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November 30, 2009
   
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And the winner is: Hondurans picked National Party candidate Porfirio “Pepe” Lobo in Sunday's presidential elections. Many hope the vote will lead them out of the political crisis that has isolated their country for the past five months.

Gustavo Amador | EFE

‘Pepe' Lobo to win Honduras election
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras – Defying calls for boycott, more than 1.5 million Hondurans went to the polls Sunday, electing opposition candidate Porfirio “Pepe” Lobo as their new president in a vote that was condemned before it began by a number of countries in the region.
Proposed plastic surgery tax in U.S. could enhance medical tourism
There's at least one sector celebrating a proposed tax on plastic surgery in the United States, and that's the people who cater to medical tourism.
Children's Museum to brighten up the countdown to Christmas
All eyes will focus on the lights and theatrics and all ears will tune in to special music Tuesday, for the annual illumination of the grounds at the Children's Museum in San José. The festivities, officially announcing the arrival of the Christmas season in Costa Rica, will begin at 6 p.m.
Edited by Alex Leff
Tico Times Staff | aleff@ticotimes.net
Costa Rica Daily News updates by the Tico Times Newspaper
November 30

Italian Film Festival
“Dopo mezzanotte,” Nov. 30, 8 p.m., Sala Garbo.

Mundoloco Concerts
Features Unity, reggae, roots, Nov. 30, Jazz Café, San Pedro.

Conference “Tourism Declaration and Rural Community Tourism”
Organizad by The Central Pacific regional office of the Costa Rica 's Institute of Tourism , 1-5 p.m., Los Altos Hotel, 2777-4221 or 2777-4217, cgallard@ict.go.cr, gugalde@ict.co.cr.

‘Pepe' Lobo to win Honduras election

By Mike Faulk
Nica Times Staff

Disrupting Sunday's peace: Marchers and bystanders flee from soldiers who launch tear gas and water cannons Sunday in San Pedro Sula , in northwestern Honduras . International observers said about 500 marchers were leading a peaceful protest against the elections, when soldiers attacked them totally “unprovoked.”

Photo courtesy of Tom Loudon/ Quixote Center

TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras – Defying calls for boycott, more than 1.5 million Hondurans went to the polls Sunday, electing opposition candidate Porfirio “Pepe” Lobo as their new president in a vote that was condemned before it began by a number of countries in the region.

By 11 p.m. Sunday, National Party candidate Lobo had won more than 55 percent of the votes counted, according to the Supreme Electoral Tribunal, which acknowledged technical difficulties that were slowing the tally.

Most Hondurans, according to opinion polls, expect Sunday's election to lead them out of the country's 5-month-old political impasse, which began with the overthrow of Manuel Zelaya.

The ousted president told supporters not to vote, claiming the elections validate a coup against his government. Voter turnout was more than 61 percent, according to the Supreme Electoral Tribunal, in elections Zelaya has labeled a “fraud.”

Roberto Micheletti, who has resigned temporarily from the Honduran presidency, praised the electoral process. “Every vote cast represents the value that we Hondurans put on our freedom to decide,” he said in a statement issued late Sunday.

Some international observers said Hondurans conducted a calm and orderly Election Day. Norman Caldera, who served as foreign minister under former Nicaraguan President Enrique Bolaños, said he went to six polling stations and was impressed with how well the representatives of different political parties worked together.

“If you didn't already know, you could hardly tell they were from opposing sides,” Caldera said.

President-elect Lobo, 61, ran on the National Party of Honduras ticket and took a quick lead in the polls over his leading rival, Elvin Santos, whose Liberal Party struggled to remain in power after toppling one of its own, Zelaya. Santos served as Zelaya's vice president and stepped down last December to run for the country's top post.

One voter, 70-year-old Calixto García, a tailor, said he's seen his fill of Honduran political events, including the country's transition to democracy in 1980.

“Under the circumstances, these are the most important elections we've ever had,” he said.

He believes clean and transparent elections will lead to a resolution of the crisis – echoing a similar sentiment expressed by the United States, Panama, Peru and recently Costa Rica, as well as 73 percent of Hondurans, according to a CID-Gallup poll published last month.

García said he voted for Pepe Lobo, raising an index finger dipped in ink to show he had proudly cast his vote.

Despite the reports of normal voting, however, about 500 people marching peacefully in the northwestern city of San Pedro Sula were repressed by tear gas and water cannons, according to observers from the Quixote Center, a U.S. faith-based, social justice organization.

Tom Loudon, leader of the Quixote Center delegation in San Pedro Sula, told The Nica Times that soldiers deployed on the march at around 12:30 p.m. Sunday, put on gas masks and began attacking the marchers “unprovoked.”

“The crowd just scattered, people went running in every direction, I was one of those,” Loudon said over the phone, still choking from the gas.

“It's just pure unprovoked brutal aggression against many people who haven't done anything; people are just walking down the street,” Loudon said.

Juan Barahona, who leads a resistance group critical of the de facto government and the elections, had told followers not to protest Sunday for fear of military repression, but he left it up to local chapters to decide. Barahona did not return interview requests before this posting.

Caldera, who has observed elections in Nicaragua and Costa Rica prior to the contentious Honduran vote, said Honduran democracy won out Sunday and dealt a blow to what he sees as a move toward leftist dictatorships in the region.

He said Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega was hoping for a low turnout to help the case for the restitution of his ally, ousted President Manuel Zelaya.  

“Democracy rests with the will of the people, not the will of the international community,” Caldera said. “ Honduras is deciding its own fate.”

Zelaya's restitution looked increasingly unlikely after Honduras' Supreme Court recommended lawmakers decide against letting him serve out the rest of his presidency in a power-sharing government. Congress delayed its vote until after the elections, this Wednesday.

Alex Leff contributed to this report.

See the Dec. 4 Nica Times for more on this story.

Proposed plastic surgery tax in
U.S. could enhance medical tourism

By Chrissie Long
Tico Times Staff | clong@ticotimes.net

There's at least one sector celebrating a proposed tax on plastic surgery in the United States, and that's the people who cater to medical tourism.

Each year, hundreds of thousands of North Americans look offshore for tummy tucks, facelifts and breast enhancements, knowing they can pay a fraction of the costs they would have to fork over in the United States.

Costa Rica, a three-hour flight from the U.S., has absorbed a large percentage of patients and, with the addition of the proposed tax, medical experts expect a greater influx.

The 5 percent tax on elective cosmetic procedures was proposed as part of the 2,074-page health reform bill presented by the U.S. Democratic Party this month. The tax is expected to generate $5.8 billion to help fund the $849 billion health system overhaul.

But plastic surgeons in the United States have launched a campaign to prevent the tax, arguing that its effects would result in discrimination against women, who represent 86 percent of cosmetic surgery patients there.

“This tax is effectively a ‘soccer mom' tax that will adversely impact mainstream American wives and mothers, who are the majority of plastic surgery patients,” said Dr. Renato Saltz, president of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS). “As doctors, we understand and appreciate the need for health care reform, but taxing physicians and cosmetic surgery procedures to pay for the reform is not realistic or beneficial.”

ASPS noted that only 10 percent of the respondents on a recent survey reported a household income of over $90,000, “which clearly refutes the suggestion that elective surgery taxes are ‘luxury or ‘sin' taxes affecting a privileged few,” according to a statement released earlier this month.

The bill was given a nod by the Senate on Nov. 21 and is awaiting further debate.

See the Dec. 4 print or digital edition of The Tico Times for more on this story.

Children's Museum to brighten
up the countdown to Christmas

All eyes will focus on the lights and theatrics and all ears will tune in to special music Tuesday, for the annual illumination of the grounds at the Children's Museum in San José. The festivities, officially announcing the arrival of the Christmas season in Costa Rica, will begin at 6 p.m.

The program, “El Pasito Mágico” (The Magic Step), is open to the public and will include the illumination of hundreds of lights on the grounds of the museum, which resembles a castle. Also, spectators will be treated to a variety of music, song, dance, theater and monumental three-dimensional projections against the yellow museum walls. The evening will wrap up with a fireworks display, according to a press release issued by the Children's Museum.

Adriana Alvarado, artistic director of the show, describes the project as a “mega-production.”

For more information, call 2258-4929, or visit www.museocr.org.

–Tico Times

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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