved physician. Their dream is to build a network of low- or no-cost clinics across the country.

They lack financing, however. That's where José Sánchez, a powerful member of the Legislative Assembly, and his ambitious but corrupt son, Orlando, come into the picture.

Orlando – who holds a nasty grudge against Gerardo for a betrayal that dates back to their high school years – wants nothing to do with the Granados family. That is, until he realizes this could be the chance he has been waiting for to exact revenge.

Hence, the book's title has a double entendre: “Even in Eden,” as in bad things happen even in nice places; and getting “Even in Eden.”

Like many a Costa Rican adventure, Correia's tale begins in the Gran Hotel Costa Rica, where Gerardo is grabbing a quick cup of coffee.

At an adjacent table, unnoticed by Gerardo, are the Sánchezes, who are discussing Orlando's political future. At another table we meet two sisters, the worldly Yessenia, just back from California, and Yenori, the innocent, whom Yessenia is trying to recruit into the get-rich-quick world of “Club Fun,” patterned not so loosely after one of San José's better-known hooker hangouts.

As those stories unfold, taking us from the central Pacific party town of Jacó to the Caribbean port of Limón, a wide cast of characters enters the stage, including a sort-of-good Gringo and a really evil Gringo, some good Ticos and some bad Ticos, some Colombians – most bad – and a narrator named the Grand Tico.

Yessenia, a sadomasochistic drug addict, eventually enters a sordid relationship with the bad Gringo but marries Gerardo, who later unwittingly becomes implicated in her lover's mysterious overdose death.

The finale is satisfying, though less dramatic than anticipated by the buildup of the many overlapping stories.

Which is where the book drags. While Correia is an able storyteller and skilled at plot twists and character development, the volume of characters (Grand Tico included) and their chatter detract from the storylines.

The book also suffers from typo, spelling and grammatical errors – no fewer than 26 over one 100-page stretch. Many of them were brought on by the computer and language barriers between Correia, who speaks rudimentary Spanish, and his Costa Rican printing contractor, who speaks rudimentary English.

Still, the shortcomings in “Even in Eden ” are nothing a good editor and publisher couldn't overcome. They should give “Even in Eden ” – or at least its sequel, which Correia has already started writing – a chance.

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