Sep 16, 2008

   
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Climb to defeat: A still of a video of Costa Rican climber Gineth Soto on her recent failed ascent of Everest, now available among other Soto clips on Youtube at http://www.youtube.com/
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Independence march: Panamanians join in a San José parade yesterday to mark 187 years of independence from Spain. Residents celebrated in other nations as well, including Nicaragua, Honduras and Guatemala.

Lindy Drew | Tico Times

Costa Rica president ‘tired' on Independence Day
Costa Rican school children marched to their own drumbeat throughout Costa Rica yesterday as the country joined other Central American countries in marking 187 years since the colonists broke away from Spain.
See More...
Costa Rica seeks more time – again – on CAFTA
For the second time, Costa Rica is seeking to extend its deadline for entering the Central American Free-Trade Agreement with the United States (CAFTA).
See More...
Nicaragua year-on-year inflation up 23.92
Nicaraguan year-on-year inflation in August was 23.92 percent, owing to rising fuel and basic grain prices, according to the Central Bank (BCN).
More Costa Ricans put economy into worry box, says poll
Economic woes have leapt further ahead of crime as Costa Rican's primary concern, according to a new Unimer poll.
How Costa Rica
Broke From Spain

We like to think that independence came peacefully to Central America on Sept. 15, 1821. It's true there were no bloody conflicts as there were in North and South America, but Spain's King Ferdinand VII didn't just let the remaining colonies slip away, either.

 

Costa Rica president ‘tired' on Independence Day

Costa Rican school children marched to their own drumbeat throughout Costa Rica yesterday as the country joined other Central American countries in marking 187 years since the colonists broke away from Spain.

But the nation's president, Oscar Arias, brought much less enthusiasm.

“Tired” was the word that lingered after President Arias' annual Independence Day address in San José's National Park. Television Channel 7 put the Spanish word cansado as the headline yesterday while it replayed images of the president's speech.

“I'm tired of trying to get important things done and hitting obstacles opposing measures simply for coming from the government … of trying to govern a country that believes criticism at any cost is the best way to carry out opposition,” he said, according to newswire EFE.

The remarks came after a period in which Arias' voice has been in and out of hoarseness, his nation's chances of meeting the deadline to enter a free-trade agreement with the United States (see separate story) were slipping away, and his administration became further embroiled in a scandal involving secret Chinese bonds.

The president, nevertheless, made a call to keep alive the dream of independence and freedom that is “forged in the hearts of all people.”

“Being free is being able to make proper decisions and execute them … freedom is not a derailed train running aimlessly through history,” Arias said.

The nation's official celebration began Sunday night when the independence torch arrived in Cartago, the old capital east of San José, from Guatemala.

Many waved national flags and marched in festive parades, but some took the opportunity to protest.

Residents in Cartago, Costa Rica's old capital east of San José where this time last year and the year before students demonstrated against free trade with the United States, on Sunday urged the government to hurry and build them a new hospital.

-Tico Times and EFE
Costa Rica seeks more time – again – on CAFTA
By Gillian Gillers
Tico Times Staff | ggillers@ticotimes.net

For the second time, Costa Rica is seeking to extend its deadline for entering the Central American Free-Trade Agreement with the United States (CAFTA).

Vice President Laura Chinchilla met with Peter Brennan, the chargé d'affaires at the U.S. Embassy, on Friday to request more time to enter the pact, according to the daily La Nación.

Chinchilla said the country would miss its Oct. 1 deadline after the Supreme Court on Thursday struck down an intellectual property law designed to put Costa Rica in compliance with CAFTA.

“We are convinced – and this is the message that we want to give Costa Ricans – that we will still be able to enter CAFTA,” Chinchilla said at an Thursday night. She then turned to a soccer metaphor: “In the last few minutes of the game, we have been dealt a yellow card. We don't think it's a red card.”

The Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme Court (Sala IV) found that lawmakers had failed to consult indigenous groups when debating the bill, as required under a 1989 United Nations convention. Lawmakers must now fix their error and pass the bill again.

The proposal was the last of 13 bills required for Costa Rica to enter CAFTA, which was ratified in a national referendum last October. After lawmakers missed a Feb. 29 deadline for passing the bills, Costa Rica's trading partners granted the country a seven-month extension.

Chinchilla said the administration will decide how much more time to request once the Sala IV releases its full ruling. The other CAFTA signers – the United States, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua and the Dominican Republic – have all entered the treaty.

Nicaragua year-on-year inflation up 23.92

Nicaraguan year-on-year inflation in August was 23.92 percent, owing to rising fuel and basic grain prices, according to the Central Bank (BCN).

Prices rose last month 0.51 percent, while inflation in the first eight months of the year reached 13.73 percent, the BCN said in its monthly report released yesterday.

The Central Bank, however, noted that the rising consumer price index has slowed since July with dipping cost of petroleum, which it said has eased down price increases of such commodities as beverages and housing.

-EFE
More Costa Ricans put
economy into worry box, says poll

Economic woes have leapt further ahead of crime as Costa Rican's primary concern, according to a new Unimer poll.

Published Sunday in the daily La Nación, the poll says 44 percent of 1,230 people interviewed from Aug. 24 to Sept. 4 put the cost of living and the state of the economy at the top of their worry list. In a similar poll in March, only 28 percent put those issues first.

Meanwhile, crime and violence, the second biggest concern in the survey, dropped from 20 percent in March to 16 percent in the latest poll.

The number of people most concerned about drug addiction shrank almost by a half, from 13 to 7 percent.

 

How Costa Rica Broke From Spain

We like to think that independence came peacefully to Central America on Sept. 15, 1821. It's true there were no bloody conflicts as there were in North and South America, but Spain's King Ferdinand VII didn't just let the remaining colonies slip away, either.

There was rebellion in the six Central American provinces that made up the Capitanía General de Guatemala (Captaincy General of Guatemala ), even in Costa Rica, far from that epicenter of discontent and intrigue, Guatemala City.

The region was described as having an intellectual current passing through it, and two new newspapers, El Editor Constitutional and El Amigo de la Patria were pro-independence. Everyone knew about Simon Bolívar liberating Venezuela and Colombia through bitter and bloody fighting, while to the north, Mexico had gained its independence in 1810 and was busy forming an empire that reached from California to the Yucatán under ruler Agustín de Iturbide.

Independence a lo Tico

Independence Day celebrations officially start Sunday at 6 p.m., when Ticos will join together and sing the national anthem, followed by a countrywide re-creation of the spreading of the news of independence, in which Costa Ricans will take to the streets carrying candle lanterns. That evening in Cartago, President Oscar Arias will accept a torch carried all the way from Guatemala to signify the spread of independence through Central America. On Monday morning, every major city in the country will host a parade presented by students. Government offices, the U.S. Embassy and most businesses will be closed for the holiday.

The Central American colonists had reasons to rebel. Spain still controlled commerce, tax collection and all important government posts. The Catholic Church, strongly tied to the monarchy, had lost a lot of favor in the New World. The Inquisition, which punished those deemed heretics by burning them at the stake or banishing them to the primitive interiors of the colonies, was still feared and was not abolished until 1834. Then, too, the diezmo, an obligatory 10 percent tithe, went to support the church.

By that time, Napoleon had invaded Spain; French language and customs were the new order, and French officials overrode colonial officialdom.

Agitation for independence grew throughout 1821 with public speakers, graffiti on walls, flyers nailed to walls and doors, and shouts of “ ¡Viva! ” in the streets. When the province of Chiapas seceded from the Capitanía to join the Mexican empire with no reprisals, the rest of the colonies, emboldened, demanded independence from a failing and ailing Spain.

On Sept. 15, 1821, Gavino Gainza, governor of the Capitanía, held a meeting of 56 leaders from the military, the church and society to decide what to do, while an unruly crowd pressured from every window and doorway with shouts and slogans.

Then the unexpected happened. Some of the outside agitators set off firecrackers, and the delegates, thinking an insurrection was upon them, wrote up a Declaration of Independence that did not take into account what to do once they were independent, and other fine points.

The finished document did not reach Costa Rica until Oct. 13, and became official here on Oct. 29, 1821, with the five remaining colonies forming a confederation. In November 1838, under President Braulio Carrillo, Costa Rica left the confederation and became a sovereign nation.

Some interesting facts about life in 1821:

– England was a major sea power and dominated the Caribbean, though it held only a couple of outposts on the mainland. British influence was strong in Central America.

–Ladies smoked cigars and cigarettes, which shocked European visitors. Central America was a big tobacco producer, and a tobacco factory founded in 1784 was one of the first buildings in San José.

–Gentlemen wore swords and used them.

–Houses at the time were whitewashed adobe with dirt floors and glassless windows with shutters. They lacked patios and were built right up to the street. Humble homes had one great room, and people gathered around the hearth for cooking. The houses were dark and poorly ventilated, and water was collected from street runoff and not very clean. The homes of “important families,” merchants or descendants of the conquistadors, were larger, with parlors for entertaining and inside patios.

–Cartago, east of the modern capital of San José, was the center of government, commerce and society. Ladies of the upper echelon wore dresses and shawls imported from Europe, which were so valuable that they were willed to daughters and nieces.

–Freedom from Spain meant freedom to trade with the rest of the world, which gave rise to the coffee boom that followed.

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