Costa Rica News, Daily News in Costa Rica by the Tico Times
May 12, 2009
   
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Money growls: The jaguar is just one of the animals that has featured on Costa Rica currency through the years. The exhibit, Plants and Animals in Costa Rica Currency, has opened this week at San José's Central Bank Museums beneath Plaza de la Cultura, showcasing some 90 objects, some dating back to 1828.

Photo courtesy of Central Bank Museums

| Previous Daily News

Bird's-eye view: This peregrine falcon resides in Managua's National Zoo of Nicaragua, which has recently unveiled a revamp including new walkways, paid for by Taiwan.

Mario López | EFE

Vacationer drowns off Costa Rica’s Playa Azul; another still missing
A Boston man drowned late Sunday while swimming with his brother off the coast of Playa Azul, just south of San Juanillo on Costa Rica's Nicoya Peninsula. Search teams found the body of the older brother Monday, but have yet to find the other, officials said.
Boston teenagers go home with flu virus
A group of young musicians from Boston came to Costa Rica last month to share their talents and connect with people here through music. But they left with a little more than they bargained for.
Same-sex union advocate slams
Costa Rica church for stoking opposition
Costa Rican gay rights activists have decried what they call the Roman Catholic church's return to Inquisition times for mobilizing church members against a bill that would give legal recognition and rights to same-sex unions.
Children’s arts activities to promote peace in San José
Over 100 children from 11 Peace Corps Volunteer communities in Costa Rica will recite poetry, paint, act and dance in the name of peace, the Peace Corps said Monday.
Twenty Years of Changes,
for Better and Worse

Twenty years ago this week, I arrived in Costa Rica as a newly minted lawyer, with the intention of staying a few months to help start an environmental law center.

 

Vacationer drowns off Costa Rica’s
Playa Azul; another still missing
By Daniel Shea
Tico Times Staff | editorial@ticotimes.net

A Boston man drowned late Sunday while swimming with his brother off the coast of Playa Azul, just south of San Juanillo on Costa Rica's Nicoya Peninsula. Search teams found the body of the older brother Monday, but have yet to find the other, officials said.

Darnell Zimmerman, 25, and his brother Jermaine, 21, were swimming in the Pacific Ocean around 5 p.m. Sunday, when a strong undertow stopped them from returning to shore, said Officer Tomás Ullejós with the Santa Cruz Police.

The body of Darnell Zimmerman was found close to 17 hours later, around 10 a.m. Monday, by a Costa Rican search team, said Santa Cruz Officials.

Jermaine Zimmerman was still missing in the waning hours of daylight on Monday, when the search was stopped around 4:30 p.m., said Rafael Angel Araya, the regional director of police in the northwestern Guanacaste province. The search was set to resume again at 5 a.m. Tuesday. He was presumed dead by authorities.

The brothers were vacationing at the Sanctuary Resort and Spa at Playa Azul, said Araya. That information could not be confirmed with the resort on Monday, because its phones went unanswered throughout the day.

Boston teenagers go home with flu virus
By Chrissie Long
Tico Times Staff | clong@ticotimes.net

A group of young musicians from Boston came to Costa Rica last month to share their talents and connect with people here through music. But they left with a little more than they bargained for.

The Health Ministry received a letter on Saturday from the Boston group, Canta Mundi, informing them that three of the students were found carrying the H1N1 influenza virus. They are in “good condition” according to the health minister, and have arrived back to their home country safely.

Yet, tracing the path of potential infection becomes more than a game of connect the dots for health officials.

“They were in Escazú, Alajuela, back to Escazú …They were in Liberia … Escazú again, Alajuela…Guanacaste…Puntarenas,” said Health Minister María Luisa Avila, listing off the places the musical group traveled in their 11-day visit. “We don't know if they infected anyone in Costa Rica.”

The trip to Costa Rica was coordinated with the Costa Rican Ministry of Culture and Youth and participants, who ranged in age from 15 to 25, distributed musical instruments to children affected by the January earthquake.

The news comes on the heels of the first reported death in Costa Rica as a result of the flu virus that has killed more than 48 people in Mexico.

A 53-year-old man died of complications resulting from the flu on Saturday, May 9, compounded by a lung condition and diabetes. As of May 11, the Health Ministry is reporting eight confirmed cases, two probable cases and 811 suspected cases. More than 700 cases have already been discarded.

According to Vice Minister of Health Ana Morice, flu season typically peaks in late May and early June, with the change of climate and the start of the rainy season, which places Costa Rica in a more vulnerable position in the face of a pandemic.

Yet, health officials here believe the rate of infection is slowing and that Costa Rica will see fewer and fewer cases in the coming weeks.

“It's going down because of prevention measures,” Morice said on Monday.

In other news, the United States recently shipped 30,000 H1N1 protection kits to Central American countries. Although Costa Rica is the only country in the region with a confirmed death, it was not among the countries receiving the kits. The kits are being shipped to Nicaragua, Belize, El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras, according to a press release issued by the U.S. Embassy in Nicaragua.

Same-sex union advocate slams
Costa Rica church for stoking opposition

Costa Rican gay rights activists have decried what they call the Roman Catholic church's return to Inquisition times for mobilizing church members against a bill that would give legal recognition and rights to same-sex unions.

“(The church) has gone back to the times of witch hunts and … the Holy Inquisition,” Abelardo Araya, spokesman of the Diversity Movement, told newswire EFE on Monday. Araya's remarks came one day after clergymen urged Catholic followers to sign a petition to launch a public referendum in the hopes of blocking the same-sex bill, which is pending debate in the Legislative Assembly.

San José Archbishop Hugo Barrantes said the referendum is a public initiative that seeks to “defend life, the principles of the church and matrimony,” according to the daily La Prensa Libre.

According to Araya, the church “should abstain from government politics,” adding that Catholic leaders have “manipulated” the issue.

“…In Costa Rica it's not homosexual marriage that's being spoken of, but rather the formalization of the union between persons of the same sex,” Araya said.

More than 200,000 signatures are needed to put the bill through public referendum, an event that highlighted deep societal divisions when it played out over the issue of free trade with the United States in 2007.

-EFE

Children’s arts activities to
promote peace in San José

Over 100 children from 11 Peace Corps Volunteer communities in Costa Rica will recite poetry, paint, act and dance in the name of peace, the Peace Corps said Monday.

Peace Corps volunteers and Costa Rica's Child Welfare Office (PANI) are organizing the event Arte por la Paz (Art for Peace) May 15 in PANI's Culture Center in San José's Barrio Luj á n. The event is set to run from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.

Traditionally, Arte por la Paz events have been held in the northwest Guanacaste province and Southern Zone region of Pérez Zeledón. This is the first time volunteers are organizing an event in San José exclusive to the Central Valley and Limón communities.

Arte por la Paz began in 2003 when a group of artists in the north-central town of San Carlos organized community art to protest war and violence. Since then, the event has evolved into something more general, with a focus on ending violence, abuse, and the exploitation of children and families, the Peace Corps said in a press release.

For more information, contact Peace Corps volunteer Laura Diederichs at 2416-0973 or e-mail her at lauradiederichs@gmail.com.

-Tico Times

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!
Twenty Years of Changes, for Better and Worse
By Steve Mack
Tico Times Staff | smack@ticotimes.net

Twenty years ago this week, I arrived in Costa Rica as a newly minted lawyer, with the intention of staying a few months to help start an environmental law center. While I was fascinated by the country, I wasn't planning to stay. In fact, I can't remember the moment I made a firm decision in that regard. However, as time went by, the center became established, I found other work in the conservation field, I married a Tica and we had a daughter, and Costa Rica definitely became my home.

Meanwhile, the country changed, imperceptibly as the days passed, but profoundly over the years. From my point of view, these changes have been both good and bad, and, as is often the case, changes that had positive impacts in one area had negative ones in others. This perspective piece is meant to share what I feel to be the most significant of these changes, and, hopefully, to encourage readers of The Tico Times to share their own perspectives and experiences.

Costa Rica is greener: In 1989, Costa Rica had one of the highest deforestation rates in the world, as forests fell to make room for cattle ranches and a renewed expansion of the banana industry. Over the last 20 years, this trend has reversed, with economic changes and government policies spurring rural-to-urban migration and reversion of marginal farmland to secondary forest. This is especially noticeable in remoter regions such as Guanacaste in the northwest and the Osa Peninsula in the southwest. Despite being home to an additional one million people, Costa Rica has seen an increase in natural forest cover over the last 20 years.

Costa Ricans are far more aware of the importance of environmental protection than before, and while problems persist – and many have worsened – there is now more willingness to point these out and work seriously towards solving them. Though Costa Rica is far from perfect in how it manages its environment, its real accomplishments, most notably its system of parks and protected areas and reliance on clean energy, deserve respect and support.

The coasts have been developed, transformed and trashed: Few people living in end-of-the-world beach towns such as Puerto Viejo, Tamarindo or Quepos saw it coming, as the world's image of Central America in the 1980s was closer to bananas, repression and revolution than fun-in-the-sun. However, outsiders who did arrive spread the word that Costa Rica was peaceful and special, its beaches empty and beautiful, and land cheap. The development of the coast began in earnest in the 1990s, and, while this tended at first to be respectful of places and communities, over time the process increasingly became caught in a tide of greed and opportunism, fed by easy money and enabled by weak governmental controls. As a result, a great deal of thoughtless development has overwhelmed the original character of many beach communities, contributing to making them uglier and more chaotic. Today, much has been built that has no reason to exist other than having made fast money for hustlers or provided investments for people with little feel for or interest in the local culture. And places that once seemed so special no longer do.

San José is cleaner and more livable: Although perhaps difficult for newcomers to believe, San José has recently taken important strides towards becoming an attractive city to visit or even to live in. Not too big or small, blessed with a near-perfect climate and placed in a beautiful natural setting, San José has the potential to be a great city. However, it faces the huge task of overcoming many decades of rapid, unplanned growth, during which it was transformed from a small town into a big city, but with little priority given to integrating and protecting the environment, creating common spaces, waste management, transportation, architecture and public arts, and housing. By the late '80s, San José was at its nadir, a pathetic poster child for urban planning. Since then, however, significant progress has been made, and visions for improving the city were developed, discussed and are being implemented. To someone who has worked in the city every day for many years, the improvement is palpable. Cleaner air, pedestrian boulevards, improved traffic flow and urban reforestation are signs of better things to come.

Costa Rica is more dangerous: To me, the saddest development over the last 20 years has been the growing insecurity felt by Ticos and visitors alike. While Costa Ricans in the cities and suburbs lived behind rejas 20 years ago, crime was not pervasive and few feared for their lives. The proliferation of firearms, increasing drug addictions, rural-to-urban migration, the weakening of family ties and the growth of gangs have combined to change the culture of peace that made Costa Rica different, and to make this a place where one feels less tranquilo – and less free.

Government is more competent and responsible: Over the years, the country's human capital has been growing by leaps and bounds, and in many fields Costa Rican professionals are as good as any. One of the ways this is reflected is in better public administration. While pockets of serious inefficiency remain, government incompetence is steadily giving way to professionalism and effectiveness. One need look no farther than the management of the economy in these times of crisis. While many banks and other financial institutions in the U.S. were discovered – too late – to have been grossly mismanaged, it appears that in Costa Rica public and private financial institutions are weathering the crisis in relatively good shape, mainly thanks to serious and sober management and effective regulation.

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