Costa Rica News, Daily News in Costa Rica by the Tico Times
February 4, 2008
   
LOGIN | SUBSCRIBE | GUIDEBOOKS | ARCHIVE SEARCH | CONTACT US |
| Home
| Top Story
| Business & Real Estate
| Arts, Travel & Fishing >
| The Nica Times
| Daily News
| Letters to the Editor
| Photo Galleries >
| Classified Ads >
| Exchange Rates
Central Bank
Reference Rate

BUY ¢493.72 SELL ¢499.44
| Previous Daily News
| Monday | Tuesday
| Wednesday | Thursday
| Friday
Weighing in on FARC: These covered corpses were soldiers of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), including one named “Jimmy” or “Karateka,” believed to be the commander of the squad found dead in the Colombian town of Abejorral, 120 kilometers east of Medillín. Protestors in Costa Rica – and more than 100 other cities worldwide – will voice their frustration this morning, calling for a stop to the violence and hostage situation in Colombia, in a march starting at 10:30 a.m. at San José's Parque de las Garantías Sociales.
Edgar Domínguez | EFE
Costa Rica joins in worldwide call for FARC's farewell to arms
Colombians are set to march today in San José as part of a worldwide protest, “One Million Voices Against the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC),” which is meant to call for the leftist rebel army to lay down its weapons and release its hostages.
High-reaching land scandal unfolds in Nicaragua
The vice president of Nicaragua's Supreme Court, Rafael Solís, renounced his immunity to allow an investigation into allegations of his involvement in a wide-reaching land fraud scandal.
Over 100 Nicaraguans found crammed into two dwellings
After conducting saturation law-enforcement sweeps in Guanacaste province this weekend, authorities announced they discovered 120 undocumented Nicaraguan laborers crammed into two covachas, or wretched huts.
Costa Rica Daily News updates by the Tico Times Newspaper
February 4

Tico roots
The group Jirondai play the music of Costa Rica 's indigenous peoples at the Mundo Loco series at Jazz Café, San Pedro, 10 p.m., www.jazzcafecostarica.com. 

Little Theatre Group Open House
A preview of farce “Hysteria” and auditions for “Twelve Angry Men” (May 16-June 1), 7-9 p.m., Laurence Olivier Theater, Shakespeare Bar, Avenida 2, Calle 28.

Educational Trips
With the Organization for Tropical Studies, Chirripó, today through Thursday; Caribbean Birds, Saturday and Sunday; Chira Island, Saturday, 524-0607, www.ots.ac.cr.

Edited By Alex Leff
Tico Times Staff | aleff@ticotimes.net

Costa Rica joins in worldwide
call for FARC's farewell to arms

Colombians are set to march today in San José as part of a worldwide protest, “One Million Voices Against the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC),” which is meant to call for the leftist rebel army to lay down its weapons and release its hostages.

The aim is to “demonstrate our repudiation of the hostage-taking and the pain caused by the FARC, and to call attention of good people around the world to its indifference,” María Fernanda Gualdrón, the protest's Costa Rica-based organizer, told Spanish language newswire ACAN-EFE.

Gualdrón said she expects 1,000 people – Colombians and other sympathizers of diverse backgrounds – to turn out. They will gather at 10:30 a.m. in San José's Parque de las Garantías Sociales and begin marching a half-hour later, according to a Colombian Foreign Ministry bulletin.

Similar shows of defiance to the FARC are planned for today in more than 100 cities around the world, according to Gualdrón. “We want everybody to hear the voice of everyday Colombians, the citizens who don't want war, the people who want an end to the violence,” she told ACAN-EFE.

In Costa Rica, protestors will sing the Colombian National Anthem and say a collective prayer for the hostages and for peace, Gualdrón said.

The global march started to spread partly as a “Web-roots” movement on Facebook, an online social-networking site, The Christian Science Monitor reported. The online group now has 230,000 members, the report said, and its founder, Oscar Morales, said the number of cities slated for marches will total 185.

Meanwhile, ahead of the protest, the leftist rebel army said it will free three ailing politicians – Gloria Polanco, Luis Eladio Pérez and Orlando Beltrán – it has held for more than six years, The Associated Press reports. Although the statement by FARC gave no date for the handover, the rebel army's latest push for a high-profile prisoner swap, the Colombian government welcomed the rebel force's gesture.

Today's march is set to raise public awareness of the more than 40 hostages, including three U.S. citizens and Franco-Colombian politician Ingrid Betancourt, whom the FARC seeks to exchange for hundreds of rebels held in Colombian prisons.

“It's time to stop the pain of Colombian families,” Gualdrón said. “Although the FARC (fighters) aren't the only ones who've had the country stuck in a violent cycle for more than 40 years, they are the most representative of the reality that we do not want.”

Some family members of the hostages, however, are skeptical of the possibility of a positive result from the protests.

"Who will benefit from this march?" Betancourt's mother, Yolanda Pulecio, told the Colombian magazine Semana. "Maybe neither the hostages nor the humanitarian exchange or peace will benefit."

-Tico Times

High-reaching land scandal unfolds in Nicaragua
By Blake Schmidt
Nica Times Staff | bschmidt@ticotimes.net

The vice president of Nicaragua's Supreme Court, Rafael Solís, renounced his immunity to allow an investigation into allegations of his involvement in a wide-reaching land fraud scandal.

The Attorney General's Office is investigating accusations from a former state attorney who has publicly accused Solís and other high-up public officials of land trafficking on Nicaragua's Central Pacific coast.

“Solis has put his immunity on hold so they can investigate him for land trafficking. It now depends on the Attorney General's Office,” said Supreme Court spokesman Mamely Ferreti. Ferreti told The Nica Times that Solís denies the allegations.

Former notary public Morena Avilés Serrano is alleging that Solís is involved in illegal land transfers, involving false signatures and stamps, of property that was handed over from the state to a group of ex-contra guerillas in the 1990s. Her allegations, made at the Nicaraguan Human Rights Center, also implicate a legislator, a Managua appeals judge and other officials at the Attorney General's Office, who all deny the allegations. Avilés told the daily La Prensa that she has received threatening phone calls since she went public with the allegations.

Over 100 Nicaraguans found
crammed into two dwellings

After conducting saturation law-enforcement sweeps in Guanacaste province this weekend, authorities announced they discovered 120 undocumented Nicaraguan laborers crammed into two covachas, or wretched huts.

A press release states the covachas are in Filadelfia and Belén de Carrillo. Most of the Nicaraguans, all of whom were undocumented, said they worked for the Chilean construction company, Melón. They also claimed their employer was keeping their identification papers.

Seventy-seven of the 120 Nicaraguans are still in immigration police custody and are likely to be deported, the release states.

As a result of the sweeps, Public Security Minister Fernando Berrocal said he plans this week to make a formal complaint to the Labor and Health ministries because of the Nicaraguans' deplorable living conditions.

The Public Security Ministry transferred 115 officers to Guanacaste over the weekend to conduct the beefed-up operations.

The sweeps also resulted in seven drug arrests, for crack and marijuana, and the seizure of 17 cars, which allegedly belonged to black-market taxi drivers.

-Tico Times

Costa Rica dentist, health, teeth whitening, crowns, dental implants, bleaching, crowns, permanent make-up
Tico Times, Costa Rica, travel guide, guidebook, beaches, rainforests, hotels, activities, restaurants
Costa Rica gated community, Costa Rican real estate, Santa Ana, living in Costa Rica, moving to Costa Rica
 
RETURN TO THE TOP OF PAGE

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