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December 1, 2009
   
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Christmas countdown begins: Young San José residents are aglow as the city inaugurates its Christmas lights and decorations.

Ronald Reyes | Tico Times

Nations split over Honduras vote
Costa Rica has embraced the controversial presidential elections in nearby Honduras, taking sides on an issue that divides the international community.
Arias tells Middle East to bid farewell to arms
During his recent tour of the Middle East, Costa Rican President Oscar Arias advised the Palestinian Authority to copy Costa Rica and abolish its army, while suggesting both Israel and Palestine should meet at the negotiating table to find a peaceful solution to their differences.
Costa Rica airport to increase security
The Public Security Ministry announced Monday that it plans to increase security at Juan Santamaría International Airport, Costa Rica's biggest airport, located northwest of the capital in Alajuela.
Edited by Alex Leff
Tico Times Staff | aleff@ticotimes.net
Costa Rica Daily News updates by the Tico Times Newspaper
December 1

Grano de Oro Acting Contest
Open to all amateur actors and actresses, categories include open plays, plays for children, monologues, finals Dec. 1-3. Info: 2547-6275, 2547-6276, www.msj.go.cr.

Lighting of the Children's Museum
Featuring 8,000 lights, concerts by the Colegio Metodista Choir and the University of Costa Rica Symphony Band, with fireworks, live nativity scene, Dec. 1, 6 p.m., Children's Museum.

Holidays Art Camp
Ages 5-10, Dec. 1-3, 4-6 p.m.; Dec. 8-10, 4-6 p.m.; Dec. 14-17, 9 a.m.-noon, Bello Horizonte, Escazú, 100 m east, 450 m south of Toycos, 8346-3030.

Epica in concert
Dec. 1, 7 p.m., The City, Curridabat, tickets at Vértigo and Insomnio stores.

Nations split over Honduras vote

By Alex Leff
Tico Times Staff | aleff@ticotimes.net

Costa Rica has embraced the controversial presidential elections in nearby Honduras, taking sides on an issue that divides the international community.

“I'm thinking about the Honduran people, that's what motivates me … to advocate for recognition of the elections,” Costa Rican President Oscar Arias said Monday during the Ibero-American Summit in Estoril, Portugal.

Arias continued, “This is a people that lived through war in 1969, that in the year 1998 was devastated, literally devastated by Hurricane Mitch, and they don't deserve a new Hurricane Mitch of politics with the non-recognition from the countries of Latin America and the international community as a whole.”

Arias was not alone in giving a thumbs-up to the winner, opposition candidate Porfirio Lobo. Colombia, Panama, Peru and the United States are endorsing Sunday's vote as the way out of Honduras' five-month-long political impasse, citing high voter turnout and a fair electoral process.

U.S. State Department spokesman Ian Kelly said, “ Significant work remains to be done to restore democratic and constitutional order in Honduras, but today (Sunday) the Honduran people took a necessary and important step forward.”

Latin American countries, including notable economic heavyweights Brazil and Venezuela, have remained opposed to Honduras' elections because they took place before the country restored the presidency of ousted leader Manuel Zelaya, whose restitution looks increasingly unlikely as the Honduran Congress heads into a vote over the matter on Wednesday.

Spain remains critical of the elections but has not entirely shunned the results. “We don't recognize but neither do we disregard the election,” Spanish Foreign Minister Miguel Angel Moratinos told Reuters.

For Arias, such opposition will only damage one of the Hemisphere's poorest countries. He said about 20 percent of Honduran government spending relies on European and North American aid. Furthermore, “disregarding the new government would mean turning Honduras into a kind of Central American Albania, a kind of Central American Myanmar,” he said, comparing his neighbor to some of the world's most globally isolated nations.

Arias and others in the pro-election camp hinged their support on the condition of a fair and transparent voting process, they said.  

Yet a rising number of international observers spoke out Monday against conditions some described as unbefitting fair and clean elections.

“On election day … there were a number of incidents that confirmed the climate of repression in which the electoral process took place, which represented the consolidation of the coup d'etat of June 28,” the Center for Justice and International Law said in a statement.

One incident occurred in the northern city of San Pedro Sula, when soldiers forced peaceful marchers and bystanders to flee the streets, using tear gas and water cannons, according to an eyewitness account from Tom Loudon, the head of a delegation of human rights observers from the U.S. social justice group Quixote Center.

Non-governmental organization Amnesty International (AI) reported that authorities have detained protestors under a decree prohibiting gatherings of more than four people. “Justice seems to have been absent also on Election Day in Honduras,” said Javier Zuñiga, head of an AI delegation in Honduras.

Zelaya, in a seemingly somber mood after the vote, jabbed at an interviewer from CNN en Español for what he said was her network's failure to cover the negative side that marred the elections.

The Center for Economic and Policy Research, a Washington, D.C. think tank, cited other incidents involving raids of offices and homes of civil society groups, including a Quaker agricultural cooperative. The group also said the authorities jammed the signals of opposition broadcasters and threatened to bring criminal charges against anyone advocating a boycott of the election.

However, at least one observer noted a calm, clean process. Norman Caldera, who served as foreign minister under conservative 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.

“Democracy rests with the will of the people, not the will of the international community,” Caldera told The Nica Times on Sunday. “Honduras is deciding its own fate.”

Though other issues were listed on its agenda, the summit in Portugal seemed to function as a forum for only one Ibero-American issue: Honduras. What the summit's participants will decide and how their opinions will affect the embattled Central American nation remains to be seen.

Mike Faulk contributed reporting from Tegucigalpa, Honduras.

See the Dec. 4 print or digital edition of The Nica Times for analysis on the Honduras.

Arias tells Middle East to bid farewell to arms

By Sean O'Hare
Tico Times Staff | editorial@ticotimes.net

During his recent tour of the Middle East, Costa Rican President Oscar Arias advised the Palestinian Authority to copy Costa Rica and abolish its army, while suggesting both Israel and Palestine should meet at the negotiating table to find a peaceful solution to their differences.

During the second day of his visit to Israel, on Nov. 27, Arias met with former Israeli president Yitzhak Navon, who served from 1978 to 1983, to discuss the conflict between Israel and Palestine.

Navon said: “As it's a message of peace, it is important for the people who live here and for the leaders of the region to listen to a man of experience who has won the Nobel Prize for peace. He has some wise advice and can make a great moral contribution to the peace.”

Arias also met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, to whom he explained the 1980s peace process in Central America.

The following day Arias visited Palestine and its Prime Minister Salam Fayyad. It was the first time a Costa Rican head-of-state has ever visited the country.

In a meeting that lasted more than an hour at the Bethlehem Presidential Palace, Arias suggested that Palestine, as a small and poor country that has lost so many wars and will never be able to triumph over the Israeli state, should abolish its army, just as Costa Rica did 60 years ago.

Peaceful negotiations, according to Arias, should focus on Jerusalem, the fronts, the refugees, the settlements and security.

In response, the Palestinian prime minister welcomed Arias and thanked him for bringing a message of peace to the Middle East and for highlighting the importance of diplomatic relations between the two countries.

While Fayyad expressed a willingness to return to the negotiating table, he insisted that in order to achieve concrete results, Israel should comply with international law, stop the building of settlements and respect Palestinian territory.

The president's Middle Eastern tour also included a visit to the site where Jesus is believed to have been crucified and the Wailing Wall.

Costa Rica airport to increase security

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

The Public Security Ministry announced Monday that it plans to increase security at Juan Santamaría International Airport, Costa Rica's biggest airport, located northwest of the capital in Alajuela.

In addition to adding 61 recently-graduated police officers, the ministry will deploy several undercover agents to the airport, although officials did not say how many.

The new protection, the ministry said, is to maintain the green star that the airport received from the United States Transportation Security Administration (TSA). The ministry claims they earned the rating for Juan Santamaría's safe security practices such as x-ray scanners and strict customs personnel.

In the past three weeks, officials have confiscated nine marijuana joints, two marijuana roaches and a 9-mm pistol with 15 bullets, according to the Public Security Officials. Airport officials have also inspected 382 vehicles and detained eight. The Transit Police have issued 96 citations in since Nov. 9 at Juan Santamaría.

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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