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September 25, 2009
   
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Tourism awards: William Rodríguez, left, vice president of the Chamber of Hotels, and Carlo Sosto, general manager of Nature Air, pick up their tourism award Wednesday evening from the National Tourism Chamber at the Costa Rica Country Club in Escazú.

Ronald Reyes | Tico Times

| Previous Daily News

Highway pulled over: The San José-Caldera Highway project has been halted by Costa Rica's Environment Tribunal for what it considers destruction to land and waterways along the road.

Ronald Reyes | Tico Times

Honduran de facto government will
welcome Jimmy Carter, Oscar Arias
The de facto government of Honduras announced Thursday it has accepted a future visit of a mediation team composed of former U.S. President Jimmy Carter, Costa Rican President Oscar Arias and Panamanian Vice President Juan Carlos Varela, in order to maintain a dialogue regarding the Honduran crisis.
Environment court halts construction on Costa Rica highway
The Environment Tribunal has paralyzed all work on the San José-Caldera highway because of apparent environmental damages, the court said in a statement Thursday.
Nicaragua denies foreign troop permits related to Honduras
MANAGUA – The head of Nicaragua's Foreign Affairs Commission denies that the recent approval of foreign troop arrivals in Nicaragua is related to the crisis in neighboring Honduras.
Dutch ship supports Costa Rica’s anti-drug efforts
LIMON – The HNLMS Amsterdam, Holland's fast combat support ship, docked at this Costa Rican Caribbean port city on Monday in a show of Tico-Dutch allegiance against drug trafficking.
Pre-Columbian Jade in
C.R.: Mesoamerican Ties

My last column focused on ancient house and tomb forms, agriculture and the first chiefdoms in the several centuries before and after Christ, and how they seem to have been influenced by Mesoamerica, the lower half of Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador and the western tip of Honduras (TT, March 27).

Honduran de facto government will
welcome Jimmy Carter, Oscar Arias

The de facto government of Honduras announced Thursday it has accepted a future visit of a mediation team composed of former U.S. President Jimmy Carter, Costa Rican President Oscar Arias and Panamanian Vice President Juan Carlos Varela, in order to maintain a dialogue regarding the Honduran crisis.

The crisis has deepened with the return on Monday of Honduras' deposed president, Manuel Zelaya, who remains holed up in the Brazilian Embassy in the Honduran capital of Tegucigalpa.

The announcement came along with the de facto government's postponement of a planned visit by the Organization of American States (OAS), which was expected to send a group headed by its secretary general, José Miguel Insulza, in the coming days. That visit would come after a conflictive one by Insulza on July 3, during which he failed to persuade Micheletti to meet the OAS' demands to allow Zelaya to return to the presidency.

According to a statement from the Honduran Foreign Ministry, Micheletti is willing to receive the OAS mission at a future date.

De facto President Roberto Micheletti said he suggested to President Carter that Varela, who also serves as Panama's foreign minister, accompany Arias and Carter.

In an ease-up from the region's hard line against Honduras' upcoming presidential elections, the recently elected Panamanian government has said it will endorse whichever candidate wins the November vote (TT Daily News, Sept. 21).

At the behest of the government of Brazil, the United Nations Security Council will hold an emergency meeting Friday to discuss the Honduran crisis.

–EFE
Environment court halts
construction on Costa Rica highway

By Mike McDonald
Tico Times Staff | mmcdonald@ticotimes.net

The Environment Tribunal has paralyzed all work on the San José-Caldera highway because of apparent environmental damages, the court said in a statement Thursday.

The tribunal, an administrative court under the Ministry of Environment, Energy and Technology (MINAET), ruled construction of the highway has affected the Barva aquifer, the Río Tárcoles and at least 20 streams and rivers along the route from Ciudad Colón, a town southwest of San José, to the town of Orotina, just inland from the central Pacific coast.

The court ordered “detailed studies” from the MINAET's water department and the National Groundwater, Irrigation and Drainage Service (SENARA) before any work can continue.

Autopistas del Sol, the Spanish company carrying out the project, released a statement late Thursday in its defense. It said the court has followed “mistaken assumptions” in its ruling, claiming the project has stuck closely to Costa Rican environmental guidelines.

In May, construction workers cut a trench 15 to 20 meters deep near San Rafael de Alajuela, west of San José, despite plans that show the Barva aquifer rises to within five meters of the surface. Footage on Channel 7 news showed water pouring out of the ground in this area (TT, June 5).

Nicaragua denies foreign
troop permits related to Honduras

By Tim Rogers
Nica Times Staff | trogers@ticotimes.net

MANAGUA – The head of Nicaragua's Foreign Affairs Commission denies that the recent approval of foreign troop arrivals in Nicaragua is related to the crisis in neighboring Honduras.

Based on a Sept. 23 “urgent request” from President Daniel Ortega, the National Assembly quickly approved entrance into Nicaragua of 10 U.S. Special Forces troops and 30 Venezuelan troops, scheduled to arrive in October and November, reportedly for “humanitarian” and training purposes.

According to Nicaragua's constitution, the presence of any foreign troops in the country must be approved in advance by the National Assembly.

Opposition lawmaker Francisco Aguirre, president of the Foreign Affairs Commission, said the request “certainly didn't raise any suspicions.”

“Am I naive? Perhaps,” Aguirre told The Nica Times in an email. “But I honestly don't think any of this has to do with Honduras.”

Aguirre said that if there were any covert military actions planned against the de-facto Honduran government of Roberto Micheletti, those operations would be “completely invisible." 

“The actors have no interest in having the National Assembly give them a green light,” the lawmaker said of conspirators. “Like mushrooms, they prefer moist, dark spaces to prosper.”

According to the congressional approval, 10 U.S. Special Forces troops, along with the USS Wasp, an amphibious assault ship, are authorized to enter Nicaragua from Oct. 1 to Dec. 31. The 30 Venezuelan troops, along with ships and Venezuelan Air Force planes, are authorized to enter the country on a rotating basis from Nov. 1, 2009 to April 10, 2010.

Dutch ship supports Costa Rica’s anti-drug efforts

By Sean O'Hare
Tico Times Staff | editorial@ticotimes.net

Patrol respite: The HNLMS Amsterdam, Holland's combat support ship, docs at the Caribbean port city of Limón this week, taking a break from its open-sea duties in the war on drugs.

Sean O'Hare | Tico Times

LIMON – The HNLMS Amsterdam, Holland's fast combat support ship, docked at this Costa Rican Caribbean port city on Monday in a show of Tico-Dutch allegiance against drug trafficking.

The Amsterdam, having embarked on its West Indian Guardship mission to patrol and protect the Dutch kingdom's six islands in the Caribbean, spent four days here.

As required by law, permission was granted by the Costa Rican Legislative Assembly 24 hours prior to the ship's arrival, after successful negotiations between the Dutch embassy and the Costa Rican government.

Commander G.H. Nijenhuis welcomed aboard the Dutch ambassador to Costa Rica, Matthias van Bonzel, who said, “Amsterdam is here to reinforce cooperation in the war on drugs, as well as promote tourism and reinforce our good relations with Costa Rica.

“We have a responsibility not only under the Treaty of Geneva to take action against drug trafficking, but also because the Netherlands Antilles and Aruba are part of our kingdom within the Caribbean, and act as transit ports for traffickers. Rotterdam, our port in the Netherlands, is also the gateway port for European distribution of cocaine, so we must do our best to solve this problem.”

The 166-meter-long ship had just returned from Panama where it was involved in a joint multi-national exercise defending the Panama Canal against maritime terrorist threats.

More than 22 countries and 33 ships participated in what is believed to be the world's largest-ever maritime exercise.

The HNLMS Amsterdam

Length:
Width:
Height:
Engines:
Max speed:
Fuel reserve:
166.33m
22m
34.65m
2 x diesel V16
22 kts
7,700 tons
(enough to circumnavigate the world twice)

As well as work in counter-drugs operations, the Amsterdam will perform coast guard duties and be on standby for hurricane relief operations.

Commander Nijenhuis said, “We are getting a grip on the problem with drug trafficking and working very hard to make sure we maintain this grip, while also carrying out our other duties at sea.”

Commissioned in 1995 and with a crew of 150, the ship is designed to simultaneously transfer fuel and supplies, such as food, ammunition, personnel and spare parts.

The Amsterdam will return to Holland on Dec. 16, after completing its six-month tour of duty.

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!

Pre-Columbian Jade in C.R.: Mesoamerican Ties

By Rod Hughes
editorial@ticotimes.net

My last column focused on ancient house and tomb forms, agriculture and the first chiefdoms in the several centuries before and after Christ, and how they seem to have been influenced by Mesoamerica, the lower half of Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador and the western tip of Honduras (TT, March 27). This time, let's focus on what else was going on in that time period in Costa Rica, and why that early northern influence gave a Mesoamerican aspect to those peoples who occupied the country some 2000 and more years ago: lapidary work in jade or similar hard, greenish stones.

Jumpin' Jade! this large (33-centimeter) clamshell-shaped pendant is one of the best Olmec jades known, found at a burial ground in Tibás with other early local artifact including.
Photos courtesy of Michael Snarskis

It has long been one of archaeology's enigmas: How could it be that more jade pendants, many of the highest quality, have been found in Costa Rica than in all of Mesoamerica, where the jade-carving tradition began and flourished for the first time, in the Olmec civilization of Mexico's Gulf Coast?

The reverence and esteem for jade artifacts began in Mesoamerica, even before the first Olmec civilization. There, it took the form of pendants, tiny free-form sculptures and even masks and small vessels before 1200 B.C. The importance and sacredness of jade artifacts cannot be overestimated – it was by far the most prestigious material controlled by the high-ranking social strata, with strong religious overtones.

The classic avian axe-god jade pendantt.
Photos courtesy of Michael Snarskis

Among Mesoamerican cultures, especially the Maya, jade symbolized water, fertility and young green maize plants; it was seen as the holy symbol of salvation in the real world, and only the highest-ranking personages owned and displayed the best jade pendants.

This same conception of jade was held in Costa Rica, perhaps even more strongly, in the centuries around the time of Christ. Whereas Maya jades often portrayed ceremonial or mythic scenes, carved in low relief, Costa Rican jades, like Olmec examples, stressed iconic images of different birds or human shamans, most often situated above a symbolic polished axe, the tool of primary clearing of agricultural plots, to fell trees and split logs used as a wedge. The continuity between Mesoamerican and Costa Rica jade symbolism is notable; agriculture and the control of its products was the basic underlying motif.

Most pre-Columbian jade carving in Costa Rica took place in the country's northwest quadrant – Guanacaste-Nicoya – and also the central and northeast Caribbean watershed. The central highlands were also included, but to a somewhat lesser degree. It is interesting to note that the northwest Costa Rican jades, between about 400 to 500 B.C. and A.D. 400, were primarily rather stiff and imposing axe-gods, mostly avian and human motifs. Some of the human effigies even seem to show curlicues that, in Mesoamerica, were always interpreted as speech scrolls – that is, the shaman or chief was depicted making a pronouncement. Further, the imported Olmec and Maya jades found in Costa Rica (mostly by looters, unfortunately) have tended to be found in that part of the country.

In the Caribbean watershed, jade carving styles and symbolism were different, frequently emphasizing openwork complex carvings with double or triple aspect symbolism. But they also produced the typical axe-god form, in many different stones.

What is Social Jade?

An owl-head ceremonial mace head from the Guanacaste province.
Photos courtesy of Michael Snarskis

For several decades now, archaeologists have realized that much of the lapidary corpus known from Costa Rica around the time of Christ is not actual jade (mineralogically, only jadeite and nephrite are true jade). In fact, the only fairly close, scientifically confirmed source of all colors of true jadeite is, so far, the Motagua River valley of Guatemala.

Other similar hard green stones were used with great frequency in Costa Rica – serpentine, chalcedony, opal, quartzite and others, even including black slate, which in the tombs oxidizes to a light green and is much softer than jade. The greenstone symbolism was key. Even though lesser stones constitute much of the Costa Rican lapidary complex, the best-carved, largest and most sophisticated examples have been shown by mineralogical analysis to be true jadeite, implying a thriving trade in crude jade or axe-shaped blanks from Mesoamerica to Costa Rica.

A still-to-be-solved enigma is the geological presence in Costa Rica's far northwest corner – the Santa Elena Peninsula – of a suite of naturally occurring minerals that, in other parts of the world, are associated with true jadeite. At present, I am one of those archaeologists who believes (like many before me) that there was a source of jadeite in that part of Costa Rica, today either exhausted or beneath sea level. The sheer quantity of superior-quality Costa Rican jades makes this hypothesis worthy of continued investigation.

Dr. Snarskis guides tours to Guayabo, an ancient city and ceremonial center near Turrialba, and to all local museums. Queries may be directed to snarskis@racsa.co.cr or phone/fax 2235-8824. See his Web sites at www.archaeocostarica.com and www.arqueocostarica.net. Reserve tours at Costa Rica Outdoors Travel Division, www.info.costaricaoutdoors.com or call toll-free from North America at 1-800-8308-3394.

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