Oct 15, 2008

   
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BUY ¢550.01 SELL ¢559.76

Need a raise? Coffee bean pickers would see about a 14 percent wage hike under labor leaders' proposal Monday. New salaries are to be set for the lowest earners of each sector next week.

Ronald Reyes | Tico Times

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Fully drenched: A hundred meters off the main road in downtown Parrita, on Costa Rica's central Pacific coast, residents do damage control after rain spilled the Parrita River over Sunday, surging water five feet high into the house. Some residents point to the failure of a new barrier system on the Parrita that was supposed to stop flooding.

Christopher Wayne | Tico Times

Water shut off in Santa Ana
Costa Rica water authorities announced they will shut off water service today from 7 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. in several neighborhoods in the canton of Santa Ana, southwest of San José.
See More...
Nicaraguan gov’t continues investigation of NGOs
MANAGUA – Two more non-governmental organizations were called before the state Prosecutor's Office yesterday as part of an ongoing investigation that rights groups and civil society are calling “political persecution.”
See More...
Man disappears in flood on Costa Rica’s Pacific side
One person remained missing yesterday along Costa Rica's central Pacific coast after torrential rains and flooding swamped the area Sunday night.
Municipal offices in San José, Santa Cruz
have 6 months to get wheelchair accessible
Costa Ricans with disabilities should find accessible entrances to municipal offices in San José and Santa Cruz, in the northwestern Guanacaste province, within six months, the Constitutional Court has ruled.
Costa Rica unions urge 12-16% wage hikes
Labor leaders this week are calling for 12 to 16 percent salary increases for private and public sector workers to keep pace with Costa Rica's fast-rising cost of living, according to Carlos Monterrey of the National Association of Public and Private Employees (ANEP).
Yuca an Ancient
New World Staple

Rainy season is in full swing in the Central American tropics. Past is the season for fruits such as the beloved mango and cantaloupe. It is, however, time for another product to be widely available at low prices all over the country.

 

Water shut off in Santa Ana

Costa Rica water authorities announced they will shut off water service today from 7 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. in several neighborhoods in the canton of Santa Ana, southwest of San José.

The neighbors affected are Salitral, Calle El Perico, Calle Machete, Chirracal, San Rafael and Calle Montoya.

The water outage was planned to carry out repairs of the region's main water tank, according to a press release from the Costa Rican Water and Sewer Institute.

 
Nicaraguan gov’t continues investigation of NGOs
By Tim Rogers and Blake Schmidt
Nica Times Staff | trogers@ticotimes.net, bschmidt@ticotimes.net

MANAGUA – Two more non-governmental organizations were called before the state Prosecutor's Office yesterday as part of an ongoing investigation that rights groups and civil society are calling “political persecution.”

Swedish development organization Forum Syd and the Civil Coordinator, a civil society umbrella group, were ordered yesterday to present their financial records to the Prosecutor's Office in an investigation that has already led to raids and citation of other non-governmental organizations (NGOs).

Police raided the Center for Communication Investigation (CINCO), headed by renowned journalist Carlos Fernando Chamorro, and the Autonomous Women's Movement (MAM), confiscating files and computers from both buildings.

Oxfam Great Britain and the International Republican Institute have also been cited in the probe and, like Syd and the Civil Coordinator, have asked for extensions to get their books in order.

The official Sandinista news media are hailing the government's actions as a crackdown on corruption, money laundering and other “illegal” activities promoted by the “oligarchic” sectors of society that they claim NGOs represent.

So far, no formal accusations have been filed.

Armando Juárez, head investigator for the Prosecutor's Office, told The Nica Times yesterday that the NGOs are being looked into for “suspicious behavior,” but he denied that the investigation represented political persecution.

Gonzalo Carrión, a top lawyer for the Nicaraguan Center for Human Rights, says the government is looking for ways to “create crimes” against organizations that have taken a critical position against the administration of President Daniel Ortega.

Ortega, meanwhile, seems to be trying to make the issue about class.

“The oligarchy thinks they have impunity; they did before but not anymore,” Ortega said during a speech Monday night.

Meanwhile, members of Ortega's Councils of Citizen Power, or CPCs, rallied outside the Prosecutor's Office in support of its investigation.

Holding up pictures of political opposition leaders as well as Chamorro and feminist leaders Sofía Montenegro and Azalia Solís, the CPCs chanted against corruption and clashed yesterday afternoon with a group of university students who showed up to protest Ortega.

Most CPC protesters interviewed yesterday by The Nica Times interviewed were unable to identify the people on the signs they were accusing of corruption.

Man disappears in flood on Costa Rica’s Pacific side
By Christopher Wayne
Special to The Tico Times | editorial@ticotimes.net

One person remained missing yesterday along Costa Rica's central Pacific coast after torrential rains and flooding swamped the area Sunday night.

Edwin Fonseca, 52, his son, Alexander, and a mutual friend, Luis Cardenas, were driving across a small bridge near the town of Cerritos de Quepos between 7 p.m. and 8 p.m. Sunday night when a surge of water pushed them into the swollen river.

“It was the worst experience of my life,” said Cardenas, who together with the younger Fonseca, were able to escape from the automobile as it filled with water.

When the car sank into the river the electrical system failed, leaving the three men unable to escape through the windows. As water filled in around them, Alex Fonseca found a tree branch and knocked out a back window, at which point he and Cardenas escaped to the roof of the car, and eventually to the bank of the river. Edwin Fonseca, unable to swim, never made it to shore.

Yesterday morning Fonseca, members of the press and two pilots boarded a rescue helicopter and took flight to search for the missing man. After an hour in the air, and with help from police and firefighters on the ground, the chopper returned. The search with continue today.

Fonseca, who currently resides in the U.S. state of New Jersey, had returned to Costa Rica earlier in the weekend to look at property for an upcoming development project.

“We are only alive by a miracle,” said Cardenas. “God gave us a new opportunity to live.”

Municipal offices in San José, Santa Cruz
have 6 months to get wheelchair accessible

Costa Ricans with disabilities should find accessible entrances to municipal offices in San José and Santa Cruz, in the northwestern Guanacaste province, within six months, the Constitutional Court has ruled.

The ruling concluded two separate cases in which complainants – one with last names Badilla in San José and another last-named Hernández in Santa Cruz – filed against the municipalities for the discriminatory layout of their facilities, without any way to enter besides stairs.

The ruling said that the current structure goes against the “right to equality of opportunities and to not be discriminated against” of people with disabilities, according to a court press release issued yesterday.

-Tico Times
Costa Rica unions urge 12-16% wage hikes
By Alex Leff
Tico Times Staff | aleff@ticotimes.net

Labor leaders this week are calling for 12 to 16 percent salary increases for private and public sector workers to keep pace with Costa Rica's fast-rising cost of living, according to Carlos Monterrey of the National Association of Public and Private Employees (ANEP).

Union representatives made the bid Monday, in the first of three meetings of the National Salary Council to decide wage adjustment. The process takes place here every six months, in October and June.

Inflation has surged 15.77 percent during the past 12 months, the highest year-over-year increase since 1998, according to the National Statistics and Census Institute (INEC).

ANEP is pushing for wage hikes that vary by sector and skill level: 11.83 percent for employees with a university degree and 14 percent for field workers such as coffee-bean pickers, to name two.

The highest hike requested by the unions is a 16.08 percent raise for domestic workers.

Business leaders will make a bid for what they perceive the increase should be Oct. 20 and the government will weigh on Oct. 22, according to Labor Ministry spokesman Geovanny Díaz.

The government's proposal could either mirror one of the other bids or choose the middle ground, and negotiations between the three parties will follow, Díaz said.

The new salaries are slated to take effect in January.

Please send us your letters, 500 words or fewer, to letters@ticotimes.net for Costa Rica issues or letters@nicatimes.net for Nicaragua and the Central American and Caribbean region. Thanks!

Yuca an Ancient New World Staple

Rainy season is in full swing in the Central American tropics. Past is the season for fruits such as the beloved mango and cantaloupe. It is, however, time for another product to be widely available at low prices all over the country. Though present year-round, yuca (Manihot esculenta) is more abundant this time of year. The tuber goes by several different names in English, including manioc, cassava and tapioca.

The root vegetables of many New World areas have a long history attached to them. Archaeological evidence reveals their use by aboriginal groups in Mexico, Central America and Brazil as early as 3000 B.C. Griddles for baking cassava bread dating back to almost 2000 B.C. have been found in South America (see story on facing page). In these ancient cultures, cassava historically played a social role, such as in religious ceremonies.

Croquette, Anyone? Enyucados are a traditional Costa Rican dish made from the historically important cassava root.
Marco González | Tico Times

According to one legend from the Tupi Indians of the Amazon, a mother with no food watched her child starve. When he died, she buried him under her hut. That night, a wood spirit known as a mani came and transformed the child's body into the roots of a plant that grew up to feed future generations. The plant was called mani-oca (oca meaning “root”).

Yuca – not to be confused with the English yucca, which is a plant of the agave family – appears to have been cultivated mainly in two areas: the semi-arid regions of the Yucatán Peninsula and adjacent Guatemala, and northeastern Brazil. While practically unknown in temperate regions, the plant is native to Brazil and is a staple for more than 600 million people in Africa, Asia and Latin America. As is true of most staple crops, yuca is almost all starch, containing up to 35 percent carbohydrates, only about 1 percent protein and almost no vitamins. The tubers can be boiled, baked, fried or dried, and are used to make flour, breads, tapioca, sugar, laundry starch and even alcoholic drinks.

One yuca plant can yield 20 pounds or more of tubers, which can be stored for a long time. Plants are grown from stems with buds, and the tubers are ready to harvest after about 18 months.

An ideal crop for the tropics, yuca grows well on dry and wet soils, produces roots in poor soils, is relatively resistant to insects and fungal pests, requires a minimal amount of agricultural effort and has a high yield per unit area. The world annual production of yuca is more than 158 billion tons, mostly used for human consumption and animal food.

Of the hundreds of known species, two types of yuca are mainly grown today. “Bitter” yuca, which has a high concentration of cyanides, is used to make glues and industrial products. “Sweet” yuca, or low-cyanide yuca, is produced for consumption. Processing is complex, because most varieties of the tuber contain potentially toxic concentrations of these cyanogenic glycosides that are reduced to innocuous levels through cooking. Yuca should never be eaten raw, and it must be cooked at temperatures of at least 200 degrees F to eliminate hydrogen cyanide byproducts.

Yuca plays a modern role as an industrial product in starches, adhesives and textiles. Brazilian researchers are currently studying its possible use in the production of dextrose and certain alcohols. Yuca may be processed into flour or boiled to create gelatinous tapioca pellets, which are used as a thickening agent in pies and other desserts.

In Costa Rica, yuca may be present at dinner tables around the country. It is made into fries, pies, tamales or the famous meat- and/or cheese-stuffed enyucados, deep-fried croquettes often topped with a sauce. It is especially present on the Caribbean coast, where its fried form accompanies many traditional dishes.

In West Africa, particularly in Nigeria, yuca is commonly prepared as eba or gari, grated and fried and then mixed with boiling water to form a thick paste.

Yuca is heavily featured in the cuisine of Brazil. The dish vaca atolada (“mud-stranded cow”) is a meat and cassava stew that is cooked until the root has turned into a paste. Pirão is a thick, gravy-like gruel prepared by cooking fish bits (such as heads and bones) with yuca flour. In farofa (lightly roasted flour), yuca combines with rice and beans to make the basic meal of working-class Brazilians. Farofa is also a standard side dish for feijoada, the famous meat-and-beans stew. Boiled yuca is made into a popular sweet pudding, and deep-fried mandioca is a popular snack.

No matter how you cook it, yuca is destined to play a role in New World and new Costa Rican cuisines. Surprise yourself with one of the world's oldest delicacies.

Enyucados (Cassava Croquettes)

Ingredients:
2 lb fresh yuca, cooked and mashed into a puree
1/2 lb fresh, soft goat cheese (chèvre)
1/4 cup chopped sun-dried tomatoes
2 tbs fresh basil, finely chopped
2 tbs olive oil
1/3 cup mayonnaise
1 tsp chipotle sauce (made from roasted jalapeño peppers)
Salt and pepper to taste
Flour to dust
1 beaten egg
Bread crumbs and sesame seeds for breading
Oil for deep-frying

Preparation Tip:
Wash yuca under running water until clean. Peel with a very sharp chef's knife, thinly slicing and removing the skin to reveal the white flesh. Cut into four-inch lengths, then cut each piece in half to reveal the core with the tough “string.” Remove the string for quicker cooking. Cook until tender in plenty of boiling water, spiced with bay leaves, black peppercorns, garlic, oregano, cloves, one tablespoon of butter and a dash of salt.

Drain well and use while warm, when it is easier to handle. Raw yuca can be poisonous, so be extremely careful never to eat it unless it is thoroughly cooked.

Directions:
1.
In a bowl, mix the yuca puree, olive oil, salt and pepper.
2. In a separate bowl, combine goat cheese, sun-dried tomatoes and basil. Set aside.
3. Form two-inch balls of the yuca puree and stuff each with a spoonful of the cheese mixture.
4. Preheat oil in a frying pan to 300 degrees F.
5. Bread the croquettes by coating with flour, then egg, then the bread crumb-sesame seed mixture.
6. Lower the croquettes into the hot oil and fry until golden brown, approximately two to three minutes. Drain on paper towels and set aside.
7. Mix the mayonnaise and chipotle sauce to create a dip. Serve warm, with chipotle dip on the side.

Makes four servings.

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