Costa Rica News, Daily News in Costa Rica by the Tico Times
Jan 5, 2009
   
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Images in mirror may appear closer: A photo taken at the start of the Christmas holiday by Costa Rican Public Security Ministry photographer Guillermo Solano of the reflection in his car's side mirror of a line of vehicles waiting to cross the border into Nicaragua. After the holidays, immigration authorities are keeping a tight squeeze on the border, turning away hundreds of undocumented immigrants.
Photo courtesy of Public Security Ministry
Costa Rica serves Copa del Café tennis tourney
Darling of U.S. tennis courts, Denis Kudla is set to take a swing at Costa Rica's Copa del Café, which opens today at 6:45 p.m. at the Costa Rica Country Club in the western San José suburb of Escazú.
Costa Rica beefs up border with Nicaragua after holidays
Costa Rican police arrested a man Saturday allegedly trying to bring 40 Nicaraguans into this country illegally to work in sugar cane fields in the northwestern province of Guanacaste, the Public Security Ministry said.
Palestinian envoy hails solidarity with Nicaragua, to Israel's chagrin
MANAGUA – The Palestinian ambassador in Managua, Walid Ibrahim Muaqqat, applauded the Nicaraguan government's criticism of Israel's military attack in the Gaza Strip. The Israeli Ambassador Ehud Moshe Eitam called for more balanced dialogue on the subject.
Edited by Alex Leff
Tico Times Staff | aleff@ticotimes.net
Costa Rica Daily News updates by the Tico Times Newspaper
Jan 5

Adventure Kids
Nature-based day camp, arts and crafts, sports, games, hiking, ages 6-12, today through Friday, Escazú and Ciudad Colón, 2289-0404, www.ausunkids.com.

Roblealto Summer Camp
Ages 4-6, today through Wednesday, Wednesday through Friday; ages 7-12, today through Friday, Jan. 19-23; ages 12-17, Jan. 12-16, Jan. 26-30, 2266-0041, 2266-0048, www.roblealto.com.

Síncopa in concert
Latin jazz fusion, part of the Mundo Loco concert series, 10 p.m., Jazz Café, San Pedro, 2253-8933, www.jazzcafecostarica.com.

Costa Rica serves Copa del Café tennis tourney

Darling of U.S. tennis courts, Denis Kudla is set to take a swing at Costa Rica's Copa del Café, which opens today at 6:45 p.m. at the Costa Rica Country Club in the western San José suburb of Escazú.

Kudla, a 16-year-old from the U.S. town of Arlington, Virginia, comes fresh on the heels of victory at the Dunlop Orange Bowl International Tennis Championships in Miami, becoming the first U.S. citizen to win that trophy since 2003, according to the daily Miami Herald.

At Costa Rica's Copa, one of the most competitive international tournaments for players 18 and under, the top seed faces such competitors as Guatemala's Julen Uriguen, a 17-year-old who is second favorite to win in boys' singles, the tournament's organizational committee president Kenneth Thome told newswire AFP.

On the female roster, 15-year-old Timea Babos of Hungary is favored to win.

-Tico Times
Costa Rica beefs up border
with Nicaragua after holidays

Costa Rican police arrested a man Saturday allegedly trying to bring 40 Nicaraguans into this country illegally to work in sugar cane fields in the northwestern province of Guanacaste, the Public Security Ministry said.

The man, with the last name Briceño, was driving with 66 people in his truck toward the town of Filadelfia, in Guanacaste. After questioning, police found that 40 of the passengers were undocumented workers and arrested them and Briceño who yesterday remained in detention at National Police's Northern Command, according to a ministry press release.

The arrests came during a week when Costa Rican authorities have tightened border controls during an annual post-holiday exodus of migrants out of Nicaragua to Costa Rica. By yesterday, Immigration officers had turned away some 1,300 Nicaraguans, according to newswire EFE.

-Tico Times
Palestinian envoy hails solidarity
with Nicaragua, to Israel's chagrin

MANAGUA – The Palestinian ambassador in Managua, Walid Ibrahim Muaqqat, applauded the Nicaraguan government's criticism of Israel's military attack in the Gaza Strip. The Israeli Ambassador Ehud Moshe Eitam called for more balanced dialogue on the subject.

In a statement last week, the Nicaraguan government pushed for a halt of what it called Israel's “criminal acts” in Gaza.

Speaking Friday to the press at a Managua university, Ambassador Muaqqat thanked President Daniel Ortega and also demanded an end to Israel's raid, which by then had left 430 Palestinians dead, newswire EFE reported.

The attack started after Hamas began launching rockets against southern Israeli towns following an end last month to its six-month truce with Israel.

Yesterday, the ninth day of hostilities, the Palestinian death toll reached about 500, following a push Saturday night by Israel's ground forces into Gaza, the Associated Press reported.

Muaqqat said the incursion was not “a war” with Hamas, but rather “a massacre, an act of genocide.”

Israel's Ambassador Eitam, for his part, said Nicaragua's statements signaled an “unfortunate” bias.

“I've never heard President Ortega ever criticize or call on Hamas … not to attack Israel,” the Israeli diplomat told Nicaraguan daily La Prensa.

“When (Ortega) criticizes just one side, especially when he criticizes Israel, he doesn't have the positive impact … that I believe he wants to have. He should be much more balanced,” Eitam said.

Venezuela's government, a close Nicaraguan ally, also called Israel's acts “criminal,” while other Latin American nations, including members of the Common Market of the South, expressed “concern and repudiation toward the spiral of violence and intimidation taking place in the Gaza Strip,” according to news agency MercoPress.

The U.S. State Department announced yesterday that Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has canceled her planned trip to China “due to the events in the Middle East,” Reuters reported. It was not clear, however, whether Rice would visit the conflicted region.

On Saturday, a U.S. State Department spokesman said the United States was working toward a cease-fire “as soon as possible” but did not call for an immediate end to the hostilities, according to Reuters.

However, efforts toward global common ground around a truce failed in the United Nations, with the United States blocking any resolution that could come out of the late Saturday Security Council meeting.

Deputy U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Alejandro Wolff said the United States believes there is no clear sign that Hamas would halt their rocket attacks against Israel.

“We're not going to equate the actions of Israel, a member state of the United Nations, with the actions of the terrorist group Hamas; there is no equivalence there,” Wolff said, according to U.S. television channel CBS News' Web site.

U.N. General Assembly President Miguel d'Escoto, a Nicaraguan Sandinista priest, chided the Security Council, calling its failure to act swiftly a “monstrosity,” the TV channel reported.

-Wire reports
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