Costa Rica News, Daily News in Costa Rica by the Tico Times
May 7, 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 ¢491.40 SELL ¢497.52
| Previous Daily News
| Monday | Tuesday
| Wednesday | Thursday
| Friday
Hui, Laura and Bruno: China's vice premier, Hui Liangyu, left, stands with Costa Rican Vice President Laura Chinchilla and Foreign Minister Bruno Stagno yesterday outside the Foreign Ministry. Liangyu, the highest-level Chinese official to visit Costa Rica, is also due to meet President Oscar Arias and other officials in a three-day visit to build on the China-Costa Rica relationship that began almost a year ago.
Ronald Reyes | Tico Times
Nicaragua summit tackles food problem
MANAGUA, Nicaragua – The presidents of Central America and the leaders of the governments belonging to the socialist cooperation bloc known as ALBA will meet today in Managua for a regional summit on food security to study ways to increase agricultural production and ensure basic food supplies for each country.
Houston group poised to land San José airport deal
The company Alterra Partners is set to sell its shares in the San José airport project to Houston Airport System (HAS) after failing to complete its revamp.
Wanted by U.S. justice, Panama's
house speaker opts out of re-election
A top Panama lawmaker wanted in the United States in the killing of a U.S. soldier said he will not seek re-election as president of his nation's congress, The Associated Press reported.
Edited By Alex Leff
Tico Times Staff | aleff@ticotimes.net
Costa Rica Daily News updates by the Tico Times Newspaper
May 7

Jazz fusion
Naguall trio Jazz Café, San Pedro, 10 p.m., http://jazzcafecostarica.com.

Plants Exhibit
Orchids and more, organized by Club de Jardines (Gardens Club), open through tomorrow, 9 a.m.-6 p.m., at the Conference Center of Ramada Plaza Herradura Hotel, Ciudad Cariari.

Tamarindo Association meeting
At Restaurante La Baula, 4 p.m.

Theater conference
Talks, workshops, today through Sunday, Edificio Cooperativo, behind San Pedro Mall , redartesescenicas@gmail.com, 2281-3170.

Nicaragua summit tackles food problem
By Tim Rogers
Nica Times Staff | trogers@ticotimes.net

MANAGUA, Nicaragua – The presidents of Central America and the leaders of the governments belonging to the socialist cooperation bloc known as ALBA will meet today in Managua for a regional summit on food security to study ways to increase agricultural production and ensure basic food supplies for each country.

Under the banner “Food for Life,” the presidents are expected to articulate new strategies to confront the global food crisis, which has hit the impoverished countries of Central America particularly hard (see story at www.nicatimes.net).

Nicaraguan Agriculture Minister Ariel Bucardo said the participating countries of Central America plus Cuba, Bolivia, Venezuela and possibly several other Caribbean nations will seek to firm up an agreement to invest $600 million in the upcoming planting season, which will start with the first rains later this month. In the long term, the bloc of countries will look to invest much more money in modernizing agricultural productivity with tractors, irrigation and new farming technology, the minister said.

Bucardo described the food security arrangement as a partnership between countries, and also between the public and private sectors.

The minister said the problem with food security in Nicaragua is not a lack of food so much as the rising cost of food. To combat the problem at home and in the region, he said, Nicaragua is aiming to increase its production of rice, beans, sorghum and corn to first satisfy local demand and then export to neighboring countries that have moved increasingly away from basic agriculture in past years.

Bucardo told The Nica Times that $150 million will be invested in the upcoming planting season in Nicaragua to help 160,000 small and medium-sized producers with seed and fertilizer, with money provided by Venezuela and the national financial system. He repeated President Daniel Ortega's claim that Nicaragua has the best agricultural conditions in the region.

Bucardo said that out of today's summit will come a special multi-national team to articulate regional production goals and policies.

Costa Rican President Oscar Arias is expected to attend along with other top government officials. Although the Arias administration has assured its residents there will be enough rice to last through the year, the daily La Nación reported yesterday that domestic harvests of another ubiquitous staple, beans, were slashed by 17 percent in some areas by dry weather.

Though all the countries seem to agree that the region needs to work together to address food security issues, political ideology is certain to play a major role in today's summit. The food crisis has already been politicized by the ALBA nations, which have blamed the situation on the “tyranny of global capitalism,” and analysts say the ALBA alliance is attempting to use the issue to gain new inroads into Central America.

ALBA forerunner Hugo Chávez, the Venezuelan president, canceled late yesterday for health reasons, according to his government, which said it would send the foreign minister to Managua instead.

The Cuban delegation was also due to arrive yesterday afternoon at 5 p.m. and attend an ALBA rally later in the evening in Managua's Plaza of the Revolution, on the eve of today's summit.

It remains to be seen how ALBA members' revolutionary politics will sit with the more moderate and conservative presidents who will join the group today.

Houston group poised to land San José airport deal

The company Alterra Partners is set to sell its shares in the San José airport project to Houston Airport System (HAS) after failing to complete its revamp.

“This is the best choice for the company and for the future of the project to modernize the airport,” Alterra's finance director, Alfredo Aguileta, told reporters yesterday.

HAS, according to its Web site, is the fourth-largest airport system in the United States and sixth in the world. Before the Houston giant can land on Tico shores, Costa Rica's aviation authority and comptroller general first must give it the go-ahead.

The revamp for San José's Juan Santamaría International Airport is a $160-million project, of which $40 million is provided by Alterra, according to newswire ACAN-EFE. The remaining funds come from the International Finance Corporation, a member of the World Bank Group.

Alterra, a wholly owned subsidiary of Bechtel Corp., won the contract in 2001 but its administration has repeatedly run into financial turbulence.

This past February the Costa Rican government said it would give Alterra 60 days to shape up or lose the contract to administer Juan Santamaría.

-Tico Times and EFE
Wanted by U.S. justice, Panama's
house speaker opts out of re-election

A top Panama lawmaker wanted in the United States in the killing of a U.S. soldier said he will not seek re-election as president of his nation's congress, The Associated Press reported.

Pedro Miguel González sent a letter to Panama's president, Martín Torrijos, saying his decision not to seek re-election is intended to limit his role in internal elections for the ruling Democratic Revolutionary Party slated for August.

González is wanted in the June 1992 killing of U.S. Army Sgt. Zak Hernández and the attempted killing of Sgt. Ronald Marshall outside Panama City, incidents that coincided with a visit by former President George H.W. Bush two years after the United States toppled dictator Manuel Noriega.

The congressional leader denies any involvement in the incident and was acquitted in a trial in Panama 10 years ago, according to AP.

Meeting yesterday with Torrijos in Washington, President George W. Bush said a free-trade agreement with Panama “is a priority of this government,” adding that he will urge U.S. Congress to vote in favor of the agreement, Agence France-Presse reported.

The Bush administration had previously warned Panama that González's election to the post last year could impede the pending trade deal.

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

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