Tuesday, October 12, 2004

Costa Rica Digest, Oct. 12

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>>Costa Rica News Digest<<
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TODAY'S CONTENTS
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*Costa Rica's Ambassador to Russia Has His Own Scandal
*News Digest

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FEATURE ARTICLE
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*Costa Rica's Ambassador to Russia Has His Own Scandal

On the front page of the Diario Extra yesterday there
is a photo
of the Costa Rican embassador to Russia with three
young women in his
bedroom.

They have uncovered a denunciation that was posted in
a Russian
newspaper 22 Aug 2003, by a young woman towards the
embassador. It is
translated from Russian to Spanish in the Extra. Here
is an English
translation:

"Girls, avoid the Costa Rican embassador, Plutarco.
He's a horrible
person. He goes out with various women at the same
time. First he
invites them to live with him, then he does whatever
possible so that
they lose their jobs and then he converts them to
sexual slaves."

The woman making the denunciation appears in the
photo. The
denunciation was published one month prior to the
embassador, 60 years
old, marrying a young Russian woman of 21 years.

Plutarco Hernandez Sancho played a part in what forms
one of Costa
Ricas ugliest pages of history. In 1969, he was
sentenced to 16 years
in prison for, with the help of Nicaraguan Humberto
José Ortega
Saavedra, assasinating José Jiménez Rodríguez who was
a Civil Guardmen
at the Alajuela prison. After the killing, they
freed Carlos Fonseca
Amador, who was incarcerated at the time, but the
prison escape failed
and those involved were captured.

In 1972, an integrated group of the same terrorist
cell (these are the
words used) hijacked a Lacsa plane from Limon to San
Jose, took it to
San Andres, Colombia and asked for the release of
Fonseca Amador,
Ortega Saavedra, Plutarco Hernández and others under
the condition
that they would set the 34 hostages on the plane
free. The deal was
made and the prisoners were transferred to Mexico.
Plutarco Hernandez
went to Russia where he had his wife and son. Under the
administration of Rodrigo Carazo Odio, he was
pardoned. His sentence
was pardoned when his cousin Rafael Calderón Angel
Fournier was
minister of Foreign Relations. When his cousin
Calderon was elected
president of Costa Rica, they sent Hernandez Sancho
to Russia where he
acted as general consul from 1990-1993. He was later
named embassador
in 1998 and still holds the position.


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NEWS DIGEST
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*Fiscalía Continue Interviews While Waiting On Miguel
Angel

While the Fiscalía (prosecutor's office) awaits
former president Miguel
Ángel Rodríguez to officially step down as Secretary
General of the

Organization of American States (OAS) of Friday and
his return to Costa
Rica, they are not sitting idly by.

Yesterday, Rafael Sequeira Garza, one of the persons
signing on behalf
of the company Denisse owned by Rodríguez was before
the Tribunales de

Justicia, to give his declaration.

Sequeira arrived at the Ministerio Público in the
early afternoon to
give an explanation of why the company Denisse
received money from the
French telecommunications firm, Alcatel.

Before entering the courthouse, Sequiera made the
following statement
to the press: "I don't have to necessarily know the
origin of the funds,
I will answer to what I know and how I can
collaborate. Never have I had

reason to question Miguel Angel Rodríguez, the last
time I spoke to him
was last Thursday when he called me to discuss
personal matters."

Sequeira added that Rodríguez was aware that he would
be before the

prosecutors.

Rodríguez is being accused by his former Housing
Minister and friend,
José Antonio Lobo, who was a member of the Instituto
Costarricense de

Electricidad (ICE) board of directors who awarded the
us$149 Million
Dollar contract to Alcatel.


*DIS/INTERPOL on Alert for Rodríguez

Many had wondered openly if former president Miguel
Ángel Rodríguez
does not return to Costa Rica, will he be joining
several others who
have fled Costa Rican justice and are now on the
Interpol wanted list?

And, since we are talking of an ex-president, will
Costa Rican
authorities put pressure on foreign authorities to
intervene in
locating a possible hiding by Rodríguez and arrest
him and return to
Costa Rica.

Well, the answer came yesterday, as criminal court
judge Isabel Porras
Abarca made an official request of the U.S.
authorities for the
immediate capture and detention of Rodríguez the
minute his duties
at the Organization of American States (OAS) is
official.

Fiscal General (chief prosecutor) said that the
international warrant
against Rodríguez was formalized yesterday when he
asked the
DIS/INTERPOL in Costa Rica directoer, Guido Alvarado,
to alert
foreign agencies to be on the alert and prevent
Rodríguez from leaving
the United States.

Rodríguez's name was added to the INTERPOL database
as of last night,
which is sent to 187 countries around the globe.


*Banco ELCA Report Expected This Week
News on the Banco ELCA intervention could come as
early as this week,
as two former managers, Javier Filloy and Hernán
González, have been

assisting the Ministerio Público to review the
evidence in the case by
the Fiscalía de delitos económicos.

The financial advisor and manager of ELCA have been
in preventive
detention for the last three months, along with ELCA
president,
Carlos Alvarado Moya.

ELCA was intervened by the Superintendencia General
de Entidades
Financieras (SUGEF) on the 29th of June of this year,
and while the
bank's doors are open, business is limited to
answering depositor's
questions and concerns about the future of the bank.

Last month, the Asociación Bancaria Costarricense
(ABC) announced that
it would pay depositors with less than ¢500.000 in
accounts at the bank,
and to date it reports that only 344 of the 800
persons expected came
forward to make a claim.

The association said only 176 cheques have been
issued or only 36% of
those expected.

This month, the Asociación Bancaria Costarricense
(ABC), is expected to

expand it's payment to those depositors with less
than ¢4.5 million
colones, expecting to pay out some us$2 million
dollars to depositors.

However, the ABC has not made a final announcement on
that plan.

Óscar Rodríguez, head of the SUGEF, informs that a
report on the Banco
ELCA situation will come by the end of this week,
which will then be
reviewed by the Consejo Nacional de Supervisión del
Sistema Financiero

(Conassif), for a final decision on the future of the
bank.

A meeting scheduled for September 30 of the partners
of the bank resulted
in no appearances. The meeting was to discuss
proposals and plans for
healing the bank.


*Protest March Set for Today

"No to corruption" will be the theme of today's
protest march downtown
San José beginning at 9am this morning.

Protestors are expected to trade their "No al TLC",
"Pacheco Vende
Patria" and other similar themes and placards for a
call to end
corruption of Costa Rica now that two former
presidents are implicated
in unrelated cases of taking bribes or paybacks from
government
contracts while in office.

A score of private and public functionaries have been
arrested, some
in preventive detention in jail, while others under
house arrest or
simply have orders against them leaving Costa Rica.

It could be said that there are more millionaires in
jail at the present
time than in the past.

The protest was organized by Costa Rica's
universities and will see
other action groups and public employees join in.
President Pacheco is
in full support of the march and has given public
employees the morning
off work to attend the protestations


*Undisclosed problems plague the Internet here

Costa RicaÂ’s internet structure is showing signs of
stress.

The ADSL high-speed service offered by the Instituto
Costarricense de

Electricidad, known as ICE, was out much of Monday.

Amnet admits to serious problems with its connection
with
Radiográfica Costarricense S.A., RACSA, the principal
internet provider
and subsidiary of ICE.

Message delivery has been spotty since Friday,
although hard facts are

difficult to get.

Public employees at ICE have been known to pull the
plug on the high-
speed Internet service for political reasons. And
Tuesday is the day for
a major demonstration against corruption and a litany
of other
situations.

Downloading Web pages was less affected, although the
speed of
refreshing a page has dropped in the last three days.

E-mail messages may take 12 hours to reach their
destination across
town. Some never arrive at all.

A chief technician for Amnet, the cable television
and Internet
provider, said Monday that a modem that connects the
companyÂ’s lines
to the RACSA server was functioning badly. He
predicted incorrectly
that the situation would be remedied by late afternoon.

Technicians at RACSA, on the other hand, discounted
reports of any
problems in telephone conversations Monday.

Although RACSA technicians said there were no
problems, a test message
Monday night sent via a direct connection to the
RACSA server to a RACSA

e-mail address took seven minutes to arrive. Usually
the speed is that of

light.

The problems with the high-speed Internet were most
obvious at a
downtown Internet cafe where employees had been in
contact with ICE
all day without much success. Users of that system
say it did not work
much of the day, although some improvement took place
about 5:30 p.m.

The high-speed Internet hookup, or ADSL, has been
restricted to a test
area downtown until recently when the company decided
to offer it to a
much wider area. ICE uses existing telephone lines
to make the
connections to Internet servers.

Amnet uses a type of cable used also for television
transmissions.


*Legion post planning Thanksgiving dinner

The American legion will hold its Thanksgiving dinner
Nov. 20 at the
Castillo Country Club in Heredia.

The legion post, the SFC Raymond Edison Jones Post 16
Costa Rica, will
gather at 11 a.m. for a 12:30 dinner. A traditional
turkey feast is
planned. The cost is 7,000 colons for adults and
3,500 for youngsters
under 12. The adult charge is about $15.50.

The purpose of the event is to socialize, and to meet
new friends,
said the organization in a release. Reservations are
available with
Ken Johnson, 591-1695, James Longshaw, 386-6572, Jim
Young, 836-2328,
and Don Roberts, 290-0167. Reservations are required.


*Day of three cultures preempts Columbus


Today is Columbus Day, although U.S. citizens
celebrated the day Monday
so many public employees could get a three-day weekend.

Columbus is not as hated in Costa Rica as he is
elsewhere, such as
México and the Southwestern United States. But the
day has not been
called that. The title Día de la Raza gave way to Día
de las Culturas
to recognize the mestizo roots of most Costa Ricans:
Indian, African
and Spanish.

To some extent the day is designed to impress on
Costa Ricans the
varied backgrounds of their ancestors. However, many
Costa Ricans do
not accept this view and insist that they are pure
Spanish.

This year the day is being dominated by an
anti-corruption march.




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