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| Watching Your Back: Tourist Police Marjorie Jiménez, left, and Alexander Gil patrol downtown San José. Crimes against tourists have dropped since their small, but growing police force took to the beat. |
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Ronald Reyes | Tico Times.
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| Note to Daily News readers: The Tico Times office will be closed for the holidays from Dec. 21 through Jan. 1, and there will be no Daily News page published during this time. Please look for the next Daily News page on Wednesday, Jan. 2. Happy Holidays! |
| Crime Against Visitors Falls
With 1-Year-Old Tourist Police |
Costa Rica's nascent Tourist Police force this week marked its first year on the beat with a second graduating class – and the release of figures showing a decrease in crimes against foreign visitors.
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| Debt Down 8 Percentage Points in Two Years |
The debt has fallen eight percentage points of gross domestic product (GDP) in the past two years, Costa Rica's Finance Ministry reported. Next year will see renewed efforts to renegotiate part of the debt in order to lower interest rates and push back payment deadlines. |
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| Nicaragua A ‘High Carbon-Emitter,'
Says Humboldt Center |
Just as Costa Rica's leaders boast of world reputed green policies and ambitious goals toward “carbon neutrality,” its neighbor Nicaragua's carbon footprint grows ever deeper. |
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| December 21 |
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Concert by Robert Aguilar and the Neotics
Neo-Soul, Dec. 21, 10 p.m., Jazz Café.
Live Rock
Bob Benjamin Zuñiga, Father Rooster, Playa Ocotal, 6 p.m.
Editus in Concert
Instrumental, Dec. 21, 6 p.m., Paseo de las Flores Mall, Heredia.
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| December 22 |
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Trova Concert
By Manuel Monestel, Cantoamerica, María Pretiz, Esteban Monge, Guadalupe Urbina, Dec. 22-23, 9:30 p.m., Jazz Café.
Clarinete and Cello Recital
By Luis Víquez and Cristian Guandique, Dec. 22, 4 p.m., José Figueres Cultural Center.
Tamale-rama
From 7 a.m., El Lagar stores celebrate “ La Tamaleada Navideña, ” with a tamale give-away, in Desamparados, El Cruce, San Francisco, Moravia, Santa Ana, Heredia Centro, San Isidro de Heredia, Belén, Barranca, Orotina and Jacó. |
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| December 23 |
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3rd Clean Ocean Big Water Paddle Board Race
Dec. 23, 2 p.m., Playa Cocles, Limón.
Live Salsa
By Gregory Cabrera, Dec. 23, 8 p.m., La Guácima Fair, Alajuela.
Natividad Campesina Play
Dec. 23, 6:15 p.m., Parque de Diversiones, in front of the Church, Pueblo Antigüo, La Uruca. |
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Edited By Amanda Roberson
Tico Times Staff | aroberson@ticotimes.net |

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Crime Against Visitors Falls
With 1-Year-Old Tourist Police |
Costa Rica's nascent Tourist Police force this week marked its first year on the beat with a second graduating class – and the release of figures showing a decrease in crimes against foreign visitors.
Tourists in Costa Rica have long been seen as easy prey for thieves. But despite the record total of foreign visitors—more than 1.9 billion last year—reported incidents of crime are going down, said the Public Security Ministry.
The most notable decline was seen in the provinces of San José, Guanacaste and Limón.
“(Reports) also declined in Alajuela, Heredia and Puntarenas,” said Tourist Police Chief Kattia Chavarría in a statement.
Those areas make up the bulk of the beat patrolled by the 225-strong force.
Total reports by tourists of crimes, such as muggings and home and vehicle break-ins, went down from 5,450 in 2006 to 4,038.
In Cartago, however, such reports increased 6%, Chavarría added.
But the reports decreased by 36% in San José province, almost 34% in Guanacaste, over 33% in Limón, 22% in Alajuela, 13% in Heredia and 2.5% in Puntarenas, she said.
These figures “tell us that thanks to the measures taken by the Tourist Police deployed throughout the country, especially in areas with a higher concentration of foreigners, have been effective…which has brought calm to visitors,” said the police chief.
Earlier in the week, the Tico Times asked for tourist crime stats from the Tourist Police and the National Security Ministry but the newspaper was told no such figures existed because police reports do not distinguish whether the foreign victim was a visitor or a resident.
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-Tico Times
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| Debt Down 8 Percentage Points in Two Years |
The debt has fallen eight percentage points of gross domestic product (GDP) in the past two years, Costa Rica's Finance Ministry reported. Next year will see renewed efforts to renegotiate part of the debt in order to lower interest rates and push back payment deadlines.
Finance Minister Guillermo Zúñiga said that in 2006 Costa Rica's debt dipped down 3.5 percentage points and in 2007, another 4.5 points, putting the debt equal to 46% of GDP.
Costa Rica's GDP is close to $21 billion.
“There are a couple of positive factors at work like the national reserves, stable interest rates in Europe and a downward trend in the United States, and now we could take advantage of the situation to make our expensive debt cheaper,” Zúñiga told the news agency ACAN-EFE.
Meanwhile, November ended with a fiscal surplus of almost $59 million thanks to a 27.4% rise in income, the Finance Ministry told The Associated Press, adding that next year's results would be even better.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) recently forecast Costa Rica's economy to grow 5% next year. “That's not bad,” Zúñigo told the AP, describing the IMF's prediction, “but I'm more optimistic.” |
-Tico Times
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Nicaragua A ‘High Carbon-Emitter,'
Says Humboldt Center |
Just as Costa Rica's leaders boast of world reputed green policies and ambitious goals toward “carbon neutrality,” its neighbor Nicaragua's carbon footprint grows ever deeper.
Nicaragua emits six times more greenhouse gas than last year because of the destruction of forests left by Hurricane Felix, say environmental experts.
Amado Ordóñez, associate director of the Humboldt Center in Nicaragua, said that because of its poor handling of its forests Nicaragua “has become a high carbon-emitting country.”
In September Felix leveled more than 700,000 hectares of forest in Nicaragua, Ordóñez noted at a press conference Tuesday in Managua.
He lamented that the government had not begun a major reforestation process and seemed to have no strategy to rebuild the forests in the future, necessary to reduce its carbon dioxide emissions.
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