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August 24, 2009
   
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Unbroken: The break-dance group Fusion Crew busts some moves before the Urban Dance and Art Festival, held this weekend at Escuela Juan Santamaría in the eastern San José district of Curridabat. The group won the crew dance battle Saturday evening and will be representing Costa Rica at "la batalha final" in Sao Paolo, Brazil.
Ronald Reyes | Tico Times
Honduras' high court rejects San José plan
Honduras' Supreme Court has rejected key points of a proposal drafted in Costa Rica that would return ousted Honduran President Manuel Zelaya to power.
New Escazú-La Sabana road bypasses highway
Costa Rican transport authorities have opened a new road that directly connects the western San José district of La Sabana to Escazú, southwest of the capital.
Costa Rica resident has ties to FARC, U.S. Treasury says
A Colombian national living in Costa Rica has been labeled a drug trafficker and an “important” financier of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) by the United States Department of the Treasury.
Edited by Alex Leff
Tico Times Staff | aleff@ticotimes.net
Costa Rica Daily News updates by the Tico Times Newspaper
August 24

Maestro Culinario Chef Competition
With 16 chefs from around the country, Aug. 24-25, Ramada Plaza Herradura, Cariari, 2234-6850, www.maestroculinario.cr.

Manuel María Gutiérrez Symphony Orchestra in concert
Music students, Monday, 9 a.m., Desamparados; Tuesday, 7:30 p.m., Melico Salazar Theater.

Art show: ‘Maternity'
Collective exhibit, through Sept. 7, Enrique Echandi Gallery, National Theater.

Honduras' high court rejects San José plan

Honduras' Supreme Court has rejected key points of a proposal drafted in Costa Rica that would return ousted Honduran President Manuel Zelaya to power.

The court said Sunday that Zelaya cannot be president nor can he avoid “having to submit to established procedures of the penal process” should he return. Zelaya faces accusations of crimes against the government, treason against the nation and abuse of power, the court said.

The court also affirmed the legitimacy of Roberto Micheletti's presidency as part of a lawful “constitutional succession.” Detractors call Micheletti a coup leader.

The ruling was a blow to Costa Rican President Oscar Arias' 11-point plan, drafted after intense talks between representatives from the rival Honduran groups in Arias' San José residence. Known as the San José Agreement, the draft included the return of Zelaya to power and an amnesty for political crimes among its proposed steps toward reconciliation.

The decision came the day before a planned visit by a delegation from the Organization of American States (OAS), which backs Arias' plan and has repeatedly called for Zelaya to be reinstated as president.

–EFE and Tico Times

New Escazú-La Sabana road bypasses highway

By Adam Williams
Tico Times Staff | awilliams@ticotimes.net

Costa Rican transport authorities have opened a new road that directly connects tCosta Rican transport authorities have opened a new road that directly connects the western San José district of La Sabana to Escazú, southwest of the capital.

Inaugurated Friday, the road enables commuters to drive between La Sabana and Escazú without having to access the Próspero Fernández highway. Road officials said the project is intended to reduce congestion on the highway.

The new two-lane road, which is 1.7 kilometers long, required an investment of $10 million in financing from the Public Works and Transport Ministry (MOPT) and other roadway institutions.

The Highway Beautification and Security Association contributed funds to provide 54 lights to illuminate the road. The National Roadway Council also contributed to fund the road's pedestrian walkway, which is still in construction.

According to MOPT, the road provides a better alternative for San José-Escazú commuters and will also expedite the commute from La Sabana to Hatillos and Alajuela. The new road begins at La Sabana's Calle Morenos and travels south. The road runs from the bridge above the María Aguilar river in La Sabana and ends in San Felipe, Alajuelita.

Costa Rica resident has ties
to FARC, U.S. Treasury says

By Daniel Shea
Tico Times Staff | editorial@ticotimes.net

A Colombian national living in Costa Rica has been labeled a drug trafficker and an “important” financier of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) by the United States Department of the Treasury.

The designation, announced Thursday, froze all assets of José Melo that have operations that fall under U.S. jurisdiction, including those of four companies which he owns – one of which is Costa Rica-based, a statement from the U.S. Treasury Department said.

The statement described Melo – who has legal residency in Costa Rica – as a “narcotics trafficker and important financial contact for the FARC.”

Melo owns four companies, according to the statement; two are Colombian, one is Costa Rican and the fourth is Venezuelan.

Costa Rica-based Carillanca S.A. is a company involved in tomato cultivation, the statement said, although it did not elaborate. One other business was involved in agriculture, specifically in the study of hydroponic agriculture, which consists of growing plants without soil in a nutrient-based solution.

Another company deals in real estate while the final is a commercial parking lot in Bogotá, Colombia.

Founded in 1964, FARC is the longest-running insurgency in Latin America. It is a Marxist revolutionary group that has, in its most recent history, involved itself in the drug trade as finances waned.

The U.S. State Department labeled FARC a foreign terrorist organization in 1997, and former President George W. Bush listed it as a major narcotics trafficker in 2003.

There have been multiple incidents of both U.S. and Colombian agencies involving themselves internationally in a crackdown of the financial support system FARC has developed in the region.

In March 2008, e-mails retrieved from a computer that belonged to the organization's then-No. 2 leader, Raúl Reyes – who was killed during a raid by the Colombian military – led authorities to a house in Santa Bárbara de Heredia, north of San José. In the house, which belonged to academics Cruz Prado and Francisco Gutiérrez, police found $480,000 in cash in a safe. The couple admitted that the safe was given to them by FARC, but denied knowing it contained money (TT, June 11, 2008).

Please send us your letters, 500 words or fewer, to letters@ticotimes.net for Costa Rica issues or letters@nicatimes.net for Nicaragua and the Central American and Caribbean region. Thanks!
 
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