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Central Bank Reference Rate
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BUY ₡ 576.66 SELL ₡ 586.44
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Goodbye, chief: Karla González stepped down Monday from her post as minister of public works and transport after the collapse of a bridge last week killed five people. |
Chelcey Adami | Tico Times |
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Surfing C.A.: Costa Rica's Carlos Muñoz gets air in El Salvador in a performance this weekend that won for him his first international title in the Junior category. Costa Rica won the Central American Surf Championship this year for the fourth time. |
Photo courtesy of Fabian Sánchez |
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| Transport chief resigns after bridge collapse |
| Four days after a bridge gave way killing five people, the head of Costa Rica's Public Works and Transport Ministry (MOPT) submitted her resignation Monday. |
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| Costa Rica slides into dry season after a weak wet one |
Without much more than a kiss hello, the rainy season is on its way out. |
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| Two journalists retell colleague’s murder |
Eight years after Costa Rican radio journalist Parmenio Medina was gunned down outside his Heredia home and by two men in a passing Nissan, his story will be told in a book appearing on shelves this week. |
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| Costa Rica carves fourth Central American surf title |
Costa Rica showed the region once more it rules the waves, celebrating a fourth consecutive Central American Surf Championship title after winning all five categories this past weekend at Playa El Sunzal in La Libertad, El Salvador. |
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‘Gestación’ a Triumph,
Chepe-Style |
It's not every day – or every year – that a Costa Rican film comes to a multiplex near you. Many will probably go to “Gestación,” set in San José and directed by Esteban Ramírez, just to see their city onscreen; my own opinion of the movie was certainly swayed by the excitement of watching scenes played out in Chepe, at the Parque Nacional or the Mall San Pedro. |
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| Transport chief resigns after bridge collapse |
By Chrissie Long
Tico Times Staff | clong@ticotimes.net |
Four days after a bridge gave way killing five people, the head of Costa Rica's Public Works and Transport Ministry (MOPT) submitted her resignation Monday.
In a three-page speech, Karla González said, “I am moved by a deep sadness and sense of compassion for the families and communities who had to be apart from their loved ones this weekend. I cannot say anything more to soothe them in their feelings of pain.
“Moreover, I sympathize with their feelings of anger against the state and against the Public Works and Transport Ministry that failed them…. It's in respect to this feeling that I present my resignation as a representative of the ministry, the state and a system that failed them.”
Her resignation came as a shock to President Oscar Arias who backed González against calls for her to step down.
“For many years, MOPT never had the resources to improve our infrastructure,” Arias said. “But this government has quintupled (spending). We have done in three and a half years what was not done in 30. Without a doubt, we have to accept that resources are not sufficient to attend to all our needs in roads, bridges and airports.”
But documents circulated over the weekend that proved MOPT did have the money allocated to replace the bridge over Río Tárcoles, but never acted on it.
“The expropriations are not an excuse. Everything, absolutely everything was ready for bidding and financing the work,” said Marvin Rojas, a legislator with the Citizen Action Party, in a statement.
The accident happened at 6:25 a.m. Thursday, when one of the cables of a wooden suspension bridge snapped under the weight of a full school bus. The bus, which was traveling from Turrubares to Orotina, fell six meters into the water.
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Costa Rica slides into dry
season after a weak wet one |
By Mike McDonald
Tico Times Staff | mmcdonald@ticotimes.net |
Without much more than a kiss hello, the rainy season is on its way out.
The transition to the dry season has begun on schedule this week, despite previous predictions of an early end to Costa Rica's unusually dry rainy season, according to the National Meteorology Institute (IMN). Meteorologists project that the duration of the changeover period will be “normal” in the Central Valley and on the Pacific side.
The dry season will begin between Nov. 7-11 in the northern Pacific, between Nov. 12-16 in the Central Valley, between Dec. 12-16 in the central Pacific and between Jan. 1-5 in the Southern Pacific.
On the Caribbean coast, the IMN forecasts 10 to 20 percent more rain than normal for the months of November and December.
October data has yet to be calculated, but earlier predictions indicated a drier-than-average October in the Central Valley and the Pacific – up to 40 percent less rain in some regions – due to the presence of El Niño in the Caribbean Ocean. Meteorologists believe that these predictions will prove to be accurate. |
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| Two journalists retell colleague’s murder |
By Chrissie Long
Tico Times Staff | clong@ticotimes.net
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Eight years after Costa Rican radio journalist Parmenio Medina was gunned down outside his Heredia home and by two men in a passing Nissan, his story will be told in a book appearing on shelves this week.
Two reporters, who followed Medina's three-year-long court proceeding, will be presenting the book “La hora del Compadre. El asesinato de Parmenio Medina” (The Hour of the Compadre: The Murder of Parmenio Medina ) – a fictional story based on Medina's murder – Tuesday night in the eastern San José neighborhood of Curridabat.
Medina was a 62-year-old investigative reporter and popular satirist for the radio program La Patada, who uncovered a series of financial irregularities at the once-popular religious radio station, Radio María.
Through his research, he learned the station's host, Father Minor Calvo, was involved in a $3 million scam whereby he convinced listeners to make donations to worthy causes, when in fact the money allegedly was lining his pockets and those of his business partner, Omar Chaves. They spent listeners' money on lavish cruises, housekeepers, fine clothes and dining, as well as favors for family and friends.
Calvo was convicted in December 2007 for aggravated fraud, but later acquitted of murder charges in the Medina case. He remains on parole for fraud.
Chaves wasn't as lucky. He continues to serve time for fraud and murder.
“The story of Parmenio Medina is one that needs to be recorded,” said one of the authors and former colleague of Medina, José Alberto Gatgens. He co-wrote the book with Otto Vargas, a reporter with the daily La Nación. “This is a loose history of what happened … We don't know what happened, but what we tried to do was picture a reality.”
The authors will be at Librería Universal at the Multiplaza del Este shopping mall in Curridabat 6:30 p.m. Tuesday to sign books and answer questions.
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| Costa Rica carves fourth Central American surf title |
Costa Rica showed the region once more it rules the waves, celebrating a fourth consecutive Central American Surf Championship title after winning all five categories this past weekend at Playa El Sunzal in La Libertad, El Salvador.
The winners are Jason Torres for Open, Carlos Muñoz for Junior's, Nataly Bernold in Women's, Anthony Flores for Longboard and Reymar Ramírez for Bodyboard.
“This is a very special title for me because I fought with everything I have,” said Torres, 21, after receiving the Open trophy, which is his second in the Central American games. “I feel that I'm in a good moment of my career and I hope to be able to keep grabbing more important titles.” Costa Rica's top international competitor added that his eyes are now on the Pan-American Surfing Association games in Brazil set for November.
José Ureña, the national team coach, is as proud as ever of his four-time champions.
“I feel really happy for these guys and girls who behaved like true professionals both in and out of the water,” said Ureña,
The coach added that all the players paid their own way to El Salvador because the team is saving money for the games in Brazil. |
–Tico Times |
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‘Gestación’ a Triumph, Chepe-Style |
It's not every day – or every year – that a Costa Rican film comes to a multiplex near you. Many will probably go to “Gestación,” set in San José and directed by Esteban Ramírez, just to see their city onscreen; my own opinion of the movie was certainly swayed by the excitement of watching scenes played out in Chepe, at the Parque Nacional or the Mall San Pedro. But “Gestación” offers much more than local color. It's a well-written and compelling film that achieves a considerable feat: capturing a certain place and time, while also transcending them.
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Scenes from San José: Adriana Alvarez and Edgar Román star in “Gestación.” |
Photo courtesy of Cinetel |
You might remember Ramírez from “Caribe” (2004), set in and around the southern Caribbean beach town of Puerto Viejo. It was lush and gorgeous, with a heavy-handed approach and a lack of focus. His newest production is a very different, and much better, movie, revealing a lighter hand, appealing characters and deft comedy.
The script – which follows the relationship of teenagers Jessie, from a poor neighborhood in the northern district of Pavas, and Teo, who hails from a richer family across town – was inspired by a case in which a pregnant high-school student spoke out against discrimination she faced at school. It is also one of the most realistic teenage love stories you could hope to find onscreen, complete with food-court rendezvous, emotional text messages, lust, stupidity and tenderness.
The movie showcases young actors who make the future of Costa Rican cinema seem bright indeed. Adriana Alvarez is a standout as Jessie – charismatic, expressive and so natural that the camera seems to have stumbled upon her by accident. Edgar Román, as Teo, is a bit forced at times, but strikes the right balance of immaturity and soulful potential. Natalia Arias steals all her scenes as the irrepressible Alba, giving the movie its belly laughs, and María Silva and Xinia Rojas, as the couple's long-suffering mothers, are steady anchors.
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As in “Caribe,” the photography is what stays with us long after the credits roll. Ramírez captures and elevates the good, bad and ugly of everyday San José: a spray of electrical wires across a cloudy sky; shacks of corrugated tin in uneven, leaning rows; a tiny Saprissista in his purple shirt; the neon pinks and oranges of a smoggy sunset; hanging bouquets of leather sandals in the Central Market; and love, in many forms, in this film that feels like home.
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