Costa Rica News, Daily News in Costa Rica by the Tico Times
September 30, 2009
   
LOGIN | SUBSCRIBE | GUIDEBOOKS | ARCHIVE SEARCH | CONTACT US |
| Home
| Top Story
| Business & Real Estate
Costa Rica Activities, Things to Do - Weekend Travel, Culture, Fishing | Weekend Section >
| The Nica Times
| Daily News
| Letters to the Editor
| Photo>
| Classified Ads >
| Exchange Rates
Central Bank
Reference Rate
BUY ₡ 581.87
SELL ₡ 591.57

More funds for the fight: Costa Rican police officers guard a shipment of cocaine seized in the central Pacific town of Quepos. This country is receiving an extra $1 million from the United States to stem drug trafficking.

Photo courtesy of Public Security Ministry

| Previous Daily News

Drying up: The Calle Lencha water tank serves residents in Santo Domingo de Heredia, north of San José. Heredia has begun rationing water, following a warning by water authorities of impending shortages in the Central Valley.

Ronald Reyes | Tico Times

U.S. increases security aid to Costa Rica
Costa Rica will receive an additional $1 million to improve its police force and prevent money laundering under the United States' Merida Initiative.
Pro-Zelaya resistance movement
protests rights crackdown in Honduras
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras – Fewer than 100 protestors organized outside the Globo radio station Tuesday morning to protest the government's closure of the pro-Manuel Zelaya outlet Monday following an executive order limiting rights of free speech around the country.
Heredia rations water to avoid shortage
The Public Service Company of Heredia (ESPH) has begun rationing water to its customers, less than a week after the national water authorities warned of water shortages in the Central Valley's future.
Fidelity Title International arrives in Costa Rica
Fidelity Title International, one of the world's largest providers of commercial and residential title insurance, has announced it will open offices in Costa Rica. The international chain, which is headquartered in Jacksonville, Florida, will provide risk mitigation for property acquisition within the country.
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).

U.S. increases security aid to Costa Rica
By Chrissie Long
Tico Times Staff | clong@ticotimes.net

Costa Rica will receive an additional $1 million to improve its police force and prevent money laundering under the United States' Merida Initiative.

The allocation is in addition to the $4.3 million Costa Rica received earlier this year, and a small fraction of the $465 million handed to the region and Mexico as part of the overall plan.

“The United States understands Costa Rica,” said Janina del Vecchio, security minister, praising the additional allocation. “They understand that (preventing drug-trafficking) isn't just a fight on the seas, it's also a fight in the streets … and that this is a joint task.”

In the first phase of the initiative in 2008, the U.S. Congress approved a $465 million allocation to the region with the hope of stemming drug trafficking, trans-national crime and money laundering. But the division of the funds – $400 million going to Mexico and $65 million to Central America – drew sharp criticism from some government officials in Costa Rica, who said the lopsided allocation was leaving Central America vulnerable to drug cartels, especially in their country, which lacks an army.

Asked whether the additional $1 million was sufficient, Foreign Minister Bruno Stagno shook his head.

“In … fighting drug trafficking, no amount is sufficient,” Stagno said. “Drug cartels have many financial and human resources.”

“But,” he added, “it certainly helps…. We hope there is money for a higher allocation in the future.”

According to U.S. officials, Costa Rica should receive an additional $8.3 million next year (including humanitarian aid), which would increase security spending to at least $12 million, while Merida aid to Mexico is expected to decrease by $20 million.

“We know this is a concern of many citizens, and it's also a concern for us,” said Peter Brennan, chargé d'affaires at the U.S. Embassy. “Costa Rica is a country that needs more help in security,” he said. “The idea is to attack this in an integral way.”

The announcement comes on the heels of a study by polling company Unimer, which revealed Costa Ricans' No. 1 concern is security, with 25 percent of the population saying, “insecurity is the issue that most worries (them),” according to the daily La Nación, which commissioned the study.

Four years ago, only 2 percent of the population indicated security was their top concern.

See related story Fear of More Drugs in C.R.

Pro-Zelaya resistance movement
protests rights crackdown in Honduras

By Mike Faulk
Nica Times Staff

TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras – Fewer than 100 protestors organized outside the Globo radio station Tuesday morning to protest the government's closure of the pro-Manuel Zelaya outlet Monday following an executive order limiting rights of free speech around the country.

José Luis Calix, a volunteer for the resistance movement, said the decision by de facto President Roberto Micheletti to close the station was a human rights violation.

"We no longer have the right to stay informed," Calix said.

Andrés Sierra, a fellow protestor, said the de facto government is only interested in silencing dissent instead of promoting dialogue that would end the conflict.

"The resistance media have been shut down, and the media that attack us have been allowed to continue," Sierra said.

Micheletti spokesman César Cáceres insisted outside the de facto president's house Tuesday that the decision to temporarily close Globo was not political, but aimed at preventing more violence from breaking out.

Globo's broadcasts were shut down following an on-air interview with Zelaya Monday in which he called for sympathizers around the country to descend on Tegucigalpa for "one final struggle." 

“Of all the protests leading up to this decree, not one of them was peaceful,” Cáceres said. “(The Resistance Front) tried to create a sense of terror among the population.”

The Honduran Congress has called on Micheletti to lift his executive order, a demand the de facto leader seems to be considering. According to Honduran daily La Tribuna, Micheletti promised to discuss the matter with the Supreme Court, the Supreme Elections Tribunal and presidential candidates in order to reach a decision on the decree.

Heredia rations water to avoid shortage
By Mike McDonald
Tico Times Staff | mmcdonald@ticotimes.net

The Public Service Company of Heredia (ESPH) has begun rationing water to its customers, less than a week after the national water authorities warned of water shortages in the Central Valley's future.

The rationing comes after the company noticed a 35 percent decrease in the flow of water from its aquifers. ESPH officials do not believe that the drop is due to the presence of El Niño, which has forced dry weather across the country this year, and said they are investigating the problem and hope to find a solution by Oct. 3.

Until workers determine the cause, however, residents of San Rafael, San Isidro and surrounding areas will have water shut-offs from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m.

During the next two months, meteorologists forecast that the Central Valley will receive 25 percent less rainfall than average.

Last week, officials from Costa Rican Water and Sewer Institute (AyA) said citizens must decrease the amount of water they consume everyday by 20 percent - 40 liters per person per day - for the next three months if country is to avoid water shortages and rations next summer (TT Daily News, Sept. 24).

Fidelity Title International arrives in Costa Rica
By Adam Williams
Tico Times Staff | awilliams@ticotimes.net

Fidelity Title International, one of the world's largest providers of commercial and residential title insurance, has announced it will open offices in Costa Rica. The international chain, which is headquartered in Jacksonville, Florida, will provide risk mitigation for property acquisition within the country.

Fidelity will be the third company in Costa Rica that aims to monitor real estate risk. Stewart International and First American Corporation are the other two companies that currently provide the service.

“Many of our clients are retirees and expats that come from the U.S.,” said Rodolfo Rivera, the vice president and manager of Latin American Fidelity operations. “When foreign clients, such as U.S. expats, invest outside of their country, their confidence is improved when they are dealing directly with the agency they are working with. Now, instead of dealing with other agencies to work with us, they will work with us directly.”

In 2007, Fidelity was the title industry's most profitable insurance company, pulling in more than $130 million and controlling more than 46 percent of the overall title market share. Fidelity Title International was listed as the 264th top company in the Fortune 500 rankings.

Rivera, who will formally announce the entry of Fidelity into the Costa Rican marketplace at a Wednesday morning press conference, summarized his company's objectives in providing title insurance.  

“We are part of a risk mitigation factor transaction,” Rivera explained. “Very few people can buy land without financing. … We are a tool in the transaction to eliminate the risk (in buying) real estate and we attempt to ensure that the landowner is protected.” 

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

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.

Tico Times, Costa Rica, travel guide, guidebook, beaches, rainforests, hotels, activities, restaurants
a
RETURN TO THE TOP OF PAGE

HOME | SUBSCRIBE | ADVERTISE | GUIDEBOOKS | BACK ISSUES | ARCHIVE SEARCH | CONTACT US | ABOUT US | NEWSSTANDS | LINKS | POLICIES