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Sworn in: Ricardo Martinelli makes his opening speech Wednesday as president of Panama, while deposed Honduran President Manuel Zelaya, back left, continues to attend international gatherings as his country's leader. |
Alejandro Bolivar | EFE
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Counter coup: Costa Rican union members Ivana González, Cristina Borge and Billy Folez rally outside the Foreign Ministry in San José to protest against Sunday's ouster of Honduran President Manuel Zelaya. |
Whitney Martin | Tico Times |
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| Ex-boxing champ, Managua mayor Argüello is dead |
| MANAGUA – Nicaragua woke up Wednesday to the shocking news that boxing legend and Mayor of Managua Alexis Argüello, 58, is dead. Early unconfirmed reports are calling it suicide. |
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Honduras crisis casts shadow over Panamanian presidential inauguration |
| PANAMA CITY – Ricardo Martinelli was sworn into office as president of Panama Wednesday, offering his business savvy to steer the country toward a “free economy” and steady “the ideological pendulum of Latin America.” |
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Costa Ricans score poorly in confidence in government, knowledge of Constitution |
Though Costa Rica is getting high marks on the world playing field for its quality of government, it's not getting the same high praise at home. |
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| Osa to invest in paving central roadway |
The Municipality of Osa has approved the investment of ¢600 million ($1,0471,138) on reconstruction projects in the Southern Zone region, including repaving the coastal highway to Bahía Ballena. |
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Why Most Ticos Don't
Want to Migrate to the U.S. |
Unlike the inhabitants of all of the other countries located between Costa Rica and the U.S.-Mexican border, Ticos are not interested in migrating north to look for better lives. And they are not interested in moving south, west or east, either. |
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| Ex-boxing champ, Managua mayor Argüello is dead |
By Tim Rogers
Nica Times Staff | trogers@ticotimes.net |
MANAGUA – Nicaragua woke up Wednesday to the shocking news that boxing legend and Mayor of Managua Alexis Argüello, 58, is dead. Early unconfirmed reports are calling it suicide.
The three-time world boxing champ and born-again Sandinista allegedly shot himself in the early hours of the morning, according to early media reports. Investigators are awaiting the results of the autopsy.
The former boxing champ, who fought briefly against the first Sandinista government in the 1980s, joined the Sandinista Front in 2001 and served as Managua's vice mayor for three years before renouncing his post to run for mayor in 2008.
Argüello told The Nica Times in an exclusive interview in December 2007 that he had been suicidal in the past. He said he would go on 20-day drug and alcohol binges when he was living in Miami after retiring from his boxing career in the 1990s.
Argüello, a humble and good-natured man with an infectious laugh, said God saved him from the "snake pit" of his addiction, and told him to get into politics to give something back to his country.
Yet since announcing his bid as mayor, Argüello had been subject to controversy, including his contested victory in the 2008 elections. The newspapers dubbed him “the mayor appointed by the Supreme Electoral Council,” and suggested that he was misusing municipal funds and not carrying through on projects that he had promised.
Argüello, who was capable of saying outrageous things, was always handled very closely by the Sandinista Front, which appointed a political administrator to run the mayor's office, too.
First lady Rosario Murillo said Argüello, known as the “Gentleman of the Ring” and the “Explosive Thin Man,” will be remembered as “the Champion of Nicaragua.” |
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Honduras crisis casts shadow over Panamanian presidential inauguration |
PANAMA CITY – Ricardo Martinelli was sworn into office as president of Panama Wednesday, offering his business savvy to steer the country toward a “free economy” and steady “the ideological pendulum of Latin America.”
A supermarket chain mogul, Martinelli is one of the last standing conservative leaders in a region in which “the ideological pendulum” has swung leftward.
Martinelli underscored that both he and his vice president, Juan Carlos Varela, are “two entrepreneurs” who have made an “incursion” in politics to “change the way things are done.”
“We're going to take our experience in the private sector and put it to work where it's never been seen: in government,” said the new president of Panama.
Martinelli is expected to raise police wages, implement monthly aid payments to the elderly and launch a subway system project in Panama City within hours after taking office, Economy Vice Minister Frank de Lima told Associated Press.
(For President Martinelli's reception in the business community, click here: http://www.ticotimes.net/businessarchive/2009_05/051509.htm.)
Although a host of leaders from across the hemisphere attended Martinelli's inauguration, the event was partly overshadowed by the presence of one leader in particular. Manuel Zelaya, the ousted president of Honduras, arrived in Panama Wednesday and announced he may stay longer than previously expected.
The tension has been building as Zelaya tours the Americas – first Costa Rica, then Nicaragua, the United States and now Panama – gathering support from world leaders and institutions along the way. Almost all are pressing the newly installed Honduran government to reinstate him. Zelaya initially said he'd return to Honduras on Thursday, in what was expected to create a showdown between Zelaya and Roberto Micheletti, both of whom claim to be president of Honduras.
“Today I can't leave Panama,” Zelaya told reporters. However, he said he is following the progress of the Honduran government in meeting the 72-hour deadline set by the General Assembly of the Organization of American States on Tuesday for Honduras to reinstate Zelaya as president.
Leaders at the inauguration reiterated statements urging the Honduran government to reverse the coup. Guatemalan President Alvaro Colom said he's willing to accompany Zelaya back to Tegucigalpa, the Honduran capital, if necessary.
Meanwhile, Zelaya continued to issue presidential orders from Panama City. He attempted to sack two Honduran ambassadors, Roberto Flores in the United States and Ramón Custodio in Brussels for being “disloyal,” according to Beatriz Valle, Zelaya's vice foreign minister. Both envoys have claimed Sunday's operation in Honduras was not a coup. |
–EFE and Tico Times
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Costa Ricans score poorly in confidence in government, knowledge of Constitution |
By Chrissie Long
Tico Times Staff | clong@ticotimes.net |
Though Costa Rica is getting high marks on the world playing field for its quality of government, it's not getting the same high praise at home.
A recent survey by the Arias Foundation found people lacked confidence in the Legislative Assembly, the president and political parties, giving them an average of 5 on a 10-point confidence scale.
Only 12 percent of those polled said they were familiar with the Constitution and only 20 percent believed they respected the laws of the Constitution (69 percent said they respected them only some of the time). The study was conducted among 1,250 people and claims a margin of error of 2.98 percent.
“This study only raised more questions than it answered,” said Luis Alberto Cordero, executive director of the Arias Foundation, which collaborated with a handful of other organizations to undertake the study. “We need to start asking why there is a lack of confidence and why people violate the law.”
Cordero pointed to education as one reason for the negative results.
On a scale of 1-10 (0 equals no confidence and 10 equals highest confidence) what level of confidence do you have in… |
…family?
…people poorer than you?
…the president?
…leaders in your community?
…people wealthier than you?
…foreigners?
…the legislative assembly?
…the police?
…political parties?
Source: Arias Foundation |
9
7
6
6
5
5
5
5
4
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“If people don't know what these institutions do, of course they aren't going to have confidence in them,” he said. “That is only natural…. It's absolutely a problem of education.”
But the same week the Arias Foundation published its report, the World Bank released numbers indicating Costa Rica ranks in some of the highest percentiles for government accountability and effectiveness.
In this year's World Bank Worldwide Governance Indicators report, Costa Rica topped most other countries in Latin America for political stability, control of corruption, among other factors.
The study found that Costa Rica ranked better than 77 percent of countries surveyed for accountability, better than 66 percent for government effectiveness, above 70 percent for control of corruption and higher than 65 percent for political stability (which is only one percentage point behind the United Kingdom ).
But Cordero didn't take any pride in the numbers.
“This is not something that necessarily makes me happy,” he said. “This is a very integrated region and if something goes wrong in one country, it greatly affects us.”
He added, “It is evident from our study (The Culture of the Constitution in Costa Rica) that we have a lot of work to do here.”
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| Osa to invest in paving central roadway |
By Adam Williams
Tico Times Staff | awilliams@ticotimes.net |
The Municipality of Osa has approved the investment of ¢600 million ($1,0471,138) on reconstruction projects in the Southern Zone region, including repaving the coastal highway to Bahía Ballena.
Of the total investment, ¢430 million ($750,450) will be used to pave the roads in the area. The investment to improve the roadways is estimated to benefit over 100 families and 400 commercial locations in the region.
The freshly paved roadway will also service the consistent tourist population in the region. The Osa region continues to see thousands of tourists annually, many of whom use the central roadway to enjoy frequent visits to the Ballena National Marine Park.
Of the remaining ¢170 million, ¢120 million ($209,428) will be used towards the construction of drainage pipes, sidewalks, and roadway signs. The remaining ¢60 million ($104,713) will be used to purchase a cement mixer.
Construction is scheduled to begin within the next month.
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| Why Most Ticos Don’t Want to Migrate to the U.S. |
By Carlos Denton
Special to The Tico Times | editorial@ticotimes.net |
Unlike the inhabitants of all of the other countries located between Costa Rica and the U.S.-Mexican border, Ticos are not interested in migrating north to look for better lives. And they are not interested in moving south, west or east, either. Surveys reveal that fewer than one in five Ticos want to go anyplace at all. In contrast, depending on the country, 40, 50 and up to 60 percent of citizens of some of the other Central American nations report that they would pick up and leave immediately if they had the wherewithal.
Although most experts agree that some movement of people from one country to another is positive – the newcomers come with fresh ideas more energy, and contribute in a positive way to the gene pool – a massive out-migration like the ones that have taken place in the so-called C4 countries (Nicaragua, El Salvador, Honduras, Guatemala) have a debilitating impact on national growth. There is a simple reason for this: migrants are usually stronger, mentally better equipped and probably better educated than those who stay at home. That a small portion of the local talent moves to the U.S. – it is estimated that 220,000 Costa Ricans live there, one third legally – does not cause damage. However, when a massive exodus occurs (think Irish potato famine or El Salvador's civil war as causes), it is difficult for the country of origin to recover.
There are two principal reasons why Costa Ricans do not migrate to the U.S. in larger numbers. First, the local unemployment rate has been in single digits for at least the past 25 years. In fact, there have been so many employment opportunities that the economy has been able to absorb 600,000 Nicaraguan immigrants to date, most of them since the turn of the century. Secondly, most Central American migrants who go to the U.S. move to areas where they have relatives to take them in and can help them to find jobs. In a recent survey done by CID/Gallup in El Salvador, 73 percent of those interviewed stated they had family in the U.S. The corresponding number for Costa Rica is 12 percent.
Since its independence, Costa Rica has received more immigrants than any of the other nations in the region, and this probably is why it is more diverse, and why more interesting ideas and projects seem to sprout naturally in its different locations and venues. The C4 countries have created economies based on the wholesale outbound migration of many of their most talented people, and the related social costs, including crime and violence, become more acute each year. Many unemployed people living in Nicaragua, El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala live out their days waiting for the next remittance check to come in from their relative who is working in the U.S.
An interesting, related question is: How many U.S. citizens live in Costa Rica? The estimate is about 18,000, and about half of these are in the country legally. This is fewer than a half percent of the total population. The 200,000 Ticos in the United States are less than a tenth of a percent of its population. As a percentage of the total population of each of the two countries, there are actually more Gringos living illegally in Costa Rica than vice versa. But as former Ambassador Mark Langdale once said, “Migration is not a priority on the bilateral agenda of either of our two nations.”
The crunch created by the global financial crisis has impacted primarily on Nicaraguan immigrants. With the severe drop in new construction projects and the decline in tourism, tens of thousands of Nicaraguan laborers, maids and maintenance people have found themselves on the street. Many have had to return home, where things are much worse than they were when they left the first time. The remaining jobs often have been taken by Ticos who shunned this type of work in the boom years, but now are willing to take anything to keep food on the table.
There is one important factor that needs to be added to understand the dynamics of the local labor market. There are no unemployment benefits for workers who lose their jobs, but they do continue to have health coverage provided by the Social Security System (Caja) for at least six months after being terminated. In contrast, U.S. workers do get unemployment benefits, but if they happen to get sick, they encounter problems in getting medical attention.
Because most local talent has remained in the country despite the financial crunch, it can be expected that Costa Rica will get back on its feet very quickly once things improve.
Carlos Denton is President of CID/Gallup, S.A., which provides strategy and marketing data in 14 countries of the region from its San José headquarters. cdenton@cidgallup.com
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