Costa Rica News, Daily News in Costa Rica by the Tico Times
November 9, 2009
   
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Race is on: Twenty boats set sail Sunday from Normandy, France for Costa Rica's Caribbean port of Limón for the ninth edition of the two-handed Transat Jacques Vabre race.

Marcel Mochet | AFP

At least 124 killed in El Salvador after rainstorm
In El Salvador at least 124 people died, dozens went missing and 7,000 evacuated their homes after intense downpours brought by Hurricane Ida caused floods and mudslides in the Central American country, the government announced Sunday.
Bridge collapses at Puerto Jiménez
Part of a bridge that spans the Río Rincón in Puerto Jiménez, a fishing community and popular tourist destination in southwest Costa Rica's Osa Peninsula, collapsed on Friday when a 95-ton crane attempted to cross it.
Costa Rica and China complete fifth round of free-trade talks
The fifth round of free-trade talks with China concluded Friday as representatives from both countries met in Beijing to further define the details of the pending agreement.
Edited by Alex Leff
Tico Times Staff | aleff@ticotimes.net
Costa Rica Daily News updates by the Tico Times Newspaper
November 9

Christmas Cooking Classes
With Isabel Campabadal, Nov. 9, 11, 7-10 p.m. or Nov. 10, 12, 9 a.m.-noon; also breads and desserts, Nov. 21, 9 a.m. Info: 2224-5803.

Blind Pigs Blues Band
Plays ( 2-5 p.m.) at Brad's Grille Tailgate Party, Momentum Mall, Plaza Lindora, Santa Ana, Nov. 9, 5-9:30 p.m. Some former NFL players to attend.

Guitar and violin concert
Nov. 9, 7 p.m., Casa de Cultura, Heredia.

At least 124 killed in El Salvador after rainstorm

In El Salvador at least 124 people died, dozens went missing and 7,000 evacuated their homes after intense downpours brought by Hurricane Ida caused floods and mudslides in the Central American country, the government announced Sunday.

President Mauricio Funes declared a national emergency, calling the incident a “grave tragedy” whose damage is “incalculable.”

The provinces affected most by the rains are San Salvador, Cuscatlán, La Libertad, La Paz and San Vicente.

During a televised presidential address, Funes stressed that in the area surrounding San Vicente volcano, authorities reported 355 millimeters of rainfall. “During (Huricane) Mitch, more than 400 millimeters fell in four days. A similar amount this time rained in only four hours,” he said.

The downpours, which intensified during the course of Saturday night and early Sunday morning, also affected several zones of the country's capital of San Salvador, where – Mayor Normal Quijano told local media – a total of 1,300 people with significant property damage has been tallied.

The National Service for Territorial Studies attributed the rains to a low-pressure system located over the Pacific Ocean that intensified with the passage of Hurricane Ida. On Sunday, the hurricane moved into the Gulf of Mexico.

For updates on Hurricane Ida, visit the U.S. National Hurricane Center's Web site: http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/#IDA.

–EFE

Bridge collapses at Puerto Jiménez

By Mike McDonald
Tico Times Staff | mmcdonald@ticotimes.net

Part of a bridge that spans the Río Rincón in Puerto Jiménez, a fishing community and popular tourist destination in southwest Costa Rica's Osa Peninsula, collapsed on Friday when a 95-ton crane attempted to cross it, the daily La Nacion reported.

According to the national daily, the 50-year-old bridge was only meant to support 35 tons.

The crane sustained severe damage to the cab, but the driver escaped unscathed. No injuries were reported.

Friday's collapse came little more than two weeks after a bridge in Turrubares caved under the weight of a school bus carrying 38 passengers, which plunged into the Tárcoles River and claimed five lives. The Turrubares collapse lead to serious questions about the Public Works and Transport Ministry's competence to maintain bridges and forced the resignation of ministry head Karla González.

In September, The National Emergency Commission (CNE) declared a “red alert” over the state of bridges in Costa Rica after a study revealed that dozens of the country's river crossings were in potentially dangerous conditions.

National Roadway Council (CONAVI) press officials said that a new bridge is under construction, but for now the only access to Puerto Jiménez is by air or boat.

Costa Rica and China complete
fifth round of free-trade talks

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

The fifth round of free-trade talks with China concluded Friday as representatives from both countries met in Beijing to further define the details of the pending agreement.

The discussions, which spanned four days, centered on defining the regulations for the exchange of products and services between the two countries. Negotiators also discussed which agricultural products their perspective countries will open up for trade.

According to Costa Rica's chief negotiator Fernando Ocampo, the conclusion of this round of discussions “highlighted the importance of both countries to strengthen the legal aspects that regulate the commercial relationship between China and Costa Rica.”

The Foreign Trade Ministry (COMEX), which is working from the Costa Rican side to establish the parameters of the agreement, said that the fifth round of talks allowed both countries to establish important regulations in terms of labor laws, which are vastly different between the two countries, necessary sanitary measures and the permissible limits of trade of certain agricultural products.

The products of chief interest for Costa Rica are beef and meat from China, while China hopes to acquire significant amounts of Costa Rica pineapples, bananas and coffee.

COMEX also reported that Costa Rica proposed an offer to include more Chinese electronics in the agreement, such as DVDs and sound equipment. Chinese representatives said they plan to review the proposal in the upcoming weeks.

The free-trade agreement with the Eastern giant has been highly scrutinized by Costa Rican industries, as there is a building fear that allowing China to participate in the Costa Rican market will harm the business of local producers.

“It's going to break a lot of businesses,” said Tomás Pozuelo, president of the Food Industry Chamber, in an interview with The Tico Times. “We are a country of 4 million people and you want us to compete against a country with over a billion people? They can produce a tremendous amount of volume of goods, at a cheaper price, using cheaper labor. Costa Rican businesses, particularly industrial businesses, cannot compete with that.”

The sixth and final round of the free-trade negotiations with China is scheduled for the second week of February in 2010.

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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