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Panama News
Panamanian police identify body of US woman
Assocated Press
PANAMA CITY – Panamanian authorities say they have identified the body of a U.S. woman who had been missing since March and are looking for a Texas man suspected in her death.
Prosecutors' advisor Neftali Jaen says police on Friday identified the remains of Cheryl Lynn Hugues, who went missing in western Bocas del Toro province. He didn't have a hometown for Hughes.
Police on Tuesday found her body and the skeletal remains of another person buried in the back patio of a hotel owned by William Adolfo Cortez, of Texas.
Jaen said police are investigating whether the remains are those of a U.S. man missing since December 2009. He said Cortez has a tourism company that belonged to the missing man registered in his name.
Interpol looks for 35 Panamanians Among domestic demand internationally including three women linked to fraud, drug and sex crimes. Rafael Luna Noguera
story La PrensaFor the month of August 2007, the list contained 29 names. Today , total 35 Panamanians included among the wanted fugitives in the world by the International Criminal Police Organization (Interpol , for its acronym in English ) , according to official records of his own website.These 32 men and three women, the latter prosecuted for fraud, drug offenses and sex crimes. Four of Panamanian citizens share their nationality with the Brazilian, U.S. and Bolivia. 21 come from the province of Panama, Chiriqui six , three of Columbus and an equal number of Bocas del Toro , one is from La Villa de Los Santos and another of Herrera. All share list with the most wanted man on the planet: Osama bin Laden , leader of the al Qaeda terrorist network .In their cases , 29 arrest warrants were fought by the judicial authorities of Panama , three out of U.S. courts , one is from Guatemala , one from Costa Rica and Argentina over .Among the crimes for which they are looking for highlights of the homicide in 18 cases . Also include crimes related to international drug trafficking , smuggling , trafficking and illegal immigration , crimes committed with weapons and explosives, crimes against children , robbery, money laundering , kidnapping , organized crime and sexual offenses.Although the number of Panamanians wanted by Interpol increased by seven during the past three years , is still below the record of its two nearest neighbors. In fact , the number of Costa Ricans sought by international police amounts to 44 and the Colombians in the same situation up , including up to 160 .The most notedPerhaps the " fugitive " highest profile in the list of former Panamanian dictator remains Manuel Antonio Noriega, whose arrest warrant or " Red Notice " arrest began circulating in January 2007.The reference capture, for extradition was made by the Second Superior Court of Justice regarding the case of the slaughter of Albrook , where Noriega was sentenced to 15 years in prison after being convicted in 1996.For the time it was included in the list of those wanted by Interpol , Noriega was a prisoner in Miami and expected to be released on September 9 of that year. Today, three years later, the former dictator was sentenced to seven years in prison in France, and the purge in La Santé prison in Paris , where he held since being extradited from the United States last April 27. renowned murderersAlso on the list of fugitives from Interpol who was one of Noriega's henchmen , Evidelio Quiel , sentenced to 20 years in prison for the aforementioned case of the slaughter of Albrook.Quiel was arrested in San José , Costa Rica on October 21, 2005 , but months later he was released , as authorities in the neighboring country to Panama denied the extradition , arguing that the trial and conviction of former military occurred in absentia.Apart from the high-profile figures for the crimes of the dictatorship , the Interpol list includes " notorious "criminals , as Frank Luzer Pardo , aka the knacker of Azuero , declared an international fugitive after escaping from La Joyita in August 2006.This man , who today is 47 years old , and his brother Sandy , 44 and still in prison, were sentenced to 20 years in prison in 2000 for the murder of Oristela Batista, December 8, 1995 , who was stabbed at least 32 times in a satanic ritual course . The fact that shocked the public opinion occurred in El Ejido de Los Santos.Luzer is arrested in Mexico since late last year , reported as a murderer in the pay of a drug cartel . Panama preparing an extradition request to refer to their Mexican counterparts .Another of the " notorious " Panamanians wanted in the world is Carlos Meneses Lambiz , the only mass murderer in the country , officials said , and the number one most wanted list in Panama for at least five years.A Meneses Lambiz are attributed to fraud, theft and rape, but mostly for the crimes he is accused of three women : Rafaela Abrego , whose body was found in May 2002 in a park in Miraflores sector in Bethania , Maria Luisa Caballero, missing since May 14, 2003 , and Leticia González was murdered in June 2004.Other NamesBut perhaps the most dangerous villain on the list is Victor Antonio McCrae , 44 , born in Panama and also a U.S. citizen.This man, 1.76 meters tall and 72 kilos in weight, brown eyes and black hair, is wanted by the authorities of the Eastern District of North Carolina and Prince Georges County in Maryland, USA, for crimes against children , homicide , crimes involving the use of firearms and explosives, sexual crimes and theft.Finally, 10 positions higher on the list is Jose Pirtea , 32, sought for homicide. In 2008, Pirtea ranked fifth in the list of " most wanted " in Panama, because of its alleged links to drug lie down . He said as a suspect in the murder of Alkis Arana, committed in 2008 in Hato Pintado.Pirtea , of course lieutenant David Viteri (now fugitive ) was arrested last May 11 when he tried to rob a bank branch in the capital were analyzed using a police uniform . His name, however, remains on the list.The youngest on the list is Emilio Santos Amador , 21 , wanted for crimes against life and health . The higher Noriega , 76 years.Are lacking , but it does the jobSince the demise of the Judicial Technical Police and consequent establishment of the Directorate of Judicial Investigation (DIJ ) , a process that took place between December 2007 and March 2008 , the local branch of Interpol became a dependency of the new entity and the director of this came to be in charge of international police in Panama. Thus DIJ chief , Javier Carrillo, is also the head of Interpol, an organization that, according to Carrillo himself admitted , works with shortcomings similar to those that have other units of the National Police. "But the job is done , "he said . "Missing personnel and resources. " He explained that the search for suspects in Panama is constantly active . "If you have any requested information that is in the country , immediately activates the quest to win his arrest or exclude the information, " he said. The start of operations of the International Criminal Police Organization dates back to 1923, although the idea of creation came nine years earlier, in 1914, after a series of meetings between officers of European countries. Since 1989, its headquarters are in Lyon , France with offices in 184 countries. Its status as of 1956 , prohibits engaging in political, religious or racial .Until 1970 it was usual to find common criminals among the most searched , but later these were replaced by antisocial organized crime figures , drug traffickers and murderers in series. After the attacks of September 11, 2001 , most of which top the list are Middle Eastern terrorists .
Truth is in the eye of the Internet or politicians
By the A.M. Costa Rica staff
Well, the truth is out.
An Irish mystic announced that 7,000 U.S. troops are being sent to Costa Rica because the gulf oil spill is lubricating a Caribbean earthquake zone
with potential devastating results.
One the other hand, there are reports that the ghost of William Walker, channeled through actress Shirley |
MacLaine, is infiltrating the top brass of the U.S. Southern Command and wants to finish the invasion he started in 1857.
And these are among the most credible explanations flashing through the Internet after the legislature last week approved shore leave here for U.S. military personnel on anti-drug duty in the Pacific.
The mystic is Sister Maria Theresa, who says she is the 73rd Sorcha Faal of the Sorcha Faal Order, which has its origins in pre-Christian Ireland. Although detractors suggest that Faal is a U.S. computer programmer and poster boy for mental health week, the latest missive is authoritative. It's from the GRU, the Russian military intelligence service. Or so the Internet report says.
The U.S. troops are here as a rescue force when the big earthquake strikes. Now scientists have been trying for years to predict quakes, but it appears that the North American Treaty Organization has the ability. Oh, that's the agency, headed by an Italian admiral, that has taken over from Barak Obama in trying to stem the gulf oil spill. At least according to the Sorcha Faal. Ireland, by the way, is the home of a famous black beer and several wonderful variations on grains.
William Walker represents a separate theory. He made himself boss of Nicaragua in the middle of the 19th century. Military reverses at the hands of a Costa Rican army sent him fleeing. But now, says the theory, he is back, at least in spirit. By psychically manipulating the minds of U.S. military leaders, he can invade the little country without an army and complete his plans to bring it into the American Union as a slave state.
Whooops! That little plan was derailed in 1865.
Meanwhile, back on earth, opposition legislative deputies have filed a court appeal claiming the approval of shore leave for U.S. personnel on anti-drug patrol is unconstitutional.
That's what Costa Rica politicians do when they have lost an Asamblea Legislativa vote. One of the
principal proponents of the appeal is Luis Fishman, who ran an unsuccessful presidential race this year.The politicians probably know better, but that's politics.
Wednesday an official of the Asociación Nacional de Empleados Públicos y Privados went on television in Panamá to report that U.S. troops were going to take over the lands and the |
mountains of Costa Rica. He forgot to mention the bars, the beaches and the tourist hotels.
From Heredia Freddy Pacheco León, a biologist at Universidad Nacional, sent a letter to lawmakers in which he continues to deplore the creation of a U.S. military base in Costa Rica. That is his take on shore leave.
The problem is that lawmakers just left on a mid-year vacation, so they will not see his letter anytime soon.
By that time, the devastation from a petroleum-induced earthquake or maybe the appearance of the ghost of William Walker will have Costa Ricans thinking about other things
Panama's Noriega denies taking drug money at French trial
AFP/US District Attorney/File – Former Panama dictator Manuel Antonio Noriega in a Miami prison in 1990. Noriega on Tuesday dismissed … by Carole Landry Carole Landry PARIS (AFP) – Panama's ex-dictator Manuel Noriega on Tuesday dismissed charges of laundering drug money as an "imaginary banking scheme" concocted by the United States as he took the stand in a French court.The 76-year-old general denied taking payments from Colombian drug lords in the 1980s and told a Paris courtroom that cash deposits transferred to French banks came from his legitimate businesses and the CIA."I say with much humility and respect that this is an imaginary banking scheme," Noriega told the court in Spanish through his interpreter on the second day of his trial."I will have the opportunity to produce documents that show that I was a victim of a conspiracy mounted by the United States against me," he said.Noriega, who ruled Panama from 1983 to 1989, spent 20 years in a Miami cell for drug trafficking and money laundering and now faces the prospect of another decade in a French prison if convicted.His lawyers argue that the charges against Noriega, who was extradited to France two months ago, hinge on dodgy testimony from ex-drug traffickers who were paid and given protection by US authorities.Once a close US ally, Noriega testified that Washington turned against him in the 1980s when he refused to allow Panama to become a staging ground for operations against leftists across Central America."That's when the propaganda started against me after so many years of cooperation with the United States," he told the court as his three daughters sat nearby, listening attentively.Presenting himself as a "professional soldier," the ex-leader strongly denied dealings with Colombian drug cartels and said that on the contrary, he had fought narco-traffickers while in power in Panama in the 1980s."I energetically fought against the drug trade and for this I received praise from the United States, Interpol and many other countries," he said, wearing a dark suit and white shirt.Waving his hands at times to underscore his arguments, Noriega recounted that he had ordered a raid against a cocaine laboratory and waged other drug-fighting campaigns."Based on these actions, I could not be friends with these gangs," he said, referring to the Colombian drug cartels.The pock-marked general known as "Pineapple Face" was arrested by US troops that invaded Panama in December on a mission to arrest him and bring him to trial in the United States.The ex-leader was extradited to France on April 26 to answer charges of laundering the equivalent of 2.3 million euros (2.8 million dollars) from the Medellin cartel through French banks in the late 1980s.A French court in 1999 sentenced Noriega in absentia to 10 years in prison and a fine of some 13.5 million euros, but for years he fought extradition from his prison cell in Miami.French prosecutors say that drug money funnelled in the late 1980s was used by Noriega's wife and a shell company to buy three luxury apartments in Paris.Much of the hearing on Tuesday was devoted to questions about Noriega's bank accounts and his ties to the now-defunct BCCI bank, that allegedly handled his financial affairs.Asked about the source of millions in cash deposits at the bank, Noriega explained that the funds came from successful business ventures including duty-free sales at Panama airport and life insurance policies. After some three hours of testimony, Noriega's lawyer Olivier Metzner asked him point blank if the funds in French bank accounts were drug money. "These funds were acquired in a transparent way. They come from my personal earnings," he said. "And from the CIA?" added Metzner, to which Noriega responded by nodding. The one-time strongman who was a key asset for the Central Intelligence Agency in the early 1980s fell out with Washington after turning his strategically important Central American country into a hub for narco-trafficking. Convicted in the United States on charges of drug-trafficking and money-laundering, Noriega was sentenced to 40 years in prison in a Florida court. His time was reduced to 17 years for good behaviour. The trial wraps up on Wednesday and a verdict could come as early as next month.
Venezuela Rejects US Accusations of Rights Abuses
By CHRISTOPHER TOOTHAKER, Associated Press Writer Christopher Toothaker, Associated Press Writer – Sun Jul 4, CARACAS, Venezuela – Venezuela's top diplomat accused U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton of attacking his country for seeking Latin American unity and opposing U.S. influence in international affairs.He said she has "an obsession" with nations that stand up to Washington."This new attack against our country from Hillary Clinton ... demonstrates a policy of intrigue, aggression and desperation," Foreign Minister Nicolas Maduro was quoted as saying by Venezuela's state-run news agency.Earlier Sunday in Azerbaijan, Clinton said the United States is challenging crackdowns on human rights in several countries including Venezuela. The other offenders on Washington's radar include Belarus, Iran and Cuba — all close allies of President Hugo Chavez.Clinton, who is traveling through Europe, said the trip aims to demonstrate the Obama administration's commitment to democracy and human rights.In Poland on Saturday, she warned that in some countries "the walls are closing in" on the likes of unions, religious groups, rights advocates and other organizations that are critical of governments.Maduro denied Venezuela violates the rights of government opponents."We have a vital democracy of a new kind developing, one that points toward socialism," he said Sunday.He also took a dig at the U.S., saying: "The people of the United States would like to have the political and social rights and freedoms of the Venezuelan people."Relations between Caracas and Washington have been rocky for years. Chavez has accused successive U.S. administrations of trying to orchestrate his ouster and meddle in Latin America's affairs. U.S. officials, in turn, have raised concerns that Chavez is becoming increasingly authoritarian and focusing his international agenda on opposing Washington.The United States remains Venezuela's leading trade partner and the top buyer of Venezuelan oil, though oil exports to the U.S. have slipped recently as Chavez seeks to diversify the nation's customers.
Costa Rica
7,000 USMC Marines Will Be Deployed To Costa RicaContributed by: Don WinnerAbout seven thousand Marines from the US military will patrol the coastal areas of Costa Rica for the next six months, after the neighboring country's parliament approved their arrival yesterday. The troops will arrive aboard some 46 armed ships, and will use some 200 helicopters. (La Estrella) Editor's Comment: Blink, blink... What? Really? No kidding? Well, how's that for a boost to your "internal security." I would love to see a copy of their Rules of Engagement. Drug runner opens up with an AK-47, 19 year old Marine (active duty or reserve?) troop returns fire, center mass burst, kills the guy. Can they open fire on vessels that refuse to stop if ordered? Posse Comitatus? Man, could you imagine the cow the PRD would have if Martinelli allowed US troops to patrol Panama to look for drug traffickers? Fun times in Central America. I guess the war on terrorism is winding down, so it's time to turn back to the "War of Last Resort" - Drugs. And why the United States Marine Corps? They like living in the jungle, being wet and cold most of the time, bitten by bugs, hungry - embrace the suck. Unfortunately, they also have a tendency to do stupid shit, get drunk, get in fights, and create discipline problems of all shapes and sizes. They put their rank on with velcro. But, there's a lot of them running around so why not? This is going to be fun to watch.
Cops stationed at airport will warn tourists about crime
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By the A.M. Costa Rica staff
Bilingual tourist police are being stationed at Juan Santamaría airport to welcome tourists and give them some security tips.
The Instituto Costarricense de Turismo, the security ministry and the airport operator, AERIS Costa Rica, have set up two booths at the airport that officials say are placed strategically to provide handouts and information.
Among the information is the fact that the 911 emergency number has at least one bilingual operator on duty at any time.
The booths went into operation Thursday.
The airport location is appropriate because tourist frequently become victims of robbers not far from that location. Crooks use the punctured tire routine to get tourists, usually in rental vehicles, to pull over and expose themselves to highway robbers.
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In addition to providing information about crime prevention, the police officers can provide general information about the country, the tourism institute said.
The Sistema de Emergencia 911 reported that in the first six months of the year it handled 345 calls that required the services of a bilingual operator. Not all of the calls were in English, and the service has a system to connect a caller with an embassy worker or someone else who speaks the required language. The service said that the calls amounted to about two a day or 60 per month.
José María Tijerino, the minister of Gobernación, Policía y Seguridad Pública, said that by contacting tourists early there were more opportunities to provide information for a safe visit.
The agencies appear to be responding to the many negative experiences that have given Costa Rica a bad name in other countries. For example, the U.S. Embassy reported that in 2009 more than 1,200 U.S. passports were reported missing or stolen there. |
Regional Tourism Ministers promoting Central
Rubén Blades recommended travel agencies meet to offer multicast packets within the region .
story by
MABEL Elkis QUINTANA
Central American tourism ministers met in Panama to announce the approval of the Strategic Plan for Sustainable Tourism Development from 2009 to 2013 .
The project aims to integrate the development and strengthening of the region as a multicast .
"Tourism should be a government priority , "said Ruben Blades , administrator of the Tourism Authority of Panama , who stressed the need for travel agents to gather and provide multicast packets in the region.
" I find incredible rates for flights to nearby countries such as Costa Rica, " he added.
Some destinations have suffered a decline in tourist arrivals by the global economic crisis . Ricardo Carlos Benavides, Minister of Tourism of Costa Rica, Costa Rica. The neighboring country is developing a tourism promotion plan in new markets to counter the crisis. PRESS / File1182611said that to counter the effect of the crisis , the country launched a plan to increase promotion in the U.S. and new markets such as Russia and Sweden.
Costa Rica. The neighboring country is developing a tourism promotion plan in new markets to counter the crisis. PRESS / File1182611
Noriega tells court U.S.
concocted allegations
By the A.M. Costa Rica wire services
Former Panamanian dictator Manuel Noriega — on trial in Paris — says French money-laundering charges against him stem from an imaginary banking scheme concocted by the United States.
Noriega was testifying Tuesday about charges he laundered millions of dollars in illicit cocaine profits in the 1980s through two French banks. He is accused of using the money to buy luxury apartments in Paris.
Noriega described the accusations as part of a conspiracy brought against him by the United States. He said the money came from his legitimate businesses and the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency.
The 76-year-old ex-general, who spent 20 years in U.S. custody for drug trafficking, could return to prison for 10 more years if convicted on the French charges. He ruled Panamá from 1981 to 1989, and was arrested a year later during a U.S. invasion.
Taking the stand, Noriega denied receiving money from drug traffickers, saying he fought the drug trade while in power and received praise for his efforts from the U.S. and Interpol. Once a close U.S. ally, Noriega testified that Washington turned against him when he refused to participate in a U.S. plan against leftists in Central America.
France convicted both Noriega and his wife in absentia on money laundering charges in 1999, but now that he is in custody, he is entitled to a new trial under French law.
Noriega's lawyers opened the proceedings Monday arguing their client's extradition from the United States should be annulled because France did not allow the ex-general to wear his military uniform and medals while awaiting trial. They also claim his Paris jail conditions are unacceptable.
In the 1990s, Noriega's attorneys argued that he was a prisoner of war under the Geneva Conventions, and therefore should be allowed to return home to Panamá. A U.S. federal appeals court rejected that argument, and the U.S. Supreme Court later declined to review his case.
U.N. agency reports that world tourism is up by 7 percent
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Special to A.M. Costa Rica
International tourist arrivals grew by 7 percent in the first four months of 2010 according to the U.N. World Tourism Organization. This growth confirms the recovery trend beginning in the last quarter of 2009 and comes despite the challenging conditions of recent months, the agency said.
While April’s results were affected by the week-long closure of European airspace, globally the pace of recovery is faster than initially expected, driven largely by emerging markets. For the full year the agency forecasts international tourist arrivals to grow by 3 to 4 percent.
International tourist arrivals increased by 7 percent in the first four months of 2010. The 3 percent increase registered in April marks the seventh month of growth in international tourist arrivals after 14 consecutive months of negative results. Still, growth slowed down slightly in April as a consequence of the closure of European airspace for a week due to the ash-cloud following the eruption of a volcano in Iceland. Although only around 30 countries have reported May data, the vast majority is positive, clearly pointing to a continuation of the current pace of growth.
Growth however varied between world regions in the first four months of this year. The Middle East is up 3 percent when compared to the very depressed same months of 2009. The Americas are up 6 percent, while Europe reports the poorest result, down three-tenths of a percent. Northern Europe, the only subregion in the world still far from recovery, was additionally affected by the closure of European airspace last April.
In Costa Rica, informal estimates say that tourist arrivals by air were up more than 10 percent over similar months in 2009.
International tourist arrivals from January to April 2010 totaled over 258 million. This clear improvement has to be compared with the negative results of 2009, the worst period of the crisis, totaling 242 million arrivals. The current volume is still 2 percent short of the record year 2008, with 264 million arrivals in the same four months.
2010 results will continue to benefit from the gradually improving economic situation, as well as from a number of high profile events including the Winter Olympics in Vancouver, the World Cup in South Africa, the World
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Exposition in Shanghai and the Commonwealth Games in India. Unfortunately, tourism has also suffered the effects of a series of natural disasters, including earthquakes in Haiti, Chile, Southern California and Guatemala and severe flooding in a number of destinations including Machu Picchu in Peru and parts of Europe.
Positive outlook for the remainder of the year, but challenges remain, the U.N. agency said.
Current growth rates suggest that end-year results are likely to be closer to 4 percent, and may even exceed it. Much depends on the results of the upcoming summer high season in the northern hemisphere, particularly in Europe, said the agency.
The phasing-out of stimulus measures, combined with austerity measures and the rise in taxation introduced by many governments, have become main factors to be considered. The tourism sector itself may be confronted with increased taxes given the expected rise in United Kingdom departure tax in November and Germany’s intention to introduce a new air tax as part of its budget-cutting plans.
“These factors constitute an important downside risk to a recovering industry,” said Taleb Rifai, World Tourism Organization secretary general. “This is the time to support the tourism sector. At a time when many countries are witnessing public deficit constraints and low domestic consumption levels, tourism can provide much needed jobs, as well as export and tax revenues." The agency welcomes examples of countries like China, which has identified tourism as a strategic pillar of its economy going forward, he added.
On the consumer side, trends such as late booking, increasing use of the internet to look and book, traveling closer and for shorter periods of time and demanding value for money, seem to have been accentuated during and post crisis. This evolving marketplace will inevitably require changes in the business models of the industry and the tourism supply. “It’s illusionary to assume that we can go back to business as usual”, said Rifai. “We need to know consumers better, master technology and integrate it more and more into the management of destinations and companies. We also need to invest more in product innovation and human resources, particularly training for green jobs and make a clear commitment to sustainability,” he concluded. |
Chavez meets with Syria's Assad in VenezuelaCARACAS, Venezuela – Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez met with Syrian President Bashar Assad on Saturday and called on Latin America and the Arab world to fight what he called America's imperialist and capitalist interests abroad.During a meeting at Venezuela's presidential palace, Chavez told Assad it was an honor to host the Syrian leader on his first visit to Latin America. Chavez presented Assad with a gold-plated replica of a sword that once belonged to South American independence hero Simon Bolivar — the inspiration for his "Bolivarian Revolution."The two leaders signed an agreement to create a $100 million trade and development fund."Arab civilization and our civilization, the Latin American one, are being summoned in this new century to play the fundamental role of liberating the world, saving the world from the imperialism and capitalist hegemony that threaten the human species," Chavez said. "Syria and Venezuela are at the vanguard of this struggle."Assad praised Chavez for standing up to the United States and supporting the Palestinian struggle."There are few politicians who are courageous to speak out when it's necessary," he said through an interpreter. "Chavez has projected the image of a resistant Venezuela."Assad strongly criticized Israel, calling the Jewish state's government "extremist" and condemning its blockade of Gaza."The resistance must be supported," he said.Chavez is perhaps Latin's America's most outspoken critic of the United States, lashing out at the U.S. government for purportedly conspiring against him and meddling in the region's affairs. U.S. officials, in turn, have raised concerns that Chavez is becoming increasingly authoritarian.Chavez also took a dig at the U.S. soccer team, celebrating Ghana's 2-0 victory of the Americans in a decisive World Cup match earlier on Saturday. "What a blast! Ghana won, Ghana defeated the United States," he said.Chavez also condemned the U.N. Security Council for tightening sanctions against Iran as a means of curbing development of the Islamic state's nuclear program.Assad said all nations, including Iran, "have the right to develop nuclear energy."Chavez has built close diplomatic relations with Syria, Iran and other Middle Eastern countries while severing Venezuela's ties to Israel. Last year, the socialist leader visited Syria, where he called Israel an imperialist nation that annihilates its neighbors and accused its government of doing Washington's bidding by trying to divide the Middle East.Following his meeting with Chavez, Assad is slated to travel to Cuba, Brazil and Argentina.
U.S. reports massive bust
of drug traffickers there
By the A.M. Costa Rica wire services
U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder announced Thursday that 2,266 people have been arrested in the United States as part of a 22-month investigation targeting Mexican drug traffickers. The announcement of what he called the most extensive and successful law enforcement effort to date targeting the cartels comes as Mexico voices concern about immigration-related issues with the United States.
Flanked by top officials from the Drug Enforcement Administration and the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Holder announced the success of the inter-agency cross-border investigation, called Project Deliverance.
In addition to the many arrests, Holder said the probe resulted in the seizure of more than $150 million in U.S. currency. He said large amounts of drugs, 2.5 tons of cocaine, 69 tons of marijuana, and more than a ton of methamphetamine and heroin, were seized, along with hundreds of weapons and vehicles.
Holder said the operation will impede the drug cartels as well as the ability of traffickers to move drugs into the United States.
"This operation has struck a very significant blow against the cartels," he said. "But make no mistake, we know that as successful as this operation was, it was just one battle in what is an ongoing war."
The United States and Mexico have intensified efforts to fight the drug traffickers who have extensive operations in the United States. In Mexico, thousands of people have been killed in recent years in drug-related violence.
But at the same time, Mexico is demanding answers from the United States about the death of a Mexican teenager, who was killed this week when U.S. Border Patrol agents responded to a report that illegal immigrants were being smuggled across the border into Texas.
U.S. officials say that as agents detained two suspected illegal immigrants on the U.S. side of the border, other individuals ran back into Mexico and began hurling stones. The FBI says a Border Patrol agent told them to stop, but they continued. It says a border agent fired his weapon several times, killing the teenager.
Mexico condemns the action and is demanding a thorough investigation. Roberto Rodriguez Hernandez, the Mexican consul general in El Paso, Texas, says it appears that a disproportionate use of lethal force was used in the incident.
The teenager's death comes as U.S. officials investigate the recent death in San Diego, California of an illegal Mexican immigrant who was in Border Patrol custody and died after he was shot with a stun gun and struck with a baton while resisting the agents who were trying to deport him.
Press group criticizes
libel award in Panamá
Special to A.M. Costa Rica
A hemispheric press group Monday criticized a highly surprising court decision against Panamanian newspaper La Prensa that ordered payment of $300,000 in damages to a former public prosecutor for libel after it published official reports on her wrongdoing while in office.
The second civil circuit court Judge Miriam Cheng de Aguilar ordered La Prensa’s publishing company to pay the damages to public prosecutor Argentina Barrera for moral damages, arising from the publication Aug. 30, 2005, of two articles titled “Attorney General’s Office Continues on the Trail of Corruption” and “For Lack of Ethics Another Prosecutor is Fired.” The reports referred to the content of official press releases issued by the attorney general’s office.
Alejandro Aguirre, editor of the Miami, Florida, Spanish-language newspaper Diario Las Américas, called the court ruling highly surprising because, he said, “the risk here is that a dangerous legal precedent is being set which makes the news media and journalists responsible for official information that originates from government sources.” Aguirre added, “This is a restriction and a message of censorship not only to the press and official sources but to the right that every citizen has to access official information.” He is president of the press organization, the Inter American Press Association.
The attorney general’s press release explained that Barrera was dismissed by the federal agency for “lack of ethics,” together with other legal officers whose names were also mentioned in the report published by the newspaper. In addition to quoting the press release, La Prensa’s articles included statements made by Barrera who was reinstated in 2008 on a ruling by the Supreme Court that also ordered she be paid her suspended salary.
La Prensa’s editor, Fernando Berguido, said he would appeal the court order which also includes payment of costs amounting to $50,000.
Costa Rica inaugurates new President Chinchilla
By MARIANELA JIMENEZ, Associated Press Writer Marianela Jimenez, Associated Press
SAN JOSE, Costa Rica – Adios, peace prize winner. Hola, first female president.
Costa Rica inaugurated Laura Chinchilla as its first woman leader on Saturday, replacing Nobel laureate Oscar Arias with his former vice president and protege.
Chinchilla promised to rule with "humility, honesty and firmness" and said she'll pursue the same economic policies that recently brought the country into a trade pact with the U.S. and opened commerce with China.
Elected in a landslide, Chinchilla has also pledged new protections for the pristine parks and reserves that make this Central American nation first in the world for land preservation.
"We're teaming up for a safer Costa Rica," she said, explaining that a safe country offers a good education, health care, decent housing, care for children and seniors, a prosperous and competitive economy and green, clean industry.
The fifth Latin American woman to be elected president, Chinchilla takes office in a decent economic climate despite the world economic crisis, thanks to policies enacted by Arias that helped insulate Costa Rica.
Chinchilla, a 51-year-old Georgetown University graduate, is a social conservative who opposes abortion and gay marriage. She appealed both to Costa Ricans seeking a fresh face and those reluctant to risk the unknown.
Her inauguration was attended by dignitaries including the presidents of Mexico, Colombia, Ecuador and Georgia. She hugged and kissed her husband, parents and 14-year-old son during the ceremony. Then she hugged Arias, a popular leader who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1987 for his work to end civil wars in several Central American countries.
Arias served as president from 1986 to 1990, and again from 2006 to 2010, boosting tourism and eco-development. During his tenure, Costa Rica became the most visited country in Central America, with a $2.2 billion tourism industry, and Arias has pushed eco-tourism, environmentally friendly development and improved trade relations.
In 2007, he set a goal for his country to be the first carbon-neutral country in the world by 2021, a goal Chinchilla supports. And in recent months, he attempted to mediate between Honduran leaders during a coup. Chinchilla says she wants to help Honduran President Porfirio Lobo, elected in the fall, to repair international relations damaged during the coup.
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CARACAS, Venezuela – Venezuelan police have arrested a man on suspicion of trying to incite the assassination of President Hugo Chavez.
Justice Minister Tareck El Aissami says the 28-year-old was detained Thursday in the southwestern city of El Vigia after a weeklong investigation. The man's identity has not been released.
El Aissami says the man has traveled frequently to Colombia and police found messages on his computers alluding to a plot to kill Chavez involving Colombia's outlawed right-wing paramilitary groups.
Tensions are strained between Colombia's conservative government and Chavez's socialist administration.
Venezuelan authorities have claimed numerous purported plots against Chavez in recent years, but none have led to arrests.
My trip to a Panamanian whorehouse
by Don Reilly
On the northeast Pacific coast of Panama lies a sprawling hamlet called Puerto Armuelles. In 1981 this little hamlet was experiencing its own little boom times and that boom was especially felt in the local house of prostitution. This is the story of my trip to that whorehouse and my unusual encounter there. This is not a story about sex but it contains elements of desperation within another young soul that reached across from another culture and touched me.
You had to go through Puerto Armuelles from the Pan-American Highway to reach the oil terminal built in the 70s for transferring Alaskan crude from super tankers to small tankers that could fit through the Panama Canal. Now it was 1981 and the sleepy fishing villages and banana plantations were getting a major invasion by an American construction company building a new pipeline from the Pacific terminal to a new terminal on the Atlantic coast. This allowed the oil to cross the isthmus via pipeline and avoid the canal and small ship transfers completely.
A large camp to house and feed expats and local hires was constructed midway from Puerto Armuelles to the Pan-American highway, relatively close to the Costa Rican border. The locals formed huge lines in David for a chance to earn 50 to 75 cents an hour. Big American money and influence had come to a Third World economy in a big way. David became the headquarters for the project offices and support facilities. There were no dock facilities for large equipment in the Puerto Armuelles area, so the first construction was to move a hill into the water to form a 300-foot-long ramp into water deep enough for unloading the barge of equipment sent from the United States.
I had the position of pipeline field engineer for Morrison-Knudsen, the Boise, Idaho firm that had a $300 million turnkey (design-build-startup) contract for the new pipeline, pump stations and terminal facilities. My survey crew of Panamanians laid out the first of four camps to eventually be built along the pipeline route and after quick erection of the Acco prefabricated housing units, we moved into our new homes. I soon learned the advantages of being a blondish, white guy with hazel eyes, in the David night spots. Nearly everyone had black hair and brown eyes. That would have been a nice advantage on it’s own, but being American with the proverbial ticket to the USA made a shy, awkward young man from the states, appear very different in Chiriqui province.
Like many of the Americans, I didn’t fight it and probably enjoyed it a little too much. The word "vamonos!" --- Spanish for “Let’s go” --- was like magic to me. I used it all the time with girls I had barely met in the clubs and bars around David. I usually proceeded it with “Tu es muy bonita,” poor Spanish for “You are very pretty.” It was like a silly left and right that seemed to work all too often. Maybe it did not matter what the words were because many of the young ladies in the David area wanted to meet the Gringo guys. The Tigre-Mono night club became a magnet for the Americans and the girls that wanted to meet them. Norma would correct me when I called them “señoritas.” “No,” she would say, “mojares.” I couldn’t find it in the Spanish dictionary but I knew what she was getting at.
Norma was one of the Panamanian young ladies working in our camp cafeteria and she became my steady girl. She was the prettiest girl working at the hotel restaurant in David where we first met. When it was time to move from the hotel to the first camp, Norma sprung on me the surprise that she was going too, to work in the camp cafeteria. We were together until the pipeline was built and I left Panama with her crying at the airport in David. She probably does not know I left a large piece of my heart with her. I still love Norma to this day.
All this is background to lend veracity to my claim of the events at the whorehouse. Paying women to have sex with me at a Panamanian brothel was the last thing I wanted, or needed.
So, what was I doing there?
Brothels in Panama were legal and strictly controlled and taxed. The women were required to have regular medical exams. The Puerto Armuelles whorehouse was like many nondescript one story, masonry houses, with tin roofs on the main drive through town. The big difference was this house had a large open covered porch area that sat on the low side of the road, perfect for viewing from vehicles traveling on the road. The girls were famous for flashing the passing truck drivers to lure them in, something I never witnessed. Now came the influx of hundreds of pipeline constructors from places like Texas and Oklahoma as well as many more Panamanians from other areas of the country. All were traveling every day to the pipeline work down past the local whorehouse and its appealing porch scenery. These men were living single in a camp with no satellite TV and making a lot of money. There were ample stories going around camp about the exploits of some of the pipeliners at this nearby pleasure establishment. In short order, this Puerto Armuelles house of pleasure became very profitable and needed a much newer, larger building with a large room for bands and dancing. What would one expect them to do when they moved into the new house but throw a grand party for their beloved pipeline workers who had brought so much prosperity?
Everyone was invited and there would be live music and free drinks. They had it on a Friday night, perhaps not realizing that, like all overseas projects, we worked six tens (six days at 10 hours per day). Saturday was another 10 hour day but most of my Panamanian crew, all married men except one, and I agreed that we should go to the party. After all, how can any construction worker turn down free beer? What happened there almost 30 years ago reverberates still in my memory as if it happened yesterday.
The Party
A Panamanian whorehouse pretty much looks like a house except bigger. The salsa band was playing away in the big main room. The lights were kind of low and on the far end of the room a bartender was giving out beer and drinks. I was absolutely shocked at what was going on in the room. I had heard stories but I wasn’t prepared for this. I am not sure I can describe it adequately... but nothing was happening. I felt like I had just dropped into a junior high dance where all the pre-teens are standing around the perimeter of the gym floor looking at each other. The men and women were standing around the perimeter of the room like that in little groups. I had kind of imagined that the working women would be scantily clad and behaving in a naughty fashion at this big party. They were not and it was just as well. Most looked rather aged, and hardened. Panamanians in this area were demure in nature and even here the ladies were dressed conservatively and acting rather shyly except a couple dancing with each other and laughing. Considering the rumors, I was also expecting to see many of the American pipeliners here. They were a hard drinking, hard working group of men. I didn’t recognize any of the few Gringos in the room. The great majority of men in the room were Panamanians. It goes to show how rumors grow and cause a completely false outlook. Somewhere along the line a very small number of the Americans may have done something wild at this house but the rumors made it multiply. This house was experiencing a boom mostly from all the Panamanians workers we had brought to the area. That made sense considering the available night life for Americans at places like the Tigre-Mono.
As I was working on my second Cerveza De Panama and watching the two girls dance to the salsa music, one of the younger women (maybe 20 years old) was milling around near me. So, I started talking to her in my primitive Spanish. Two lines I knew well were “Que Paso” (what’s happening) and, of course, “How are you.” She responded with standard fare. When I drink beer, I like to smoke, just not enough to carry cigarettes around. I asked her if she had a cigarette. She looked at me and said in Spanish, “Yes, come here” or something similar. I wasn’t sure where she was leading me, but thought maybe she was taking me to the bartender to buy a very expensive pack of cigarettes. She went past the bartender and through the side door with me trailing behind her. In the dimly lit hallway she opened a door to a small bedroom and said she had them in here (as best I could understand Spanish at the time). This room may have been where she worked her trade but it was also where she lived. There were clothes hanging up in the corner, posters, books, cassette tapes, boom box and other knick knacks like you would expect in any teenager's room.
She was wearing jean shorts and a short sleeved shirt with a collar, nothing revealing. She had a kind and sensitive manner about her. In the dim light she searched through something on the dresser and made an “Ah-Ha” sound as she pulled out a marijuana cigarette and pushed it toward me. I laughed and said that I was thinking more of something like a Marlboro. She gave a sheepish smile and sure enough, she had a pack of Marlboro’s in her stash. Before she gave me a cigarette she asked what kind of music I liked as she motioned toward her large box of cassettes.
I had purchased a tape deck at the border store and installed it in the suburban so we could listen to music on the long drives. The company vehicles did not have radios. One of the cassette tapes I brought from the US was Kenny Rogers Greatest Hits. The first time I played it with my survey crew in the vehicle, it seemed like I had started a riot. They all started jabbering real loud and too fast for me to understand. They grabbed the Kenny Rogers tape box and passed it around like it was an alien object. Louis was my lead surveyor who could speak a little English and usually sat in front with me. I asked him what was going on. He said:
“Don, Kenny Rogers is Spanish, we no know he could sing in English.” I told my crew they were “loco,” and that Kenny Rogers was a Gringo from the Estados Unidos! I learned from them that Kenny Rogers had released his greatest hits in a Spanish version and it was a pretty big hit in these parts. I latter bought the Spanish version at the border store and was amazed at how good old Kenny sounded in Spanish.
Considering that experience with my crew, I responded to the young girl on her bed: “Do you have any Kenny Rogers?” I started another riot of sorts. She jumped up on her bed with great excitement and a huge smile, saying in Spanish “I love Kenny Rogers!” as she slammed the Kenny Rogers Greatest Hits tape into her boom box above her head board. While Kenny Rogers was singing The Gambler in Spanish, my young prostitute friend finally lit my Marlboro. I smoked the cigarette and drank my beer as we listened to Kenny. I made a point not to touch her at any time. Not because I didn’t like her, but I knew my own weaknesses and I did not want to do this. Absolute poverty that most Americans cannot comprehend pushes young girls in the Third World to work in these places. I had been told that very poor families would drop their girls off at houses like this because they couldn’t afford to take care of them. Touching her even slightly could easily have sucked me in. Fortunately, she responded in kind and did not make any overtures to touch me. After a little more chit-chat, (“I’m a field engineer working on the pipeline,” etc.) the empty beer gave a good excuse to say “necesito regreso” or something similar. My crew was still standing where I had left them. The girl followed me back to our position near the guys. They looked terribly bored and I asked if they were ready to go. I turned to the girl and strung together a couple of the Spanish goodbye phrases that I knew and threw in one meaning: “It was a pleasure to meet you.” She sort of nodded her head and I turned to walk away when all hell seem to break loose. As I had turned away, she dropped to the floor and wrapped herself around my leg closest to her, all the while crying and sobbing profusely and crying out in Spanish. It was much too fast for me to comprehend. She had both arms wrapped around my leg like she was holding on for dear life. She was not slowing down after the first minute --- sobbing and speaking fast and loud. I thought of the possibility that this was some strange Panamanian whorehouse custom but as I looked into the faces of my crew, with their eyes bulging and their mouths wide open, I knew this was not something they had seen before.
I didn’t want to drag her along the floor. At first everyone in the room, even the other girls, just stood motionless and watched. I said to Louis: “Que Paso?” I thought maybe he could at least understand what she was saying and tell me. His response was only: “No Se” (I don’t know).
After what seemed like an eternity, a couple of the women came running over. The two of them, pried her off my leg and got her off the floor. She never stopped crying as they escorted her back through the doorway.
I was too young to understand what had happened. I wanted to get out of there and as we were walking to the Suburban, I kept telling the guys I didn’t understand (“no comprende”) what happened to her and that I did not have “sexo” with her. Louis sat in the passenger side on the drive back to camp and I said to him softly in English: “Do the guys believe me that I didn’t screw that girl?” “NO Don. They think you f--ked her real good.” The idea that my crew thought I screwed that girl so good that she cried for me not to leave made me smile, but it was fleeting as my thoughts returned to the girl. It was ironic that it was the opposite of what they thought. The last thing a young girl in a whorehouse needs is another good screw. They didn’t understand that the reason she cried for me leaving was because I did not screw her. I gave her something more valuable which cost me nothing --- compassion and kindness without abuse or demands.
One question remains unanswered for me. I have been fulfilling the role of a care giver for disabled family members for a long time. Did that girl respond only to my kindness or did she sense something else that was too rare for her to relinquish --- someone that takes care of people instead of abusing them? I feel sad that I could not help her, but we at least touched each other’s souls across a deep canyon of cultural differences for a brief instant in time.
CARACAS, Venezuela – Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez urged thousands of gun-toting militia troops Tuesday to be ready to fight for his socialist government, telling them that opponents may be plotting to oust or kill him.
Chavez rallied the civilian militia at an outdoor speech while marking the anniversary of a failed 2002 coup against him. Organizers estimated about 35,000 militia members in the crowd, which filled a downtown avenue in Caracas.
The president said his opponents would be defeated if they tried another coup, and he vowed to emerge again with a dominant majority in the National Assembly after September elections.
Without giving details, Chavez told the crowd that he believes some people in Venezuela are conspiring to assassinate him.
"If they were to do it ... you know what you would have to do. Simply take all power in Venezuela, absolutely all, sweep away the bourgeoisie from all political and economic spaces, deepen the revolution," he said.
He held aloft a sword that once belonged to the 19th century independence hero Simon Bolivar — the inspiration of Chavez's socialist Bolivarian Revolution movement — as he administered an oath to members of the Bolivarian Militia.
Chavez declared April 13 to be the "Day of the Bolivarian Militia," a national day of celebration.
He called the militia, which he created, a key force to help defend the country against any threat, whether foreign or domestic.
"You should be ready to take up the arms you have there at any time and go out to give your lives, if you have to, for the Bolivarian Revolution!" he thundered.
Confetti floated through the air after Chavez arrived in a jeep waving to the crowd.
The former paratrooper officer, who is up for re-election in 2012, has recently seen his popularity slip as his government copes with a shrinking economy, racing inflation and electricity shortages.
Chavez thrives on confrontation and has repeatedly accused his opponents of trying to overthrow or kill him.
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez say no more Freedom of the Press
By GONZALO SOLANO, Associated Press
QUITO, Ecuador – Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez on Friday defended the arrest of a major TV channel owner, calling him a criminal and denying the government is carrying out an assault on press freedom.
The back-to-back arrests this week of two government opponents — including the owner of Venezuela's only remaining anti-Chavez TV channel — have drawn accusations that Chavez is growing increasingly intolerant and authoritarian as his popular support has slipped.
Opposition leaders and human rights groups condemned Thursday's arrest of Globovision's owner Guillermo Zuloaga, who was detained at an airport and released hours later after a judge issued an order barring him from leaving the country.
Zuloaga is accused of spreading false information and insulting the president at an Inter American Press Association meeting in Aruba last weekend, Attorney General Luisa Ortega said.
"A Venezuelan judge comes along and orders the detention of a criminal in Venezuela who owns a media outlet," Chavez said during a visit to Ecuador. "And then they attack the government of Venezuela ... for attacking press freedom, for attacking journalists and the news media — what cynicism. It's the cynicism of the (U.S.) empire."
Chavez also took a verbal jab at U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, accusing her of being out of touch and saying she seems more and more like her predecessor, Condoleezza Rice.
"She still considers herself the imperial lady. She is behind the times," Chavez said. "She still thinks the United States is the owner of this continent."
His complaints were echoed by Ecuadorean President Rafael Correa, who said his government would prepare its own report on human rights in the United States.
The State Department has said harassment and intimidation of the opposition and the media are on the rise in Venezuela.
Clinton said earlier this month during a Latin American tour that Chavez's government is limiting freedom and should restore "full democracy," and State Department spokesman Mark Toner has expressed concern about Monday's arrest of opposition politician Oswaldo Alvarez Paz.
Alvarez Paz was charged with conspiracy, spreading false information and publicly inciting crime after remarking that Venezuela has turned into a haven for drug traffickers, among other accusations.
U.S. criticism of Alvarez Paz's arrest prompted a diplomatic protest by Foreign Minister Nicolas Maduro, who met with U.S. Ambassador Patrick Duddy, the state-run Bolivarian News Agency said Thursday.
The two arrests were similar in that both men made remarks that authorities deemed false and offensive.
The Inter American Press Association said Zuloaga spoke in response to a group of pro-Chavez journalists who accused him of backing a failed coup against Chavez in 2002. He denied the charge and recounted his version of events, according to a transcript of the appearance.
"We are also against what happened back then because if it had been done right perhaps we would have a different Venezuela today," Zuloaga said.
He accused Chavez of ordering security forces to open fire on a protest march that was headed toward the presidential palace. Chavez maintains opponents were behind the bloodshed that preceded the short-lived coup.
Zuloaga also accused the government of limiting free speech, saying: "You cannot talk about true freedom of expression when a government uses its power to repress media, to shut down media."
Globovision has been the only stridently anti-Chavez channel on the air since another opposition channel, RCTV, was forced off cable and satellite TV in January.
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Associated Press Writer Ian James in Caracas, Venezuela, contributed to this report
Donald Trump and Panama
by Tim Rodgers
Donald Trump has never been accused of subtlety. So there is nothing retiring about the celebrity real-estate magnate's venture into Panama. His 70-floor sail-shaped Trump Ocean Club, under construction in Panama City's exclusive Punta Pacifica district, will be the largest and most expensive building ever built south of the Rio Grande. "Nothing like this has ever been attempted in Latin America," says head developer Roger Khafif, whose K Group construction firm is handling the $400 million project. "When you think of Sydney you think of the Opera House, when think of Paris you think of the Eiffel Tower, and when you think of Panama, you are going to think of this building."
The 1,080-unit building's construction has now reached the 62nd floor and is scheduled to be inaugurated by the end of the year, complete with luxury condos, a five-star hotel, six restaurants, a Las Vegas-style casino and a private yacht club on the nearby Isla Saboga. The project is 10-to-20 times more expensive than that of any other skyscraper in Panama City. It will be 20% bigger than the AOL-Time Warner building in New York City, Khafif says.
Khafif says Trump's name will help the country's image makeover. "Before it was Panama and Noriega," he explains, referring to Manuel Noriega, the notorious general who ruled the country from 1983 to 1989. "But now it will be Panama and Trump." Or at least he hopes so. "We bet $400 million on it," Khafif says. If Khafif sounds proprietary about something with Trump's name on it, it's because the project was his idea in the first place. When the Colombian-born developer came up with the plans for the building in 2005, amid Panama City's real-estate explosion, he realized it was too big to be financed without a major-league brand name. Khafif knew that Trump had been in Panama in 2003 for the Miss Universe Pageant, so he asked a mutual friend to set up a meeting in New York. "I know the guy has an ego and likes pretty things and, boom, Panama is exploding. So baby, if there's any right time, this is the right time," Khafif recalls, explaining the spirit in which he approached Trump.
The meeting happened in 2005 and Khafif said he was surprised to learn how much homework Trump had done beforehand. "He had done a lot of due diligence. That's what let me walk through that door; it's not easy to walk through that door," Khafif says. Trump "already knew that the country was booming," but "hates to fly or leave the country." The day after the meeting, Khafif said he received an early morning phone call. "I hear a voice that sounded like Trump, but I thought it was friend who can imitate voices. Two minutes later I realized I was talking to the real thing and I had to apologize," admitted Khafif, who speaks in a quick and seamless flow between Spanish and English, oftentimes switching languages several times in the same sentence. Trump, perhaps accustomed to telling people it's him and not an impersonator on the phone, told Roger, "I love it and I am going to send Ivanka down."
Ivanka is Trump's daughter by his ex-wife Ivana. The young woman is now the company's executive vice president of development & acquisitions, and keen on bringing a more global vision to the family business. The next week, Ivanka visited Panama City and liked what she saw. "Panama is a spectacular, thriving country, changing by the day," Ivanka told TIME in an email. "It's been amazing for me to see the growth of Panama City first hand." "She's a very intelligent young woman," Khafif says. "Sometimes I think she's even smarter than her dad about certain things." The contract was signed and the project was launched in New York City in 2006 — the same day authorities back in the Latin American nation announced a dramatic $5.2 billion expansion of the Panama Canal.
More expensive than Miami real estate and priced three-to-eight times higher than property in the rest of the Panamanian market, the Trump Ocean Club is partially financed by a $230 million bond offering from Bear Sterns. That bond is now being handled by JP Morgan following the collapse of Bear Sterns in the 2008 global financial crisis. "Without Trump, we would have lost our shirt," Khafif admits. Since then, more than 2,000 construction workers add a new floor each week, silencing many of the earlier skeptics who claimed the project would never get off the ground.
But some doubts remain. Eric Jackson, owner of the English-language Panama News thinks that many of buyers in the Trump Ocean Club, which claims it is 90% sold, could be speculators rather than future tenants. "You go around Panama City and look at these new 'sold out' luxury towers at about 8 p.m. and there are hardly any lights on in them," Jackson says. Samuel Taliaferro of the PrimaPanama investment blog agrees. "I have received emails from a number of speculators who never intended on taking possession."
Others worry the Trump Ocean Club will only contribute to what they see as the city's coming urban-planning disaster. Marco Gandasegui Jr., a University of Panama professor with the Center for Latin American Studies, says many Panamanians are "convinced Panama City's skyline gives us a better image," but warns the building spree is putting an enormous strain on the city's infrastructure. "The Trump Ocean Club is just another example of the chaotic situation Panama City finds itself today," Gandasegui said. "It is squeezed into a tiny dead-end street where it will share space with another dozen similar buildings. It will be part of a permanent traffic jam created by its designers." (Indeed, in a bid that may trump Trump, a project may soon be underway to build Los Faros, an 85-floor gargantua flanked by two 75-story towers.)
But realtors say Panama is just the type of image-crazed country where people will put up with traffic problems in order to boast "Trump" as their address. Kent Davis, owner of real estate agency Panama Equity, says that even the neighbors are excited about Trump. "It's not like having Wal-Mart move in and force out the competition. People are psyched to have Trump in the neighborhood. I even sold a property in a nearby building because the buyer was excited about using the Trump facilities."
Hugo Chavez Wants to Block internet in Venezuela like China and Iran
(Reuters) - Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez, who is criticized by media freedom groups, called on Saturday for regulation of the Internet and singled out a website that he said falsely reported the murder of one of his ministers.
Media
"The Internet cannot be something open where anything is said and done. Every country has to apply its own rules and norms," Chavez said. He cited German Chancellor Angel Merkel as having expressed a similar sentiment recently.
Chavez is angry with Venezuelan political opinion and gossip website Noticierodigital, which he said had falsely written that Diosdado Cabello, a senior minister and close aide, had been assassinated. The president said the story remained on the site for two days.
"We have to act. We are going to ask the attorney general for help, because this is a crime. I have information that this page periodically publishes stories calling for a coup d'etat. That cannot be permitted."
Social networking web sites like Twitter and Facebook are very popular among Venezuela's opposition movements to organize protests against the government. Chavez has complained that people use such sites to spread unfounded rumors.
Many opponents fear Chavez plans to emulate the government oversight of the Web used by allies Cuba, China and Iran, but the socialist leader has not given any sign that he is planning such a move.
In 2007 Chavez refused to renew the license for television station RCTV, which is now battling to survive as a cable-only operator.
The government has also put pressure on opposition TV network Globovision to soften its editorial line and last year closed dozens of radio stations for administrative breaches.
Police cought bringing Colombian prostitutes from Panama to Costa Rica
By the A.M. Costa Rica staff
Two Fuerza Pública officers are facing allegations that they helped smuggle Colombian women into the country.
The arrest of one policeman identified as Montoya Gómez was made by fellow officers at a control station in la Unión de Sabalito, said the Poder Judicial. Montoya was off duty but usually works at the control station himself, said the Ministerio de Gobernación, Policía y Seguridad Pública.
The ministry said Montoya was in a vehicle heading north from the border with Panamá when he was pulled over. He and the two women passengers fled into the brush but were captured, officers said.
Later, the Poder Judicial said that a second officer, identified by the last names of Mora Otoya was detained with the allegation that he was the one who actually helped the two women cross the border. The woman carried passports that did not have the appropriate entry stamps, said the Poder Judicial.
Two women also were detained. They were identified by the last names of Muñoz González and Fonseca Moya. They are facing allegations of assisting in the trafficking of persons.
The two Colombian women were identified by the last names of Vargas Olarte and Vásquez Zapata, said the ministry.
Hookers being recruited as intelligence operatives
By the A.M. Costa Rica staff
The statement may seem very obvious, but customers of prostitutes should not provide a lot of personal information.
Some of San José's more expensive call girls report that they have been approached by individuals they think are Mexican with offers to purchase information regarding their customers.
In México, officials have discovered that the Zeta narco military force has made offers of from $400 to $800 to working women and men for information that may be useful in a crime. The narcos are interested in infiltrating public institutions, finding out which potential kidnap victim has ready money and a whole list of personal information on large groups of persons.
Costa Rican prostitutes say that similar efforts to obtain personal information have been made here.
Mostly unknown to the sex tourists who visit some of the local hotels is another tier of prostitutes who are involved with the movers and shakers of Costa Rican society. It is at this level that attempts have been made to obtain information
No one has admitted accepting the offers, and one individual said that $400 to $800 is not enough to destroy her business. She is one of those women who works from noon until 8 p.m. in places where the average expat cannot go. Patrons are mostly top businessmen, diplomats, judges and politicians. Discretion is the rule.
Sought are a whole list of information ranging from locations of bank accounts to the names of minor children. The questioners also are interested in the names of corporations in which the individual may have an interest. In addition to pillow talk, the questioners most certainly have taken advantage of the country's public record system that lists corporate ownership, vehicle titles, deeds and family relationships.
Some of the women who have been approached said that the volume of information that they receive is incredible because frequently their customers either simply want to talk or seek to feed their ego.
One woman said that she believed similar offers are being made to domestic employees who are situated much better to provide floor plans of homes and hourly schedules.
Martinelli meets with presidents of Costa Rica and Mexico
la prensa
President Martinelli, along with 29 other heads of State, are gathered in Cancun for a regional summit.
President of the Republic, Ricardo Martinelli, is scheduled to meet with President of Costa Rica, Oscar Arias, and President of Mexico, Felipe Calderón during his current mission to Cancun to attend the “Latin America and Caribbean Summit of Unity."
One of the objectives of this mission is the signing of an agreement with Mexico to avoid double taxation; an action that forms part of the strategies being developed by the Panamanian government to extricate the country from "the list of uncooperative countries with regards to tax matters.”
During the Summit, which approximately 30 Heads of State are attending, Martinelli, accompanied by Vice-President and Foreign Minister, Juan Carlos Varela, is expected to hold bilateral meetings with his Central American counterparts.
The purpose of these meetings is to join forces to promote the incorporation of Panama into the process of negotiating an Association Agreement between Central American countries and the European Union.
Martinelli is also expected to support efforts being made to rebuild Haiti, as well as to discuss infrastructure investment and regional trade promotion with his counterparts.
Fears expressed that Colombian war is spilling into Panamá
By the A.M. Costa Rica staff
The policies of the conservative Martinelli administration are raising fears that Panamá may become more deeply involved in the Colombian war against the Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia.
A shootout took place Jan. 27 between Panamanian forces and a small group of the Marxist guerrillas, according to The Panamá News. Three members of the Fuerzas Armadas died, and two were captured, the newspaper said.
The location was said to be on the banks of the Tuira River not far from Boca de Cupe in the Darién Province of eastern Panamá.
The newspaper said that this was at least the third shootout with the Colombian rebel group in the last year. Panamanian sources have been selective in giving information on the run-in, but President Álvaro Uribe in Colombia said that Panamanian forces bombarded a rebel camp in Panamá, said the newspaper, citing reports from El Espectador in Colombia.
Concerns about Panama's involvement in Colombia's civil conflict are being expressed in some of the daily newspapers, said The Panama News. A more recent run-in off the Darien coast may have been with rebels or ordinary criminals.
The area along the Colombian border with Panamá is a lawless one, but the Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias
have used the area to purchase supplies and to hide from Colombian government forces.
"Other signs of the Martinelli administration's position in the Colombian internal conflict are less ambiguous: the Panamanian police wanted posters for FARC leaders posted around Darien communities near the border," wrote Eric Jackson, editor of The Panamá News. "Although Colombia's right-wing paramilitaries have attacked Panama and burned villages, assassinated public officials and kidnapped and murdered fleeing Colombians in the course of these attacks, there are no similar posters for the perpetrators of these acts."
Jackson also said in his newspaper that U.S. mercenaries are active in the region.
"If Panama is going to go to war with FARC to the extent that FARC responds in kind, even if they are depleted by defeats in their war with government forces in Colombia, the guerrillas probably outmatch any fighting force of Panama's," said Jackson. "They probably also have the funds to bribe key Panamanian security forces."
Ricardo Martinelli took office July 1 after a campaign that promised a crackdown on crime and corruption. He has a U.S. military school education as well as a conservative political orientation, so support for Uribe's war would not be a surprise. However, in Costa Rica, politicians and others are sure to be troubled by an expansion of the four-decade-old Colombian insurgency into Panamá.
Panamá trade treaty stalled
Dodd tells officials there
By the A.M. Costa Rica staff
There is little chance that the U.S. Congress will pass the Panamá free trade treaty, according to U.S. Sen. Christopher Dodd, who is touring Central American countries with Sen. Bob Corker, according to The Panamá News. Dodd, who will not be seeking re-electionn November after three decades in the Senate, met with Juan Carlos Varela, Panama's foreign minister.
Dodd told Varela that the weak rule of law in Panama as one of the reasons the agreement will not be confirmed, said the newspaper. The treaty was signed in 2006 and has the support of President Barack Obama and the Ricardo Martinelli administration in Panamá.
Dodd and Corker also met Friday with President Óscar Arias Sánchez and president-elect Laura Chinchilla at the Arias home in Rohrmoser. There was no significant announcement after that meeting. The two senators also are visiting Honduras, El Salvador and Nicaragua on their trip.
Panama vows to defend border area following clash
PANAMA CITY – The government of Panama says it will defend its territory following the wounding of a police officer during a clash between Panamanian police and armed men along the border with Colombia.
The Foreign Ministry says the government will not allow any part of Panama to be used by groups for drug trafficking or other illicit activities.
Sunday's statement does not identify the group that attacked a government patrol boat Saturday. But the wording suggests they may have been related to Colombian cocaine traffickers or rebels who participate in the trade.
A similar border clash in January resulted in the deaths of three Colombian rebels.
Panama Visitors Guide
Welcomes
G.S.L. Real Estate Panama
G.S.L. Real Estate Panama Web-Site
Republic of Panama
Welcome to GSL Worldwide, the Real Estate site for properties throughout the whole of Panama. GSL provides a first class service which is based entirely on customer satisfaction for those wishing to rent or purchase Real Estate within Panama. We have connections with all major construction companies and developers in Panama to enable us to locate the property that suits both your budget, and your preference. There is so much to choose from in the cosmopolitan city of Panama, including first class restaurants and bars for those of you who prefer the hustle and bustle of city life. For those who prefer the quieter lifestyle of secluded beaches and mountain locations and prefer to be outside the city, there is also a great deal to choose from. Please select from the menu on the left hand side in order to view the properties on offer and feel free to contact us any time for further advice or just a chat. We have both English and Spanish speaking professionals who are able to assist you in every aspect of moving or retiring to Panama.
•
Our offices are situated at Local #3, Via Espana, close to many of the hotels. Please call in Monday to Friday between 8.30am and 6.00pm or Saturday between 9.00am and 2.00pm, or telephone and arrange for us to meet you at your hotel. We are fully licensed Realtors and will take you through the process of completing all the paperwork for renting a property, or guide you through the laws and regulations of purchasing property. When dealing with GSL you will have peace of mind, knowing that you can relax and enjoy the vibrant atmosphere that Panama has to offer, with the certainty that all legal aspects of your property deal have been completed in an exacting manner.
• Anyone moving to a new country is aware that the assistance of local professionals can be invaluable. It is in our interest to make sure that every aspect of your property purchase or rental is carried out with the utmost professionalism and friendly service that we are renowned for.
• All legal aspects of renting Real Estate in Panama are covered by a lease agreement between yourself and the vendor. All of this paperwork is completed by our own in-house lawyer and registered with the local governing authorities.
• When purchasing Real Estate in Panama it is always advisable to use the services of a fully qualified lawyer, who has the relevant experience. Here at GSL we are able to process all Real Estate transactions, setting up of Corporations and Foundations, and also handle all types of Immigration Visa's.
• Welcome to GSL Worldwide, the Real Estate site for properties throughout the whole of Panama. GSL provides a first class service which is based entirely on customer satisfaction for those wishing to rent or purchase Real Estate within Panama. We have connections with all major construction companies and developers in Panama to enable us to locate the property that suits both your budget, and your preference. There is so much to choose from in the cosmopolitan city of Panama, including first class restaurants and bars for those of you who prefer the hustle and bustle of city life. For those who prefer the quieter lifestyle of secluded beaches and mountain locations and prefer to be outside the city, there is also a great deal to choose from. Please select from the menu on the left hand side in order to view the properties on offer and feel free to contact us any time for further advice or just a chat. We have both English and Spanish speaking professionals who are able to assist you in every aspect of moving or retiring to Panama.
•
Our offices are situated at Local #3, Via Espana, close to many of the hotels. Please call in Monday to Friday between 8.30am and 6.00pm or Saturday between 9.00am and 2.00pm, or telephone and arrange for us to meet you at your hotel. We are fully licensed Realtors and will take you through the process of completing all the paperwork for renting a property, or guide you through the laws and regulations of purchasing property. When dealing with GSL you will have peace of mind, knowing that you can relax and enjoy the vibrant atmosphere that Panama has to offer, with the certainty that all legal aspects of your property deal have been completed in an exacting manner.
• Anyone moving to a new country is aware that the assistance of local professionals can be invaluable. It is in our interest to make sure that every aspect of your property purchase or rental is carried out with the utmost professionalism and friendly service that we are renowned for.
• All legal aspects of renting Real Estate in Panama are covered by a lease agreement between yourself and the vendor. All of this paperwork is completed by our own in-house lawyer and registered with the local governing authorities.
• When purchasing Real Estate in Panama it is always advisable to use the services of a fully qualified lawyer, who has the relevant experience. Here at GSL we are able to process all Real Estate transactions, setting up of Corporations and Foundations, and also handle all types of Immigration Visa's.
• Welcome to GSL Worldwide, the Real Estate site for properties throughout the whole of Panama. GSL provides a first class service which is based entirely on customer satisfaction for those wishing to rent or purchase Real Estate within Panama. We have connections with all major construction companies and developers in Panama to enable us to locate the property that suits both your budget, and your preference. There is so much to choose from in the cosmopolitan city of Panama, including first class restaurants and bars for those of you who prefer the hustle and bustle of city life. For those who prefer the quieter lifestyle of secluded beaches and mountain locations and prefer to be outside the city, there is also a great deal to choose from. Please select from the menu on the left hand side in order to view the properties on offer and feel free to contact us any time for further advice or just a chat. We have both English and Spanish speaking professionals who are able to assist you in every aspect of moving or retiring to Panama.
SAN JOSE, Costa Rica – Costa Ricans have elected their first woman president as the ruling party candidate won in a landslide after campaigning to continue free market policies in Central America's most stable nation.
With most of the votes from Sunday's election counted, Laura Chinchilla held a 22-point lead over her closest rival. Her 47 percent share of the vote was well beyond the 40 percent needed to avoid a run-off.
The 50-year-old protege of the current president, Nobel Peace Prize laureate Oscar Arias, promised to pursue the same economic policies that recently brought the country into a trade pact with the U.S. and opened commerce with China.
"Today we are making history," said Chinchilla, who will be the fifth Latin American woman to serve as president when she takes office in May. "The Costa Rican people have given me their confidence, and I will not betray it."
The closest contender, Otton Solis of the Citizens Action Party, got 25 percent of the votes. He and the other main rival, Libertarian Otto Guevara, quickly conceded defeat.
It was unclear, however, whether Chinchilla's National Liberation Party would gain a majority in congress.
Analyst Heather Berkman of the Eurasia Group said coalition building without a majority would likely delay or derail controversial fiscal reforms to shore up government finances and energy deregulation.
The third-place candidate, Guevara, congratulated Chinchilla as "our president," but he also pointed out the new political muscle of his tax-bashing Libertarian Movement Party. He won 21 percent of the vote.
Arias' economic policies helped insulate Costa Rica from the world economic crisis as he kept a high profile on the world stage as a negotiator in Honduras' political crisis after a coup deposed President Manuel Zelaya in June.
Critics of the Arias government, in which Chinchilla served as vice president, contended its policies catered to big developers to boost the economy at the cost of the nation's fragile ecosystems.
But most Costa Ricans were reluctant to shake up the status quo in a country with relatively high salaries, the longest life expectancy in Latin America, a thriving ecotourism industry and near-universal literacy.
Chinchilla, the mother of a teenage son, is a social conservative who opposes abortion and gay marriage. She appealed both to Costa Ricans seeking a fresh face and those reluctant to risk the unknown.
As a female president, she would follow an increasingly common trend in many Latin American countries: Nicaragua, Panama, Chile and Argentina have all elected women as presidents.
Alfredo Fernandez, 77, said he has always voted for the National Liberation Party, but this time his ballot was special.
"It is an honor to be able to have a woman president," he said.
Even Costa Ricans on the margins of society backed Chinchilla.
Heizel Arias, a 24-year-old single mother voted at a prison where she is serving an eight-year drug smuggling sentence.
"I voted for Laura Chinchilla because she has promised to fight for women," Arias said. "She was the only one who visited us and told us her plans and I believe in her."
Visit by Pope Benedict to Panama confirmed for 2013
Pope Benedict XVI will make an official visit to Panama to coincide with the celebration of the 500th anniversary of the discovery of the Pacific Ocean by Europeans in September 2013.
Confirmation was made on Wednesday by the Minister of the Presidency, Demetrius Papadimitriu, in a meeting with representatives of foreign and local press.
The pope received President Ricardo Martinelli at the papal summer residence of Castelgandolfo in September 2009. On that occasion, the Holy Father was invited by Martinelli to Panama for the celebration of the 500th anniversary of the sighting of the Pacific by Balboa.
The visit will coincide with Panama's planned hosting of the Central American Games.
The ProntoCash Financial MasterCard
Contributed by: Don Winner
The ProntoCash Financial MasterCard is not another Credit Card, Debit Card or Prepaid Card,
it is a revolutionary and unique Financial Card – it is like having your own private bank in your
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bills and so much more. Enjoy the privilege and benefits of owning a worldwide recognized
MasterCard® with first class service. You´ll be able to make purchases in more than 25 million
locations around the world; have access to hundreds of thousands ATMs around the world
providing the highest level of safety and convenience, eliminating the need to carry cash or
checks so your purchases will be more secure and fast. And the best thing about it is:
No annual or membership fees, no initial purchase cost, and no monthly management fees.
The
card holder manages and administrates his own ProntoCash Financial Card from MasterCard.
(more)
One of the most important and unique concepts of the ProntoCash Financial Card is the fact that the actual Card Holder controls his own card and account and he/she is the only one that has access or knowledge of PIN number and Password. The Card Holder also is the only one that monitors the account and administrates their money. The money is on the card and not in someone company´s access or account. The Card Holder loads the amount of money that they want to spend and/or use or can afford. The control is yours! You can reload the card at any time, 24 hours a day, 7 days of the week, as long as you have access to a computer, cell phone or telephone. More of the wonders you will experience with your ProntoCash Financial MasterCard, you won´t believe this…. Which ProntoCash Financial MasterCard is right for you? Meet our 7 phenomenal Cards:
The ProntoCash Financial Classic MasterCard for Private Card Holders is a revolutionary and unique MasterCard issued by ProntoCash, is perfect for any individual and/or family that leads a busy life style and needs to organize their financial output in a proper manner and without the expenses of other cards on the market.
The ProntoCash Financial Payroll MasterCard provides a unique and efficient concept to companies for paying salaries, vacations, bonuses and other remuneration to their employees. By using the ProntoCash Financial Payroll MasterCard, your company expenses and time invested in this procedure will decrease tremendously. No more checks to fill or time wasted in making long lines at the bank. Reducing the risk and exposure at getting the employees´ payroll money robbed before reaching the physical hands of the employees. With the use of the ProntoCash Financial Payroll MasterCard, employees will be able to withdraw cash, transfer money within seconds, purchase at any place in the world or by internet, pay bills and so much more without leaving his/her desk.
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The ProntoCash Financial Tourist MasterCard is perfect to use for a Tourist anywhere in the world. MasterCard® is one of the most appreciated and accepted means of payment, especially to purchase merchandise, restaurants and entertainment. The card is available in US Dollar, which is the most accepted currency in many countries; such as, China, Russia, Europe, etc. The ProntoCash Financial Tourist MasterCard is ideal for frequent travelers and can be loaded before travelling abroad, eliminating the need for Travelers Checks and/or carrying large amounts of local currency, creating a more secure environment for using funds abroad. However, the same Financial Card also has the capabilities of Multi Currencies for over 20 countries around the world presenting to the Card Holder a very unique and advantageous support for travelling. The exchange rates are the lowest in the banking industry and are as support for the ProntoCash Financial Card Holders around the world.
The ProntoCash Financial Travel´s MasterCard is an instant Money Card and a fantastic concept for use when traveling. The Travel´s Card is available, as a EURO Financial Card and a US Dollar Financial Card. All of the Financiera Pronto Cash Travel Money Financial Cards offer excellent exchange rates without the usual fees charged by Currency Exchange Outlets. The ProntoCash Financial Traveler´s MasterCard is a genuine MasterCard® with all the security features. The ProntoCash Financial Travel´s MasterCard is perfect for Tourist, Weekenders, Frequent Travelers and especially students traveling in various countries. The ProntoCash Financial Travel´s MasterCard can be loaded prior to traveling abroad. This eliminates the need for costly Travelers Checks and/ the danger of carrying large amounts of local currency, creating a more secure environment for spending your money abroad. The cards are loaded with funds at the lowest FX Currency rates prior to use and are accepted globally for merchant, internet purchases and/or to withdraw cash when needed from any ATM that bears either the ProntoCash and/or the MasterCard® symbol.
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To apply for any of the ProntoCash Financial MasterCard you must be at least 18 years old and either a resident or a Corporation domiciled and/or resident in the Republic of Panama. We will require confirmation concerning your personal information and your address in the Republic of Panama. We ask you to submit a copy of your Personal ID and/or Passport or Cedula (Government Issued Identity Card) and/or some documentary evidence to verify information about you. You will receive your ProntoCash Financial MasterCard within 7 days of application once your identify verification checks are successfully completed. You must sign the signature strip on the back of the ProntoCash Financial Card, as soon as it is received. You must activate your card, as soon as you have received your PIN, following the instructions on our Web Site. Remember that unlike other cards or Prepaid Cards; there is not any purchase cost for the ProntoCash Financial MasterCard. In fact there is no yearly membership cost or renewal cost nor a monthly service charge.
How To Reload Your ProntoCash Financial MasterCard - Using our online SpeedyCASH SOFTWARE from ProntoCash the Card Holder can Download our Free Software and then register your Debit/Credit Cards and/or Bank Accounts online and link this card to your ProntoCash Financial MasterCard. Once you have registered your card you can then load funds directly to your ProntoCash Financial Card from anywhere in the world. Other ways you can reload your ProntoCash Financial Card: Now you can share money with friends & family in more than 210 countries! The world of banking is changed now according to the amazing Financial Products of Financiera Pronto Cash S.A., licensed as a Financial Institution in the Republic of Panama since 2006 and a Principal Issuer Member of MasterCard® for Latin America and the Caribbean. There are now simple financial solutions for people that do not have bank accounts and do not need a bank account to share money; however, do have internet connection and a cell phone. With the ProntoCash SWIFTCASH Financial MasterCard you can now receive and/or share money with family and friends to over 210 countries without restrictions and instantly with the Global TeleNet software. Financiera Pronto Cash, S.A. has become partners with select and leading banks, processors, software creators and the prestige MasterCard; and created the SPEEDYCASH system to share and transmit money in order to provide a convenient, secure, and cost-effective means of sending money to family and friends abroad. Each ProntoCash Financial Card Holder controls his own funds and sends his own funds to a Supplementary Card Holder instantly with the SPEEDYCASH software. There is no longer need to wait for hours to share money. A Card Holder can be in Moscow; his bank in London and he can send money to his son who is in South Africa within seconds. His son can then either attend at an ATM immediately or pay for his dinner at a local Bistro or shop.
Clear instructions on how to use your ProntoCash Financial MasterCard are found on the Web Site. The Card Holder is required to follow these instructions, in order to properly use the ProntoCash Financial MasterCard. ProntoCash will deduct the amount of your transactions from the balance on your ProntoCash Financial MasterCard; as soon, as they are made. ProntoCash will also deduct any applicable costs; as soon, as they become payable by the Card Holder. In the situation of sufficient funds are not loaded on your ProntoCash Financial MasterCard at the time of a transaction to cover the amount of the transaction and the Fees, the transaction will be declined. The ProntoCash Financial Card can only be used where the merchant requests authorization electronically or by telephone. Where authorization is not granted, the transaction will be declined, as in any other ProntoCash Financial MasterCard has implemented various Anti Fraud Alerts to protect the money of the ProntoCash Financial Cards.
The Card Holder has the legal right to cancel the ProntoCash Financial MasterCard up to 30 days after you have applied and received your ProntoCash Financial MasterCard without incurring a refund fee. The 30 day period allows the Card Holder to use the card and become assured that the ProntoCash Financial MasterCard is the most viable financial solution for them. There is no Purchase Cost for the ProntoCash Financial MasterCard
On behalf of the Panama Visitors Guide, Costa Rica - 1 and the Republic of Panama we thank Don Winner for this story.
Tropic Star's Black Marlin
Jon Schwartz finds monster black marlin in Panama
By Jon Schwartz Web-Site
A Week at Tropic Star
In the winter of 2008, I had the great fortune of photographing some of the world's greatest fishing spots running at full steam. Swarms of surface-breaking striped marlin provided Cabo anglers with nonstop action. The pristine paradise of Costa Rica's Osa Peninsula served up a tropical mix of billfish, roosters and bull dolphin. To top it all, the annual run of sailfish in Guatemala, where anglers released an average of 20 per day's charter, eclipsed even my wildest fishing fantasies. I returned to the States in January, flush with a wealth of images and adventure that would surely quench my traveling jones for a good while.
Just when I'd started to acclimate to my normal stateside routine, I got an e-mail from Raleigh Werking, manager of the Tropic Star Lodge. Turns out that they'd just experienced their best month ever of marlin fishing: 97 released in a single week! Had this report been from any other place in the world, I would have been able to brush off this incredible news, satisfied that I'd recently seen enough similar action. The problem was that this wasn't any old spot.
Panama's Tropic Star Lodge (TSL) is home to a great many species and boasts one of the most productive inshore fisheries in the world. Huge cubera snapper, grouper and roosterfish are landed on a regular basis within yards of the coastline. TSL's all-tackle record roosterfish tipped the scales at 96 pounds, and many are caught in the 50- to 70-pound range. Incredibly, this top-notch nearshore bite rates a distant second to the international contingent of anglers who flock to TSL for one reason alone: close and personal encounters with Makaira indica, the majestic black marlin.
We've all seen Guy Harvey's pictures of brutish blacks rocketing skyward within feet of TSL's fleet of 31-foot Bertrams, deckhands' arms fearlessly reaching for the leader while the angler sits with mouth agape. Always the skeptic, I'd assumed that these incredible scenarios were fairly rare. If they weren't, one thing was for sure - I was missing out on some of the most dramatic displays of man versus beast to be found on the planet.
A confluence of events: Raleigh's report, a whole week off from my day job and payday succeeded in rendering me utterly incapable of resisting the temptation to see for myself. In addition, black marlin were one of the few species that I'd been unable to get on film (compact flash card, really). The potential to plop myself into the middle of some big-game madness and score some epic photos of my own sealed the deal.
TSL usually books out a year in advance, so it was only with some great luck that I was able to book a room during the peak season for black marlin. Bonnie Karp at the lodge's office in Orlando, Florida, helped me find a flight from LAX to Panama City's Tocumen Airport. Arriving guests usually spend the night in one of the deluxe hotels near the airport and take a transfer plane to the remote airport near the lodge the next morning.
To my delight, a well-dressed representative from TSL was waiting for me as I exited the plane. She whisked me through customs and brought me to the VIP lounge, where I sipped espresso and caught up on e-mails via wireless until Jimmy Owens, the larger-than-life valet, showed up and brought me to a deluxe hotel, smack-dab in the middle of Panama City.
One of the things I enjoy most about fishing travel is exploring the host countries. Although I'd soon be on a plane bound for one of the most remote fishing lodges on earth, I had a full day to tour Panama City, a thriving modern metropolis. Jimmy hooked me up with a classic old Panamanian gentleman named Luis Singh who took me on one of the most enjoyable half-day tours I've ever experienced. Winding through the districts in Luis' prized Crown Vic, I got the lowdown on the country's history: the building of the Panama Canal, the international flavor the city enjoyed as a result of the constant influx of trade and tourism, and the structural and political stability that grew from the decades-long partnership with the United States.
After witnessing a massive cruise ship squeak through the Miraflores locks of the canal, we passed by the nearly finished phalanx of skyscraping luxury condos that line the city's waterfront. This area of the city is as sophisticated and metropolitan as any that I've see in the States. In visiting a modern mall to get some last-minute electronic goodies for my cameras, I noticed that the quality of goods was high, but the prices were reasonable. The U.S. dollar is the country's official currency, which makes transactions effortless. International Living magazine ranked Panama City as one of the world's top five places to retire, and it's no wonder. Between the low cost of living, the surge in development and its central location, Panama City is clearly blossoming.
From January to March, TSL only offers weeklong bookings; that amounts to six days of fishing and seven nights. Half-week packages are available in December and from April to September. The stay is all-inclusive, except for extras like massages, drinks and tips.
Fishing for Marlin in Panama
Chavez does it again and breaks the Bolivar.
story by Panama Jack
In the world market the Venezuelan Bolivar Dollar has dropped to an all time low, after the government took over several banks and one of the Hugo Chavez's Minister's brothers was cought stealing funds. The new value for the bolivar was set at (B-1,000,000.00 Bolivar = 1 Banana) only one country in the world is excepting this form of curancy that is Iran and only because of the missile deal the 2 countrys have with each other.
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Costa Rica MurderInvestigators wonder why
Cañas woman got to HerediaBy the A.M. Costa Rica staff
A young woman in Cañas, Guanacaste, left her home July 7 to attend night classes and to study with friends.
Seemingly without reason her body turned up six days later in a field in Barrio El Socorro in Santa Domingo de Heredia.
The woman with the last name of Obando was 19 when she was murdered. She was a student at the local branch of the Universidad Latina. She had been tied up and strangled.
The investigation was confounded for several days while agents tried to learn the identity of the corpse. DNA tests showed Friday that the victim was the Cañas girl.
Still to be determined is how a Cañas college student ended up being a murder victim who was dumped so far from home.Panama Killers Sought in Costa RicaCouple sought here in Panamá property theft killingsA.M. Costa RicaJudicial police have been working overtime this weekend as they seek a man and a woman suspected of multiple murders in Panamá not far from the Costa Rican border.
Agents got a tip Saturday that the pair, William Adolfo Cortez and Jean Seana Cortez, had rented living quarters near Turrialba.
The story has been big news in Panamá where as many as two deaths and five missing persons cases may be under investigation. Local newspaper and television stations picked up the story, and the owner of the living quarters contacted police.
The couple is believed to have fled when their names made the Saturday newspapers. Both are believed to be U.S. citizens although they could be traveling under different passports with different names..They are suspects in the death of Cheryl Lynn Hugues, who ran a backpacker hostel that Cortez later operated. Ms. Hugues, who vanished in March, was found in a grave on property Cortez operated. Investigators found another body at the same time. They believe it is of Bo Icelar, who vanished in December after Cortez was said to have purchased his tourism business.
Agents also want to question the Cortez couple about three Dutch citizens, a husband and wife and a son, who have been missing in the Boca del Toro area for three years.
The Cortez couple is believed to have said they purchased property from the husband and wife.
Neftali Jaen, a judicial official, said Saturday that two local workers who were employees of the couple have vanished.
The Cortez couple are believed to have crossed into Costa Rica two weeks ago.
Disclaimer: If for any reason you may think you may have found HER in either Panama, Costa Rica or Columbia. It is only a delusion brought on by being old or having a cunt of a wife for far to many years. These women are prostitutes, Hookers, Whores and even if they make you feel like you are their boyfriend you are really only their meal ticket. Do not send them money after you leave in the hopes that they will stay pure until your return. They all have about 5 men who send them money. You are only their paycheck. New Lie Detector Service Available Just in case you think you found her in Pamana and Costa Rica
Is Your Girlfriend Cheating On You ???? by Panama Jack Have you been sending money every month to your girlfriend who lives in Costa Rica or Panama. Have you ever wondered if those stories she tells you about her mother being sick or someone stole her cell phone her wallet with all her money? Do you wonder if those stories are true? You are working hard in the United States to able to send her money to feed her and her family. Is she cheating with other men? does she have 5 other men sending her money? Or is she really waiting for you to return to make her life whole and to be with her true love??? You can have a lie detector test done on her for only $350.00 and put your mind to rest. If you are interested in this service contact Panama Jack and I will see you get connected with the people who do this service in Costa Rica and Panama
jack@republicofpanama.net
506-8883-5225I
i am at your service Panama Jack
Costa Rica Daily NewsHeavy-handed judges complicate domestic casesBy Garland M. Baker
Special to A.M. Costa Rica
The intention of Costa Rica's domestic violence laws is to protect — especially women — in cases of aggression or violence against a mate.
However, the law has been transformed into a law that creates a legal license to steal. Judges have not helped the situation at all. There are around 18 different medidas cautelares. This would translate into protective measures or injunctions in English. Most judges use only the harshest one, six months of complete separation of the parties involved. This is true even though in many domestic violence cases the charges are complete lies.
After police eject a husband from his home even if the allegations are fabricated, a court hearing may not take place for months.
The six-month protective measure actually has provoked violence, and a mate thrown out of the house sometimes goes back in violation of the restriction and does bodily harm to the spouse. If nothing else, the law as it is normally applied breaks down a family in direct violation of the Constitution and tears marriages apart.
Actually there is something in the domestic violence law most people do not know. The law states: El Estado procurará ofrecer alternativas de tratamiento y rehabilitación a las personas agresoras, tomando en cuenta, entre otras, su doble condición de víctimas y de agresoras.
This means the state shall offer alternatives to people entwined in a domestic violence case and offer assistance to both the victims and aggressors. This part of the law is hardly ever even offered to the parties of a domestic violence case according to four attorneys when it is an obligation of the state to do so.
The intention of the alimony and child support laws is to provide a source of income for children, spouses, and the elderly. The law also covers cases where people are incapable of working due to illness or a handicap. However, this law, too, has been in some many cases been distorted into a way to steal from another.
By filing questionable paperwork and receipts, a woman and her lawyer can convince a judge to set a very high alimony and child support payment, particularly if the husband involved is an expat. One judge in a decree that he felt that based on the receipts and other paperwork the expat could afford to pay the alimony and child support.
This is in direct violation of several key constitutional cases which state a judge cannot set an alimony or child support amount without concrete and factual information because the non-payment of either is an offense that can mean jail time. If the spouse does not pay the amount set by the judge, he goes to jail. Many times the amount is ridiculous because the primary source of facts about the husband's income come from the wife and her lawyer.
Some expats caught up in this nightmare who cannot not pay end up leaving the country, even if they have children here. Others go into hiding or worse. Most do not have the financial recourses or legal knowledge to fight, especially when they are battling against laws that have been adulterated.
One poor expat was thrown out of his house without notice by a women and her daughter on trumped up charges of domestic violence, and now the wife has filed for alimony using his United States pension as proof he can pay it.
When an experienced legal professional looked at the facts of one case, it appeared more than just the woman was involved in getting what she wanted. She and her legal team obviously had the right contacts.
It is important to note that cases against expats flow differently than they do for local Costa Ricans. Usually, in a case of domestic violence, alimony and child support against a local, the whole family gets involved including the family's pastor or priest. Normally, most expats do not have a big family support group in Costa Rica and are at a disadvantage. In an interview with three Costa Ricans caught up in a domestic violence and alimony case, all said that the problems were ultimately worked out inside the family.
This does not mean that Ticos do not get shafted by the laws too. They do. The primary cases where exorbitant alimonies were set by judges with little or no factual information now set a precedent to change the jurisprudence of the past.
The moral of the story, expats need to understand the domestic violence, alimony and child support laws in Costa Rica. Most do not. They need to understand the application of the laws are relentless. In many cases most expats who end up in court lose everything they own.
Sad Story from a Young Prostitute in San Jose Costa Rica
Story by Panama Jack
A young Prostitute in Costa Rica told me this story about an American Man she was in love with. She said I love him very much I have never been so much in love with a man, Wait a minute aren’t you a lesbian I said to her. On many occasions you have told me that you where in love with only women and that you only had sex with men for money. She say to me I have changed, I really love this man. So I ask her what is so special about this man, is he good looking, is he young, does he have a lot of money and when I say that I mean a lot of money. A few years ago this same girl said to me if a man gives me a lot of money it makes my pussy wet. I did not believe her at the time. But now I see the puzzle coming together. The man is in his fifties, he is fit, but most of all this man is wealthy and willing to spend big and I mean big on this young prostitute. So I say to her where did you meet this wonderful man that you are in love with, the answer comes slowly Gringo Gulch. I say to her so you met this wonderful man in a place where whores go to meet American men and have sex for money. So this wonderful man picked you up in a house of prostitution. Does that mean that at the time you met him you where working as a whore. Yes she replies I was working as a prostitute at the time I met him. So this wonderful man spent a lot of money on you. She replies yes he did. So I say how much, she replies 10 of thousands of dollars. So I now I think I understand Latin women, they are prostitutes until they find a man that can give them anything their hearts desire. So I say you do not have a problem, just go back to the same place and find another. Now that’s a good thought she says to me.
Costa Rica Is sex and prostitution legal in Central America???
Story by Panama JackIt seems to be, but there are different rules. While everyone is aware that 97% of all Latin men have extramarital affairs and the 83% of all Latin women do also. So what in the world is going on in Costa Rica and in Panama? It seems that every one there is going around screwing each other. Now in Panama it is not legal for a Panamanian girl to be a prostitute, but a girl from another country can be a prostitute? I do not get it. You can be a prostitute in Panama, but not if you are a Panamanian. Whoever makes these rules must be nuts. The reason that most women turn to prostitution is that they need money to feed their children and their adult family. In Latin America the girls get pregnant around 15 years of age give or take a few years. The young men that get them pregnant cannot support them on a $1.25 an hour job, so they run away a most of the time into the arms of another women or man. And here comes into office a women president in Costa Rica from a well to do family. The new president decides that Costa Rican girls cannot be prostitutes and starts by attacking their places of employment. Making it impossible for them to meet what they consider to be a rich man (Just someone working for a living in the United States) The new president not to offend the Latin men, go after the places where these prostitutes of Costa Rica have a chance to meet a man who can support her family, I mean the whole village. These girls that are prostitutes do not like being prostitutes, they would rather be the new women president of Costa Rica or any Latin country, but that is not going to happen and their babies are crying for mike and they have no money to buy it and the father of that baby is gone chasing another women. What is a women going to do, she drags her ass down the local casino, bar restaurant or night club where she might find an American or a local Costa Rican man cheating on his wife. The women has but no choice I this matter, can be a maid for $12.00 or work in McDonalds for the same amount. This kind of job will not pay the rent and buy food and absolutely not are car to drive. So the government of Costa Rica wants women and their family to starve. Mommy I would like some milk or a can of soda sorry baby we have no money. How do you think these women feel when her child is hungry for milk and rice and beans. So the put on that red dress and they go to a restaurant, Bar, Hotel, Massage Parlor and they sell their pussy for enough money to feed their little children and pay their rent. Sad Sad Sad. There has got to be a better way. How about a prostitution tax. You use that tax money and you put it in a very safe place, so one that a government official cannot get at two and steal? You use that money to pay for education so that these women can make a living being a doctor or a lawyer or the president of Costa Rica. Does your baby have mike tonight??? Now here is the big question, do you have the balls to go out and be with an ugly old man and suck his dick? The prostitutes of Panama and Costa Rica do.The governments of both Costa Rica and Panama, should set up a safe place where these Prostitutes sell their where it’s Kind of like a farmers market, but a prostitutes market
Police Stop and Search all Cars infront of the Horseshoe Casino looking for Drugs and Guns
Last night in San Jose Costa Rica in front of the Horseshoe Casino the police blocked off all the roads to search cars driving by with dogs looking for drugs and guns. reports came in yesterday to Panama Jack that in San Pedro police stopped a a man in a car outside a restuarant who runs a taxi stand infront of the Horseshoe Casino and found a large amount of cocaine and automatic rifles. These to police action are most likley related to each other. There where at least 50 plolice officers involved. The police w here very polite and the dog seemed to be friendly.
New Lie Detector Service Available in Pamana and Costa RIca
Is Your Girlfriend Cheating On You ????
by Panama Jack
Have you been sending money every month to your girlfriend who lives in Costa Rica or Panama?
Have you ever wondered if those stories that she tells you about her mother being sick or that someone stole her cell phone or her wallet with all her money? Do you wonder if those stories are true? You are working hard in the United States to able to send her money to feed her and her family. Is she cheating with other men? Does she have 5 other men sending her money, or is she really waiting for you to return to make her life whole and to be with her true love???
You can have a lie detector test done on her for only $300.00 and put your mind to rest.
If you are interested in this service contact Panama Jack and I will see you get connected with the people who do this service in Costa Rica and Panama
jack@republicofpanama.net
I am at your service Panama Jack
Looks Like Hugo Chavez is getting ready for war.
story by Panama Jack
Hugo Chavez is spending his countries oil money on weapons instead of the people of Venezula, he is meeting with all the dictators of the world, it look like he is preparing for war with his neighbors and the United States. Following Castro he is getting rid of anyone who gets in his way. This is the problem of haveing a military man elected to office, all they know is war. If a house builder was elected president of Venezula he would be building houses for the poor people.
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Panama Travel Adventures |
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Panama Vacation Tours

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Visit the Turtles of Panama
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Hotel Milan is the best deal in Panama City.Best Location, Great Service and the Price is Right.
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Laura Kay Yoga Bocas Del Toro
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Black Jesus Isla Grande
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Jon Schwartz Fishing Adventures
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Bocas Del Toro Vacation's
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San Blas Vacation's Web-Site
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President Ricardo Martinelli
Panama
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Beautiful Costa Rica Women
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Weekend in Heaven
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Surf Bocas Del Toro
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PANAMA TOURS & TRAVEL
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Costa Rica International Art Gallery
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Panama River Charges
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Costa Rica 7,000 USMC Marines Will Be Deployed To Costa Rica
Contributed by: Don Winner
About seven thousand Marines from the US military will patrol the coastal areas of Costa Rica for the next six months, after the neighboring country's parliament approved their arrival yesterday. The troops will arrive aboard some 46 armed ships, and will use some 200 helicopters. (La Estrella) Editor's Comment: Blink, blink... What? Really? No kidding? Well, how's that for a boost to your "internal security." I would love to see a copy of their Rules of Engagement. Drug runner opens up with an AK-47, 19 year old Marine (active duty or reserve?) troop returns fire, center mass burst, kills the guy. Can they open fire on vessels that refuse to stop if ordered? Posse Comitatus? Man, could you imagine the cow the PRD would have if Martinelli allowed US troops to patrol Panama to look for drug traffickers? Fun times in Central America. I guess the war on terrorism is winding down, so it's time to turn back to the "War of Last Resort" - Drugs. And why the United States Marine Corps? They like living in the jungle, being wet and cold most of the time, bitten by bugs, hungry - embrace the suck. Unfortunately, they also have a tendency to do stupid shit, get drunk, get in fights, and create discipline problems of all shapes and sizes. They put their rank on with velcro. But, there's a lot of them running around so why not? This is going to be fun to watch.
Casino Industry
story by Don Winner
Panama has the third most organized and developed casino and gaming industry in Latin America, according to a report of the Board of Gaming Regulatory Agencies Gaming. Recently casino operators in the region met in the country during the international SAGSE Gaming convention, which made Panama the capital of gambling for two days. Some 40 companies exhibited slot machines, table games, roulette and safety equipment technology. Also present were representatives of textile companies, dedicated to the production of carpets, and others responsible for designing uniforms for casino employees, parts suppliers, equipment maintenance companies, as well as architecture and design firms. Giorio Gennari Litta, the chairman of the event, was optimistic on the results of this international exhibition, with the quality of the companies involved and the variety of products on display, mostly consumables. (La Critica)
Chavez meets with Syria's Assad in Venezuela
story by Associated Press CARACAS, Venezuela – Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez met with Syrian President Bashar Assad on Saturday and called on Latin America and the Arab world to fight what he called America's imperialist and capitalist interests abroad.During a meeting at Venezuela's presidential palace, Chavez told Assad it was an honor to host the Syrian leader on his first visit to Latin America. Chavez presented Assad with a gold-plated replica of a sword that once belonged to South American independence hero Simon Bolivar — the inspiration for his "Bolivarian Revolution."The two leaders signed an agreement to create a $100 million trade and development fund."Arab civilization and our civilization, the Latin American one, are being summoned in this new century to play the fundamental role of liberating the world, saving the world from the imperialism and capitalist hegemony that threaten the human species," Chavez said. "Syria and Venezuela are at the vanguard of this struggle."Assad praised Chavez for standing up to the United States and supporting the Palestinian struggle."There are few politicians who are courageous to speak out when it's necessary," he said through an interpreter. "Chavez has projected the image of a resistant Venezuela."Assad strongly criticized Israel, calling the Jewish state's government "extremist" and condemning its blockade of Gaza."The resistance must be supported," he said.Chavez is perhaps Latin's America's most outspoken critic of the United States, lashing out at the U.S. government for purportedly conspiring against him and meddling in the region's affairs. U.S. officials, in turn, have raised concerns that Chavez is becoming increasingly authoritarian.Chavez also took a dig at the U.S. soccer team, celebrating Ghana's 2-0 victory of the Americans in a decisive World Cup match earlier on Saturday. "What a blast! Ghana won, Ghana defeated the United States," he said.Chavez also condemned the U.N. Security Council for tightening sanctions against Iran as a means of curbing development of the Islamic state's nuclear program.Assad said all nations, including Iran, "have the right to develop nuclear energy."Chavez has built close diplomatic relations with Syria, Iran and other Middle Eastern countries while severing Venezuela's ties to Israel. Last year, the socialist leader visited Syria, where he called Israel an imperialist nation that annihilates its neighbors and accused its government of doing Washington's bidding by trying to divide the Middle East.Following his meeting with Chavez, Assad is slated to travel to Cuba, Brazil and Argentina.
Boquete is now an eco-tourist destinationPosted by Lee for Boquete Panama Guide Now I understand all those young people with backpacks that out number the people with balding heads. I thought they were just visiting their grandparents! There really has been a great increase in younger people here both as tourists and residents.Once considered one of the world’s top retirement destinations, Boquete is now Panama’s Capital for Eco-tourism & Adventure TravelBoquete, Panama (PRWEB) June 22, 2010 — In 2001, the sleepy mountain town of Boquete was shaken out of its slumber by an article in AARP’s Modern Maturity magazine. It named Boquete as the fourth best place in the world to retire, turning the small town into an overnight sensationBoquete is now an eco-tourist destination that attracts an adventurous crowdFast-forward to 2008, when Boquete, along with the rest of the world, was hit hard by the global economic crisis and housing market crash. Of Boquete’s more than 40 planned residential developments targeted to ex-pats, less than half a dozen came to fruition. In the years that followed, Boquete worked hard to retain its newfound prosperity by turning the spotlight on its greatest strengths: its beauty and potential for adventure.Boquete has everything an eco-adventure enthusiastic could want: “unspoilt nature and wildlife, hundreds of birds and beautiful hiking trails in our National Parks, award winning coffee, world class whitewater adventures, thrilling zip-lining tours…
“Boquete has everything an eco-adventure enthusiast could want,” says Julio Santamaria, Co-founder, Habla Ya Spanish Courses & Ecotourism. “Unspoilt nature and wildlife, hundreds of birds and beautiful hiking trails in our National Parks, award winning coffee, world class whitewater adventures, thrilling zip-lining tours, hot springs, challenging rock climbing routes and horseback riding tours. You name it: Boquete has it. Boquete is truly Panama’s Eco-Adventure Capital.”What seemed to be a disastrous turn of events for Boquete is turning into a positive. Tourists come prepared to spend money and local businesses benefit. Tourism also creates a vast amount of long-term jobs and opens the door for the community to flourish in other industries.“Five or six years ago, the majority of the storefronts on our main street were real estate offices,” says Jay Thomas, Owner, Boquete Garden Inn. “They’ve been replaced by tour operators, gift shops and restaurants. In our hotel, we have seen a substantial rise in people coming to Boquete for eco-tourism and adventure, discovering more and more of what Boquete has to offer.”Boquete seems poised for even greater growth with the announcement that Copa Airines (a Continental partner) is adding direct flights from Miami or Houston to David, a short 30-minute drive to Boquete.“We established our business here because we believe in Boquete’s potential,” says Jay Thomas, Owner, Boquete Garden Inn. “It offers first class services while retaining its charm. Visitors love it and there is something for everyone in Boquete: be it bird watchers in search of the Resplendent Quetzal, orchid collectors exploring our gardens or adrenaline junkies wanting to zipline through the cloud forest’s canopy or raft our ferocious rivers.”And as if tourists needed more incentive to visit Boquete, during the first round of the World Cup in South Africa, which ends June 25, several business owners are offering potential visitors the opportunity win a two week language holiday in Panama. Participants only have to predict which 4 teams will reach the semifinals and their name will be put into a draw to win two-week stay including accommodations, Spanish lessons at Habla Ya, and several eco-adventure tours plus cash in hand. Entering the contest is easy: participants just have to post a comment with the four teams of their choice in one of the sponsor’s blogs:
Prostitutes in Panama Exploited by Imigration
By DON WINNER for Panama-Guide .com - I've been talking to some of the women who were detained by immigration in raids they conducted in recent weeks. In the middle of May Panama's National Immigration Service conducted raids in several bars and clubs in Panama City and arrested a total of 68 foreigners. A week later Immigration conducted another raid, this time in a couple of the seedier clubs in Calidonia and Santa Ana, and arrested another 25 women. All of these women were taken to the holding cells run by Immigration on Ave. Cuba. So, in all between the two raids a total of 93 women were initially detained. I now have the inside story on what actually happened to this women, who have contacted me to tell their story. It turns out they are being manipulated and exploited by a "three way" consisting of Immigration Officials, night club owners, and unscrupulous lawyers.
Protecting Their Identities: For reasons that should be more than obvious I have to protect the identities of the women that I have been talking to. They are all foreigners, and they admit that they are working in Panama as prostitutes, so that much is clear. Most of them are in Panama "legally" - that is to say they are here on a tourist visa, have some kind of card or carnet from Immigration, and are not in violation of any kind of immigration law. Yes, they admit they are working as prostitutes, however when they were arrested they were simply sitting in a bar having a drink. It's not like they were caught in the act, in a sting operation, or something like that. It's not illegal for a tourist to sit in a bar and have a drink, right? No matter, they were arrested and hauled down to Immigration anyway, legal or not.
Anyone Can Turn Tricks in Panama: Any prostitute on the planet can simply fly to Panama, enter as a tourist, obtain a cheap cell phone number, put an ad in the classified section and start to work as a prostitute. For example in today's edition of La Prensa the following ad appears: "Voluptuous girl with cinnamon skin offers 'super complete' massages, everything included, that will leave you feeling like new. Discreet. Call 6687-4066." Give her a call, but just so you know "voluptuous" normally is code for "fat." Anyway, the point is that anyone can come here and do this. There are a few centers of gravity where many of the girls go to cruise for tourists, places like Habana's Cigar Bar, located right across the street from the Marriott Hotel in Panama City (where the gringo's stay.) The guys go there because the girls are there. The girls go there because the guys are there. It all works out just fine, they are all adults, no one is forcing the women to sell their bodies, and no one is forcing the men to hire them. It's the oldest profession in the world, for a reason. And of course all of this is unregulated in anyway so you're taking your chances.
The Regulated System: The government of Panama has created an entire system of "Alternadora" visas which allows the owners of whore houses and strip clubs to hire foreign girls and to bring them into Panama where they can work in the sex trade legally for as much as nine months. The nightclub owners have to obtain one "cupo" or permit for every girl. When the girls come into the country they get "Alternadora" (Entertainer) stamped in their passport. And, they have to turn over about half of the money they make to the nightclub owner. Basically, the girls don't like this system for several reasons. First of all, they have a "boss" and they can't make their own decisions as to when they want to work. Their "boss" is basically their pimp, and he takes about half of the money they generate. And, they get a big fat stamp in their passports that basically says "I'm A Prostitute" - and that's the part they like the least. So, the smart ones who have been around the block a few times avoid this system. They would rather work as independents. Have cell phone, will screw for money. What's wrong with that?
The Nightclub Owners Pay Through The Nose: Immigration sucks big bucks out of the nightclub owners for the "cupos". To be clear - I mean they have to pay thousands of dollars in bribes just to get the "cupos" assigned so they can bring in the girls. They have to invest a whole lot of money in paperwork, lawyers fees, and bribes, to say nothing of the money they have to spend to refurbish the club itself to get it ready to open. We're talking investments of hundreds of thousands of dollars in order to position yourself as the "Pimp Daddy of Panama City." However, there's a catch. The girls don't want to work for you. And, why should they when they can make twice as much money by just hanging out at a bar on weekends?
Hence, The Recent Raids: A new club called the "Moulin Rouge" just opened on Via Veneto, right below the Don Lee restaurant, next to where the old "My Place" bar was years ago. It's to the left of the long standing "Oasis" massage parlor. According to the girls who were arrested, Immigration conducted the most recent series of raids against the prostitutes because the owner of the Moulin Rouge - who they identified only as "the Swiss guy" - is pissed off. He apparently invested a whole lot of money to open his new club, and no one was going there. He needed to get the streets swept clean of the "tourist hookers" in Panama, so he reportedly or allegedly (according to the girls) paid a bribe to Immigration so that they would go out and conduct these raids. If there are no girls working as freelancers in the bars, then the men would have to go to his club in order to find the girls, right? This is a turf battle more than anything else. In response, Immigration did in fact conduct two raids in May, resulting in the arrest of more than 90 women.
"As If He Owned The Place" The details of what was going on became very clear to the women who were being held in the immigration holding cells. While they were being held the girls in the immigration holding cell they could not receive visits from friends or family members. However the "Swiss guy" was allowed to waltz into the immigration holding cells where the women were being held "as if he owned the place." He was escorted into the women's area by Immigration officials. He was allowed to "inspect" all of the women as if he was picking sheep from the herd. One woman said "he picked all girls who were young, slim, good looking, with long dark hair." He paid additional bribes to Immigration to have these women released, and they were set free immediately, They were all taken to work for him at his club, however he is now retaining their documents, paperwork, cards, and passports. While the girls did not have to pay any fines or fees to be released from immigration, they are now being forced to work basically as sex slaves for this man. They have not reached any kind of agreement as to how much money they will have to pay him, he simply said "you can work it off." These girls are just tourists and are not here as "alternadoras" (entertainers) and they are forced to work from 6:00 pm until 4:00 am. The girls can't quit because if they demand their paperwork he will just turn them back over to immigration, who he has apparently bought off.
$1,000 Per Head - Or Be Deported: The rest of the women, those who were not selected to go work for "the Swiss guy," faced extortion by Immigration officials. They were told that they had to pay between $1,000 to $1,500 each or else they would be deported. Most of these women were in the country legally as tourists or they had some other kind of card or permission from Immigration, but immigration officials simply said "we have discovered a problem" in your status, so either you pay or you will be deported. The lawyers who were representing these women basically took half of the money, and the other half went to corrupt immigration officials as bribes. Let's see, about 90 women, average payments of about $1,250 and half as bribes - these two raids generated roughly $56,250 in bribes that were paid to corrupt immigration officials, and the other half (equal amount) went to the lawyers, who were in on the whole thing. One of the girls initially paid $200 to a non-corrupt and honest lawyer who was trying to represent them as part of a Human Rights Non Government Organization (NGO). That lawyer gave them back their money and said "even though you are here in the country legally, there is nothing I can do. It has been made perfectly clear to me that the only way to get you out of here is to pay the bribes to the immigration officials, and in my position I cannot do that. So, I am returning your money to you, and either you will have to play by their rules or you will be deported. I'm very sorry..."
"If We Ever Catch You Again" Remember, this entire scam has several end objectives. First, for the "Swiss guy" it gets the tourist hookers off the streets and forces the Johns into his club, where he can make money as a pimp. Secondly, it generates bribes for immigration officials. However, it does the "Swiss guy" no good if the girls simply pay their bribes and go straight back to the bars and turning tricks. As they were released, they got a stern warning from the immigration officials - "If we ever catch you again, you will be deported." The girls don't want to be deported because when that happens they put a stamp in your passport that prevents you from returning for from five to ten years, for any reason. They really, really don't want to get that stamp in their passport, and are willing to do almost anything to keep that from happening.
Nowhere To Turn: These girls literally have nowhere they can turn. They cannot make any kind of an official complaint or denouncement. First of all, they admit they are prostitutes and most people really could not care less what happens to them. Secondly, the very governmental institution that is supposed to be monitoring and regulating this kind of thing - Immigration - are the ones who are breaking the law. And remember, Immigration works for the Executive branch of government, so it makes no sense to complain to the "Corruption Czar" because they too work for the Executive. The police? Yup, also Executive branch. That leaves the Attorney General's office and we all know what happened with Ana Matilde Gomez and Giuseppe Bonissi (also practically part of the Executive branch, for all intents and purposes.) The wild card would be the Office of the Ombudsman (Defensoria del Pueblo) where people are supposed to be able to go when their human rights are being violated, but to he honest I have not heard a peep out of those guys in a very long time. Last hope - international organizations. At the end of the day these women have no one they can complain too - and that is precisely why they are being exploited. There's not a damn thing they can do about it. The message is - shut the fuck up and pay, whore. Nice, really nice.
Farming This Out To Panamanian Media: I just got all of this today. I am now going to be talking to my contacts in the Panamanian news media to see if anyone wants to pick the story up and run with it. I certainly hope it gets some traction.
Thank You Don Winner for Panama Guide Go ahead and use whatever you like as long as you credit the source. Salud.
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What to see in Darien |

Darien National Park
Established in 1980 the "Parque Nacional Darien" covers 579,000 hectares of land. It is the largest national park in Central America and was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1981 and a Biosphere Reserve in 1982.
The park has administrative headquarters in Real de Santa Maria and you can also find three scientific stations apart from one at Cana. To get there you can go by car as far as the town of Yaviza and then you need to take a boat to El Real de Santa Maria.
Mateo Mecha was born in Darien Sambu and later moved to start a new Embera Drua Village just outside Panama, City in Chagres National Park. You can visit his village Buy e-mailin Mateo at mateo_embera@yahoo.com The village is just 35 minutes by car or bus outside of Panama, City and then a 20 minute boat ride up one of the most beutiful rivers in the world, the Chagres River.
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Panama Visitor's Guide Vacations |
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Tranquility, Comfort and Service. Hotel Milan was built and opened in fall of 2004 with the amenities and comfort that you seek when away from home. Located in the heart of Panama City in the Cangrejo District it is close to everything; Panama's best shopping, attractions, restaurants, banking, casinos, and only a few minutes away from the InterAmerican highway that connects the Americas through Panama.
Tel: 507-263-6130 inside Panama.
Tel: outside Panama 011-507-263-6130
Ask about our rates and discounts by e-mail
hotelmilan@cwpanama.net
Website Pictures Photo's Information
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Poor Street Children of Panama |
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Educational Center
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Panama Hotel & Resort Guide |
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Panama Hotel Guide
Los Balcones Hotel
Hotel Tierra Verde
Built over the Caribbean Sea, along a mile long coral reefed coast, Punta Caracol is constructed using the traditional methods of the Archipelago: each handsomely built.
Intercontinental Panama City
Bananas Village Resort
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Contact Panama Visitor's Guide |
Panama Visitor's Guide.
Panama Jack
8883-5225 Costa Rica
011-506-8883-5225 from the United States
00-506-8883-5225 from Panama
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Panama Tour & Vacation Guide |
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Sport Fishing Panama
Tropic Star Lodge
This is the best fishing in the world, just ask my friend Bubba he has more trophy fish and animals than any one in the world. The walls in his house look like a cemetery. I sure hope GOD is not a fish or an animal, for his sake.
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PANAMA PHOTO GALLERY
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Wild Bill Cortez in Panama
By JUAN ZAMORANO, Associated Press PANAMA CITY – A U.S. couple was deported in shackles Thursday from Nicaragua to Panama, where they face charges of killing two Americans and questioning in the disappearances of 5 other people.Authorities identified the suspects as William Cortez and his wife, Jane, though the male suspect claimed his name was William Dathan Holbert, which matches a suspect featured on the "America's Most Wanted" website who is reportedly wanted for a 2005 fraud case in North Carolina.The couple was arrested in Nicaragua, and prosecutors said they had apparently preyed on residents of the scenic coastal Bocas del Toro region in what President Ricardo Martinelli called "one of the first cases of serial murders" in the Central American country."He picked out his victims after making their acquaintance," assistant prosecutor Angel Calderon told reporters. "Knowing that nobody would ask about them, he got rid of them."They are charged with killing Cheryl Lynn Hughes, 53, a St. Louis, Missouri-native who had lived in Panama for 10 years, and Bo Icelar, who a friend described as the former owner of a Santa Fe, New Mexico, gallery.The pair were caught Monday by Nicaraguan soldiers at the border with Costa Rica after they identified themselves with what authorities have called false names.Since investigators uncovered the bodies of Hughes and Icelar last week, buried in shallow graves behind a hotel run by Cortez in Bocas del Toro, "residents have come out and given testimony, knowing that he (Cortez) is in custody," Calderon said.Cortez and his wife face charges for "crimes against the life and personal integrity" of the two victims, said Assistant Director of Investigations Omar Pinzon. He said they will also be questioned about the disappearance of five other people — reportedly three Americans and two Panamanian workers.Upon arrival at Panama City's Albrook airport, Cortez and his wife were bundled into a vehicle and taken to a cell at the Office of Judicial Investigation. Before entering, Cortez told Channel 13 television, "The people of Panama are very friendly, and I like living here."Asked about the two deaths, Cortez laughed and said: "I need to speak to them (authorities) about that. I just want to say, thanks for the trip."Investigators in Panama say the killings may have been part of a scheme to steal the victims' property on a Caribbean archipelago popular with expatriates.Friends and relatives say Hughes owned the hotel but wanted to sell it, and that Cortez took it over after she disappeared in March.She was reported missing by a friend. Police found her body after her estranged husband, Keith Werle, persuaded them to search the hotel run by Cortez.Werle, who also lives in Panama but was separated from Hughes, said Cortez claimed he had bought Hughes' property and that she had left the area without saying where she was going.Werle said he began suspecting Cortez when his stories about the transaction didn't add up, and when he realized that Cortez also owned property that had belonged to Icelar, who also disappeared in Bocas del Toro, a Panamanian archipelago of mangrove islands.Werle said he received text messages from Hughes' phone that he found suspicious, including one claiming that she had gone sailing."She didn't like sailing. The stories he kept telling people didn't make sense," Werle said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press.Then Werle stopped hearing from Hughes altogether, which he found implausible despite their estrangement. The couple moved to Panama together 10 years ago and married after five years. "If she had met someone and moved on or something she would have thrown that in my face," he said. Werle said several of Hughes' dogs, her passport and other items belonging to her were found at the hotel during the police search last week. It was one of the dogs that led police to Hughes' body in a wooded area behind the house, he said. A few hours later, police found another body that Panamanian authorities identified as Icelar. Icelar, too, had been trying to sell his property in Panama and move back to the United States, said longtime friend, Sharon L. McConnell. He wanted to leave Panama "because the political climate was such that he didn't want to get involved in any of that stuff," she added. McConnell became suspicious after Icelar stopped answering his phone on Nov. 30. She learned Cortez had bought the property and left numerous phone messages for him asking about Icelar's whereabouts. Cortez never returned those messages. Eventually, she asked a friend of Icelar's in Panama to report him as missing. According to the America's Most Wanted article, William Dathan Holbert was involved in a similar scheme of taking over a house in North Carolina. The article cites police as saying the man travels under different identities. The U.S. Embassy said it had no information about Icelar, but Calderon said he was an American. The embassy declined to comment on the investigation or on the two U.S. suspects. It was unclear if Cortez and his wife had an attorney. Panamanian police said they are investigating how Cortez obtained Hughes' hotel and property that had belonged to Icelar.
Bill Captured in Nicaragua
Story Panama Jack
First Report in the capture of William (Wild Bill) Adolfo Cortez and Jean Seana Cortez in Nicaragua are coming. The couple is accused of the murder of several person in Boca del Toro Panama and are believed to have been involved in several other murders. The couple were seen in Costa Rica for a few day, but must have slipped across into Nicaragua
.Nicaragua detains 2 foreigners in Panama Murder case
Associated Press
MANAGUA, Nicaragua – The Nicaraguan army detained two foreigners at the border with Costa Rica on Monday, and Panamanian officials said they are investigating whether the couple is linked to the discovery of a dead American woma Panama Murder captured in Rio San Juan, Nicaragua after escapinf from Costa RicaFugitive pair from Panamá are captured on Río San JuanBy the A.M. Costa Rica staff
A man and woman sought for investigation of multiple murders in Panamá seem to have spent several weeks in Costa Rica before they tried to flee to Nicaragua Monday morning.
The Nicaraguan army captured the duo on the Río San Juan as they tried to flee from a checkpoint there.
The pair are William Adolfo Cortez and Jean Seana Cortez. They appear to have spent time in Grecia, Nuevo Arenal, Turrialba, and Puerto Viejo de Sarapiquí before spending a night on the run in the community of La Trinidad. They had been sought since Saturday by Costa Rican law enforcement officers because a prosecutor in Boca de Toro asked the International Police Agency to list them as wanted.
Both are large individuals, and Spanish-language newspapers have been publishing their photos. The story broke Friday when the prosecutor's office in Boca de Toro confirmed that two bodies had been found on property occupied by the pair. By that time they had crossed over into Costa Rica.
They are in custody now in Nicaragua and were being taken to the capital of Nicaragua after their arrest. That happened in a place known as Tambor. The river is Nicaraguan territory, and Costa Rica's jurisdiction ended at the river bank. However, judicial agents confiscated their vehicle on the Costa Rican side.
They are suspects in the death of Cheryl Lynn Hugues, who ran a backpacker hostel that Cortez later operated. Ms. Hugues, who vanished in March, was found in a grave on property Cortez operated. Investigators found another body at the same time. They believe it is of Bo Icelar, who vanished in December after Cortez was said to have purchased his tourism business.
Agents also want to question the Cortez couple about three Dutch citizens, a husband and wife and a son, who have been missing in the Boca de Toro area for three years. The Cortez couple is believed to have said they purchased property from the husband and wife.
Neftali Jaen, a judicial official, said Saturday that two local workers who were employees of the couple have vanished. There may be more missing workers.
Both Cortez and his wife are believed to be U.S. citizens, but they seem to have been traveling on Dutch passports. Cortez has connections in Aruba.
The arrest was dramatic. The pair rented a boat and asked the owner to take them to Barra del Colorado on the Río Colorado, which really is the southern mouth of the Río San Juan in northeast Costa Rica. As they approached a checkpoint on the river, the boat operator either declined to evade it or was not doing a good job, so Cortez is said to have thrown him into the river and took charge of the craft himself.
An army craft with soldiers armed with machine guns eventually stopped their flight.
Cortez, handcuffed to his wife went on another craft with Nicaraguan police officers under army guard. The river is the main transportation route in that part of the country.
Judicial agents are checking in detail the history of the couple's stay in Costa Rica, particularly since they are suspected of multiple murders.
The allegations from Boca de Toro are that the pair would enter into negotiations for property and then take possession by killing the rightful owners. In several cases, Cortez is said to have told neighbors that the previous owner simply left abruptly after the sale.
The Dutch couple and son, who have the last name of Brown, were in the fruit production business.
Panama, like Costa Rica and Nicaragua, does not have a death penalty in its penal code. n.The army said the two foreigners were arrested after they ignored warnings from soldiers posted at the border to stop. The two were traveling by boat on the San Juan River, which separates Nicaragua and Costa Rica.Authorities are investigating whether the couple fled north through Costa Rica from Panama.Panama assistant prosecutor Angel Calderon said the two "have similar characteristics" to William Adolfo Cortez of Texas and his wife, Jane, who are being sought in connection with the death of American Cheryl Lynn Hughes.Acquaintances said Hughes was from St. Louis, but the U.S. embassy in Panama refused to confirm that.Last week, Panamanian police found the body of Hughes, who had been missing since March, and the skeletal remains of another person. Both were buried in the back patio of a hotel owned by Cortez in western Bocas del Toro province.
Wanted Reward For Information Costa Rica
Costa Rica Murders Investigators wonder why
Cañas woman got to Heredia
By the A.M. Costa Rica staff
A young woman in Cañas, Guanacaste, left her home July 7 to attend night classes and to study with friends.
Seemingly without reason her body turned up six days later in a field in Barrio El Socorro in Santa Domingo de Heredia.
The woman with the last name of Obando was 19 when she was murdered. She was a student at the local branch of the Universidad Latina. She had been tied up and strangled.
The investigation was confounded for several days while agents tried to learn the identity of the corpse. DNA tests showed Friday that the victim was the Cañas girl.
Still to be determined is how a Cañas college student ended up being a murder victim who was dumped so far from home
.Panama Killers Sought in Costa RicaCouple sought here in Panamá property theft killings
A.M. Costa RicaJudicial police have been working overtime this weekend as they seek a man and a woman suspected of multiple murders in Panamá not far from the Costa Rican border.
Agents got a tip Saturday that the pair, William Adolfo Cortez and Jean Seana Cortez, had rented living quarters near Turrialba.
The story has been big news in Panamá where as many as two deaths and five missing persons cases may be under investigation. Local newspaper and television stations picked up the story, and the owner of the living quarters contacted police.
The couple is believed to have fled when their names made the Saturday newspapers. Both are believed to be U.S. citizens although they could be traveling under different passports with different names..They are suspects in the death of Cheryl Lynn Hugues, who ran a backpacker hostel that Cortez later operated. Ms. Hugues, who vanished in March, was found in a grave on property Cortez operated. Investigators found another body at the same time. They believe it is of Bo Icelar, who vanished in December after Cortez was said to have purchased his tourism business.
Agents also want to question the Cortez couple about three Dutch citizens, a husband and wife and a son, who have been missing in the Boca del Toro area for three years.
The Cortez couple is believed to have said they purchased property from the husband and wife.
Neftali Jaen, a judicial official, said Saturday that two local workers who were employees of the couple have vanished.
The Cortez couple are believed to have crossed into Costa Rica two weeks ago.
This cunt should have been killed 50 years ago.
Panama Jack
No sign of Fidel Castro at Revolution Day eventAssocated PressSANTA CLARA, Cuba – A public celebration to mark Revolution Day has begun in this central Cuban city with no sign of Fidel Castro.The 83-year-old ex-president had a made a string of appearances at small public events in recent weeks, fueling speculation he could turn up for Monday's event in Santa Clara.Instead, Raul Castro — who succeeded his older brother as president, first temporarily, then permanently — presided over the event.THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.SANTA CLARA, Cuba (AP) — A spate of appearances by Fidel Castro after four years of near-total seclusion has Cubans buzzing: Could the official Revolution Day ceremony Monday be Fidel's coming out party?It would be easy for younger brother Raul to make headlines in a major Revolution Day speech in this central Cuban city. All he has to do is bring up the 52 political prisoners he has agreed to release, or discuss plans to open the island's communist economy.But nothing Cuba's 79-year-old president says will mean as much as whether Fidel is standing by his side."If Fidel is there it will cause a huge stir. It will be very important," said Wayne Smith, a former top American diplomat in Havana and senior fellow at the Washington-based Center for International Policy.He said the elder Castro brother's presence would make clear to many in Washington that the 83-year old revolutionary still has a strong hand in affairs of state. That, Smith says, would not be viewed positively by those waiting for Cuba to allow more economic, political and social changes."The thought has been that they are moving toward reforms under Raul, but that they might be moving more energetically if not for the fact that Fidel Castro is still sitting on the porch and Raul is afraid he might not be enthusiastic," Smith said. "If Fidel does come back, that could suggest they aren't going to move as fast as they should with these changes."Fidel Castro ruled Cuba for nearly a half century until he was forced to step down in 2006 and undergo emergency intestinal surgery, turning power over — first temporarily, then permanently — to his brother.Since then, he has lived in near total seclusion. Until this month, that is.The former president has seemingly been everywhere, most recently making an emotional visit Saturday to a town outside Havana to honor fallen revolutionary fighters. There he read a statement that was right out of his much-weathered revolutionary playbook, turning Cuba's tortured half-century conflict with the United States into a positive."The simple fact of maintaining this fight for such a long time provides proof of what a small country can achieve against a gigantic, imperial power," Castro said after laying a wreath at a mausoleum for his comrades. In other appearances Castro has visited economists, scientists, diplomats and even dolphins at the national aquarium, his every move captured on national television and in state-run newspapers.State media have even taken to calling him "commander in chief" again, a title he has largely shunned since stepping down.Fidel Castro has used the publicity spree to warn that the world stands on the precipice of a nuclear war — pitting the United States and Israel on one side, and Iran on the other.So far he has stayed clear of commenting on current events in Cuba, perhaps in an effort to avoid the appearance of interfering with his brother's work running the country. But merely attending Revolution Day celebrations would be an overtly political act.While Raul Castro has remained loyal to his brother's communist ideals, he has overseen the handover of tens of thousands of acres of government land to individual farmers, allowed some small-level entrepreneurship in a country where the state controls well over 90 percent of the economy, and has spearheaded an anti-corruption drive in which several senior officials were fired. He has also tried to scale back unsustainable subsidies in a system where most people earn low government wages but receive free health care and education, near-free housing and transportation and deeply discounted basic food. The reforms — while halting — have allowed Raul to emerge from the shadow of his more famous brother, though opinion is divided on how much influence Fidel wields behind the scenes. The government has said nothing about whether Fidel will be on hand for Monday's celebration, which commemorates the date in 1953 when the Castros led an attack on the Moncada army barracks in the eastern city of Santiago and a smaller military outpost in the nearby city of Bayamo. The operation failed spectacularly, but Cubans consider it the beginning of the revolution that culminated with dictator Fulgencio Batista's ouster on New Year's Day 1959. Cuba celebrates Revolution Day in a different part of the island each year. This year it is Santa Clara's turn, and the city offers an intriguing backdrop. The speeches will be held at a towering outdoor memorial housing the remains of Argentine revolutionary Ernesto "Che" Guevara. Santa Clara is also home to Guillermo Farinas, a dissident who recently ended a 134-day hunger strike after the government agreed to release the last remaining opposition leaders jailed since 2003. At least 15 have been let go and sent to Spain so far, with the rest expected to follow in coming months. Security around the site was stepped up Sunday night, with police closing roads and directing traffic out of the area. Police also stood guard on every highway overpass leading into the city. While many think Fidel Castro's appearance Saturday means it was less likely he would also show up in Santa Clara, there were some signs he might attend. When Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez announced he would attend the festivities, he wrote that he wanted to share the day "with Raul, with Fidel and with the Cuban people." Chavez canceled the visit shortly before he was scheduled to leave Sunday, citing rising tension between his country and neighboring Colombia.
Chavez plans to declare war and halt the elections by declaring marshal law.
Where are the car bombs when you need one.
Panama Jack
Bolivarian shadow of crisis
NacionFollowing the tactics of Chávez , Correa used clothing to undermine democratic checks and balances mechanism institutionalChavez is looking for an excuse to cancel the elections and thereby preserve the checks has QueyEcuadorian President Rafael Correa, is immersed in a harsh confrontation with Congress on a number of projects promoted by the authoritarian executive. If achieved, these laws would be empowered to control Correa priority aspects of national life , such as water use , higher education , and oil concessions to the public system . The controversial expansion of powers sought by Correa 's opposition raises a variety legislation that brings together national sectors whose support has been crucial to the emergence and political survival of the President , including the indigenous movement. Moreover, the intensification of the conflict with Congress means dissent ruling parliamentary bloc . In this regard it is noted that Correa 's party (Alianza PAIS) has only 54 of the 124 seats in the full Legislature . Lacking a majority to win approval of legislation, the President has to resort to partnerships with groups who now oppose his agenda. This background highlights a critical flaw for president Correa embracing that , following the manual 's populist Hugo Chávez and his supporters of Bolivia and Nicaragua , it aspires to be set up in Ecuador. This manual, a strategy of political scam designed by Chavez and neatly articulated by gurus foreign Venezuelan President uses clothing to undermine democratic checks and balances mechanism to institutional replace an autocracy whose paradigm is Cuba . The conversion process to the Bolivarian dictatorship will necessarily change the constitution to suit the budding autocrat , especially to ensure their stay in the presidency without being subject to time limits or boundaries. Similarly, need to install in the judicial hierarchy loose a majority of judges who obey his orders. Added to this construction the comptroller organization of elections and referendums , whose leadership should also depend on the strong man. However, the picture would not be complete without a docile congress and subjected to an automatic majority run by the emerging dictator, with a numerical advantage sufficient to overcome any qualified vote . This key step Chavez have materialized somehow also Evo Morales and Daniel Ortega.Morales has an automatic majority thanks to the indigenous sector and to date is firm in his position. For his part , Ortega has been a gross and obvious breach of the Constitution and laws, as has happened to assume the appointment of magistrates and judges by decree . However, Ortega seems immune to the passage of the Supreme Court, for obvious reasons, or parliament through its alliance with former President Arnoldo German. For his part , Correa , despite having a high percentage -65% - of popular approval , it has made progress in its current agenda of concentration of authority precisely because of the obstacles in Congress. This shift is worrisome for the Chávez bloc leaders . The Venezuelan president has even invoked the events that plunged Honduras Manuel Zelaya and in particular the central role of Congress in this chain of events. He hates that something similar happens in Quito and, moreover , in Caracas. Hence the accusation that his opponents lurking reissue the presidential impeachment in case of Honduras to succeed in the legislative elections scheduled for next September 26 . Such statements , coupled with many other over imaginary invasions and plots to assassinate him qualified observers suggest that Chavez, with a better organized and united opposition , is looking for an excuse to cancel the elections and thereby preserve the checks and has . No doubt , competition for a legislative majority presents serious challenges to Chavez , who do not obtain satisfactory results , it could even lose the right to use enabling laws with which he could rule by decree. Either way , there are hints of crisis on the horizon Bolivar.
New Photo's of Killer Wild Bill who killed in Panama and is now hiding in Costa Rica.
Click Here
Don Winner
More Photos of William "Wild Bill" Adolfo Cortez Reese
Authorities in Bocas del Toro have reportedly discovered another, third body on the property of William "Wild Bill" Cortez in the area of Isla Cauchero in the province of Bocas del Toro this afternoon. There is now an international manhunt underway. If you've seen this person anywhere - inform your local law enforcement authorities immediately. Both William Cortez and his wife Jane should be considered armed and very dangerous. Do not approach these people under any circumstances. And, this story is going to hit the local Panamanian media starting tonight and in the papers tomorrow morning. I've also been fielding calls from reporters, particularly from the St. Louis area, Cher's hometown.
Hugo Chavez is now warring full body armor everywhere he go’s.
Story by Panama Jack
It look like Hugo Chavez is about to declare war on Colombia, in his drug crazed mind he is seeing everyone around him closing in on him wanting to take his oil away. In the movie Godfather Marlin Brando’s family took out the heads of all the other mafia families in one quick sweep. Sounds like something Obama should be thinking about. One quick hit. Venezuela, Cuba, North Korea, Iran. It is called a change in leadership and then you say who is next and no one will be raising their hand and there is nothing left but world peace.
Venezuela's Chavez warns Colombia amid tensionsBy FABIOLA SANCHEZ, Associated Press
CARACAS, Venezuela – Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez warned Colombia against provoking a conflict, saying any attack on his country would trigger a reaction.Chavez insisted he wants peace during a speech Friday night but raised the possibility of a conflict, saying his top generals were constantly evaluating the situation along the Colombian border and that he was in contact with commanders at border posts to make sure they don't "fall for provocations.""Imagine a war between Colombia and Venezuela. That would be something to cry over for a hundred years," Chavez said. "But you understand that if we are attacked, we aren't going to stay with our arms crossed."Chavez announced he was breaking off diplomatic relations with the neighboring country on Thursday and placed his military on alert, accusing Colombia's U.S.-allied government of fabricating evidence showing Colombian rebel bases inside Venezuela.Despite the tensions, cars and pedestrians moved between the countries as usual at border crossings Friday, officials on both sides said. Venezuelan Vice President Elias Jaua called the situation on the border normal.The diplomatic dispute over the presence of Colombian rebels in Venezuela has worsened just as Colombian President Alvaro Uribe prepares to leave office.Uribe has frequently feuded with Venezuela's socialist leader, and Colombian officials have long complained, mostly in private, that Chavez has harbored leaders of its two main rebel groups.President-elect Juan Manuel Santos, however, has stressed the importance of mending trade relations with Venezuela, which overwhelmingly benefit Colombia's food producers. And Chavez has raised the possibility that relations could be restored under Santos.Trade between Venezuela and Colombia has fallen 70 percent since Chavez froze relations a year ago in response to Colombia's decision to grant the U.S. military expanded access to its military bases. The scaled-back relations have also hurt Venezuelan consumers, as sporadic shortages of items like beef — once imported from Colombia — have worsened.At a meeting of the Organization of American States in Washington on Thursday, Colombian Ambassador Luis Alfonso Hoyos presented photos, videos, witness testimony and maps of what he said were rebel camps inside Venezuela and challenged Venezuelan officials to let independent observers visit them.Chavez has suggested the photographs presented by Colombia could be bogus. He also has suggested Uribe and the U.S. "empire" could be attempting to provoke a war, and insisted Venezuela does everything possible to prevent members of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia and the smaller National Liberation Army from crossing into Venezuelan territory."We have never supported movements in Colombia in any way, even though we could have. And I'm not referring to the guerrillas," Chavez said Friday night.He said he thinks the rebels "should reconsider their armed strategy" because they seem to have no chance of toppling the government and also because "they've become the main excuse for the empire to deeply penetrate Colombia."Chavez has argued in the past that U.S. officials are using Colombia to portray him as a supporter of terrorist groups to justify U.S. military intervention in Venezuela. He warned that any aggression against Venezuela could "become a boomerang against the Yankee empire."U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon expressed hope that Venezuela and Colombia will work out their differences in a peaceful manner.In Washington, U.S. State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley called the dispute unfortunate and said it was a "petulant response by Venezuela to cut off relations with Colombia.""Venezuela has clear responsibilities. Colombia has put forward serious charges. They deserve to be investigated," Crowley told reporters.The European Union, in a statement issued by its ambassadors in Colombia and Venezuela, called for relations to be re-established soon and urged the countries to "abstain from any action that could exacerbate tensions." Colombian Foreign Minister Jaime Bermudez complained that Venezuela had cut relations without clearly responding to the Colombian government's accusations. He said what's needed is "effective cooperation in the fight against terrorism."
Panamanian police identify body of US woman
Assocaied Press
PANAMA CITY – Panamanian authorities say they have identified the body of a U.S. woman who had been missing since March and are looking for a Texas man suspected in her death.
Prosecutors' advisor Neftali Jaen says police on Friday identified the remains of Cheryl Lynn Hugues, who went missing in western Bocas del Toro province. He didn't have a hometown for Hughes.
Police on Tuesday found her body and the skeletal remains of another person buried in the back patio of a hotel owned by William Adolfo Cortez, of Texas.
Jaen said police are investigating whether the remains are those of a U.S. man missing since December 2009. He said Cortez has a tourism company that belonged to the missing man registered in his name.
Simon Bolivar an obsession for Venezuela's Chavez
By CHRISTOPHER TOOTHAKER, Associated Press
By CHRISTOPHER TOOTHAKER, Associated Press CARACAS, Venezuela – For Hugo Chavez, Simon Bolivar is more than a founding father to be feted once a year on his birthday. He's the icon of an entire political movement. He's a muse whose words inspire nearly two centuries after his death.For Chavez, Bolivar is an obsession.The president's admiration for "El Libertador," who has been his guiding light since Chavez was a rank-and-file soldier, goes far beyond the conventional reverence most Venezuelans hold for the independence leader who is being honored Saturday on the 227th anniversary of his birth.The socialist Chavez views himself as the modern emissary and disciple of Bolivar, and sees parallels between his hero's efforts to free South America from Spanish rule and his own crusade to challenge U.S. influence in the region.Critics say he is trying to cast himself as Bolivar's reincarnation — an allegation Chavez vehemently denies.Chavez's fascination with Bolivar has been on display like never before this month as he has exhumed Bolivar's bones in hopes of using modern forensics to confirm his identity — and investigate the president's theory his idol was felled by a murder conspiracy.Historians have generally concluded Bolivar died of tuberculosis, and some Venezuelans are saying Chavez has gone too far."It's madness. Bolivar's dead. His remains should remain untouched," said Rosalinda Fuentes, a 53-year-old housewife who doesn't support either Chavez or his political opponents.On walls in Caracas, graffiti has appeared reading: "Let me rest in peace. Bolivar."Chavez is undeterred in using Bolivar as his political stamp and a nationalist symbol to rally his supporters.A portrait of the 19th century independence leader often serves as a backdrop during televised speeches in which Chavez reads Bolivar's writings and expounds on his aims.His political movement — the Bolivarian Revolution — takes its name from his idol. Shortly after taking office in 1999, Chavez pressured a popularly elected assembly packed with his allies to change the country's name to the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela.Chavez has vowed to build a monument to Bolivar atop the mountains that fringe Caracas.At public events, he sometimes brandishes Bolivar's sword — a solid-gold saber encrusted with more than 1,000 diamonds, rubies and other precious stones. He has given gold-plated replicas of the sword to foreign allies, including former Cuban President Fidel Castro and Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.Chavez's opponents contend the president manipulates the history of Bolivar to serve his own political purposes.And some accuse Chavez of launching the investigation into Bolivar's death in hopes of affecting legislative elections in September. They say he wants to distract public attention from problems such as crime, 31 percent inflation and a scandal involving thousands of tons of food left rotting in government storage.Opposition newspaper editor Teodoro Petkoff says Chavez tries to portray himself as a modern-day Bolivar, attempting to win over supporters by tapping into nationalist sentiment."The Chavista revival of the cult has created its own replica of the Holy Trinity: Bolivar, Chavez and the people," Petkoff wrote in a stinging editorial in his daily, Tal Cual. Vice President Elias Jaua called the criticism from government opponents "pitiful" during a news conference, saying only "sick minds are capable of judging a very serious investigation and minimizing the importance of the investigation."
Costa Rica Bachelor PartiesPanama Bachelor Parties.Story by Panama JackWhat better place in the world to through a bachelor party than in Central America (Costa Rica. Panama)2 stable countries in Latin America where the best bachelor parties can be thrown. The reason is that the cost for a first class bachelor party including airfare and hotel is very cheap. You can rent a small Private hotel in Costa Rica or Panama for very little money; you have the run of the house. You bring in strippers to the hotel and the next thing everyone has a great time, no one is driving drunk and when the strip show is over the strippers stay with you and spend the night. Yes in these Central American countries prostitution is legal that means a stripper can also be a prostitute. If you would like further information on how and where you can have a bachelor party in Panama or Costa Rica you can contact Panama Jack at e-mail jack@republicofpanama.net
Costa Rica Bachalar PartiesPanama bachalar Parties.
Story by Panama JackWhat better place in the world to through a bachalar party than in Central America ( Costa Rica. Panama)2 stable countries in latin America where the best bachalar parties can be throun. The reason is that the cost for a first class bachalar party including airfair and hotel is very cheap. You can rent a small Privite hotel in Costa Rica or Panama for very little money, you have the run of the house. You bring in stippers to the hotel and the next thing everyone has a great time, no one is driving drunk and when the strip show is over the strippers stay with you and spend the night. Yes in these Central American countries prostitution is legal that means a stripper can also be a prostitute. If you would like futher information on how and where you can have a bachalar party in Panama or Costa Rica you can contact Panama Jack at e-mail jack@republicofpanama.net
Argentina's gay marriage law signed by president
Argentina's gay marriage law signed by presidentBy DEBORA REY, Associated Press BUENOS AIRES, Argentina – President Cristina Fernandez signed a new law Wednesday making Argentina the first country in Latin America to legalize marriage for same-sex couples.Civil registries across the nation will now begin processing long lists of marriage applications from gay couples. The first such ceremony in Buenos Aires is set for Aug. 13."Today we are a society that is a little more egalitarian than last week," Fernandez said at the signing ceremony.Representatives of groups for gays and lesbians cheered, crying out "Equality, equality!"The law, which was approved by the Senate last week following earlier endorsement by the lower house, grants same-sex couples the full legal protections and responsibilities that marriage gives to heterosexual couples, including the ability to inherit property and to jointly adopt children.Mexico's capital was the first city in the region to legalize gay marriages."We must all get used to living in a free country, in harmony," said designer Roberto Piazza, who attended the signing.He said he planned to take advantage of the law and marry his partner soon.The bill was pushed by Fernandez's left-of-center administration, worsening its already strained relations with the Roman Catholic Church.
It's Nicaragua, Iran and Chávez
keeping U.S. eyes on area
Dear A.M. Costa Rica:
As an expat pensionado living here full time I would like to clear up some large misconceptions of why the U.S. wants a military presence here.
First of all, the notion that the U.S. wants to control or make Costa Rica a territory, ludicrous, at best. The U.S. has had a defense treaty with Costa Rica for years, which should be welcome with the fact that Nicaragua is now nothing short of a total dictatorship and is allied, with Venezuela, which is now mining uranium for Iran for the purpose of expanding their nuclear weapons program and who is sending secret flights of personnel to Caracas on a monthly basis.
Other than fair trade the U.S. has no other intention other than to stop the flow of drugs and keep a necessary eye out for the security of the region for which no one else can or is capable of doing.
The ships that come here will offer aid and medical treatment for people here as well. To those who say "Yankee Go Home" I can only say "Who Ya Gonna call" when your country's security is threatened by a military power in the area??? We should be glad the U.S. is nearby and willing to be a good, helpful neighbor.
Is the United States sending warships to dethrown the dictators of Central and South America?
Is the United States sending warships to dethrown the dictators of Central and South America?
Is the United States sending warships to dethrown the dictators of Central and South America?
Is the United States sending warships to dethrown the dictators of Central and South America?
Story By Panama Jack
Costa Rica and Panama.The United States of America has 47 warships on route to Central America, some think that the United States is going to put an end for once and for all to the Sandinista Dictator Daniel Ortega and while they are at it knock off the oil stealing drug running dictator cokehead Hugo Chavez who has seized several American oil fields and several hotel chains in Venezuela. Some think Hugo Chavez have been working with groups and supplying them with guns to over though several countries in Central and South America. President Ricardo Martinelli of Panama says the United States has talking it eye off the ball Meaning (Central and South America ) but 47 Men of War sailing south does not look like a there is going to be a walk in the park. I wonder why they just can not keep it simple and shoot a missile right into those dictators bathrooms while they are taking a dump, like Ronald Reagan did with Kaddafi, or should I call him Cuntdadfi. They are saying the 7 thousand United States Marines and that means about 30 thousand support personal. That sounds like 37 thousand men coming to Central and South America.Controversial Visit is a Medical, Humanitarian one?
By the A.M. Costa Rica staff
One of the U.S. Navy vessels to take advantage of Costa Rica's approval of its visit is the USS Iwo Jima.
A spokesman for the U.S. Southern Command said that the Iwo Jima, a 257-meter (843-foot) amphibious assault ship that has been refitted with special medical equipment, plans a stop in Costa Rica. The boat, its crew and non-profit organization staffers will spend from 10 days to two weeks providing humanitarian assistance to residents of the southern Caribbean coast, the Southern Command spokesman said. The dates still are uncertain.
"The primary focus of the medical teams is to provide a range of health care services ashore. On a case-by-case basis, select patients will receive medical or dental care on the ship," said a Southern Command release, adding:
"The medical contingent aboard USS Iwo Jima is trained to provide general and specialty surgical care, primary and consultative care for children and adults, obstetrical and gynecological consultative care, ophthalmologic services, optometric services, preventative medicine treatment, dental screenings and treatment, optometry screenings, eyewear distribution, public health training, infrastructure support and veterinary services."
This is the fifth such visit by similar ships. The Iwo Jima was included in a list of 46 ships that the Assemble Legislative permitted to visit Costa Rica. Such approval is required by the Costa Rican Constitution. Also cited was a 10-year-old anti-drug agreement between Costa Rica and the United States, although the mission of the Iwo Jima does not involve drug interdiction.
Although 46 boats and 7,000 crew members were mentioned in the assembly resolution, most of them will not visit Costa Rica. For example, the famous USNS Comfort, a hospital ship, is on the list but not scheduled to stop here during the next six months, said the Southern Command spokesman.
Primary opponents in the legislature were Luis Fishman Zonsinski of the Partido Unidad Social Cristiana and Jose Maria Villalta Florez-Estrada of Frente Amplio, a party that has ties to Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez.
More recently the Sindicato de Trabajadoras y Trabajadores de la Educación Costarricense published a half-page text ad in El Diario Extra in which it said its Congreso Ideológico opposed the resolution and asked the government to withdraw the permission. President Laura Chinchilla noted that similar permissions have been granted every six months for years.
A Prensa Latina news story prompted the most concern because it gave the impression that 46 ships and 7,000 service members were going to come to Costa Rica at the same time. The Cuban news service seems to be in step with Communist Party President Fidel Castro, who is promoting the idea that the United States is about to start a nuclear war.
Some 1,600 persons will be on the Iwo Jima, the Southern Command spokesman said. The Iwo Jima left Norfolk, Virginia, July 12 to begin its four-month goodwill mission, called Continuing Promise 2010. In addition to Costa Rica, the ship will visit Haiti, Colombia, Guatemala, Guyana, Nicaragua, Panamá and Suriname.
"The mission aims to foster goodwill and demonstrate U.S. commitment and support to Latin America and the Caribbean," said the Southern Command. The Continuing Promise medical contingent will partner with local health care providers and community officials to provide free medical care to communities with limited access to medical treatment, it said.
The medical/dental/veterinary crew includes medical professionals from the U.S. military and U.S. Public Health Service, non-governmental organizations and other international partners, all with approval from various ministries of the host nations, said the Southern Command.
A team of Navy Seabees will conduct building repairs and improvements, small construction
projects, utility system repairs and
other engineering assistance projects for local communities during the mission.. About 500 Marines from Cherry Point, North Carolina, are supporting the deployment. The Marines’ mission is to provide air, ground and logistics support to humanitarian civic assistance activities, the Southern Commands said. They will also be ready to provide relief to any natural/man-made disaster that may occur in the region, it added. The ship is carrying four Blackhawk helicopters.
The Iwo Jima now is in Miami and scheduled to leave Wednesday for Haiti, the first country on its list of stops. The crew of the Iwo Jima will be joined during the mission by medical, dental and engineering professionals from Canada, Chile, Germany, the Netherlands and Paraguay, the Southern Command said. Supplies have been donated by some 30 non-profit organizations.
Large amphibious ships, like Iwo Jima, resemble small aircraft carriers and include the ability to rapidly move personnel and cargo by
helicopter and landing craft, making it an ideal platform to support humanitarian relief missions on short notice, the Southern Command explained.
This is the fifth such deployment to the region since 2007. Prior deployments were supported by crews aboard the hospital ship USNS Comfort and the amphibious ships USS Boxer and USS Kearsarge, the Southern Command said. Continuing Promise crews have treated more than 265,000 patients during previous missions, it added.
U.S. service personnel have visited southeastern Costa Rica several times. They provided needed medical treatment for the largely native population there.
American Citizen "Bo" Olsen Shot and Killed on Sailboat in PanamaContributed by: Don Winner
Bond Olsen, 61, of Denmark, died early Tuesday when five gunmen attacked his sailboat the "Antares." Also on the boat at the time of the attack were his son, 24 year old American citizen Zacarías Keiser Olsen and his 27 year old wife Sujey Rodríguez, a Panamanian woman from Chiriqui. The criminals shot Olsen in his right leg and he bled to death. The bullet hit an artery. The sailboat has been anchored for six months in front of the Bajo Pipón island in the Gulf of Chiriqui. (La Critica) Editor's Comment: From what I understand "Bo" Olsen is a dual US/Danish citizen. His 24 year old son was born in the United States, and he was also shot in the side. They managed to get to land and he was operated on yesterday. Zack's wife was beaten in the face by the attackers. I've received some phone calls and emails from some members of the boating community in this area detailing some of the rumors and innuendo possibly surrounding this attack - but since there's nothing substantial I won't repeat any of that stuff - at this point is all just speculation and gossip. The Panamanian authorities continue to investigate the attack. erpol looks for 35 Panamanians Among domestic demand internationally including three women linked to fraud, drug and sex crimes. Rafael Luna Noguera
story La PrensaFor the month of August 2007, the list contained 29 names. Today , total 35 Panamanians included among the wanted fugitives in the world by the International Criminal Police Organization (Interpol , for its acronym in English ) , according to official records of his own website.These 32 men and three women, the latter prosecuted for fraud, drug offenses and sex crimes. Four of Panamanian citizens share their nationality with the Brazilian, U.S. and Bolivia. 21 come from the province of Panama, Chiriqui six , three of Columbus and an equal number of Bocas del Toro , one is from La Villa de Los Santos and another of Herrera. All share list with the most wanted man on the planet: Osama bin Laden , leader of the al Qaeda terrorist network .In their cases , 29 arrest warrants were fought by the judicial authorities of Panama , three out of U.S. courts , one is from Guatemala , one from Costa Rica and Argentina over .Among the crimes for which they are looking for highlights of the homicide in 18 cases . Also include crimes related to international drug trafficking , smuggling , trafficking and illegal immigration , crimes committed with weapons and explosives, crimes against children , robbery, money laundering , kidnapping , organized crime and sexual offenses.Although the number of Panamanians wanted by Interpol increased by seven during the past three years , is still below the record of its two nearest neighbors. In fact , the number of Costa Ricans sought by international police amounts to 44 and the Colombians in the same situation up , including up to 160 .The most notedPerhaps the " fugitive " highest profile in the list of former Panamanian dictator remains Manuel Antonio Noriega, whose arrest warrant or " Red Notice " arrest began circulating in January 2007.The reference capture, for extradition was made by the Second Superior Court of Justice regarding the case of the slaughter of Albrook , where Noriega was sentenced to 15 years in prison after being convicted in 1996.For the time it was included in the list of those wanted by Interpol , Noriega was a prisoner in Miami and expected to be released on September 9 of that year. Today, three years later, the former dictator was sentenced to seven years in prison in France, and the purge in La Santé prison in Paris , where he held since being extradited from the United States last April 27. renowned murderersAlso on the list of fugitives from Interpol who was one of Noriega's henchmen , Evidelio Quiel , sentenced to 20 years in prison for the aforementioned case of the slaughter of Albrook.Quiel was arrested in San José , Costa Rica on October 21, 2005 , but months later he was released , as authorities in the neighboring country to Panama denied the extradition , arguing that the trial and conviction of former military occurred in absentia.Apart from the high-profile figures for the crimes of the dictatorship , the Interpol list includes " notorious "criminals , as Frank Luzer Pardo , aka the knacker of Azuero , declared an international fugitive after escaping from La Joyita in August 2006.This man , who today is 47 years old , and his brother Sandy , 44 and still in prison, were sentenced to 20 years in prison in 2000 for the murder of Oristela Batista, December 8, 1995 , who was stabbed at least 32 times in a satanic ritual course . The fact that shocked the public opinion occurred in El Ejido de Los Santos.Luzer is arrested in Mexico since late last year , reported as a murderer in the pay of a drug cartel . Panama preparing an extradition request to refer to their Mexican counterparts .Another of the " notorious " Panamanians wanted in the world is Carlos Meneses Lambiz , the only mass murderer in the country , officials said , and the number one most wanted list in Panama for at least five years.A Meneses Lambiz are attributed to fraud, theft and rape, but mostly for the crimes he is accused of three women : Rafaela Abrego , whose body was found in May 2002 in a park in Miraflores sector in Bethania , Maria Luisa Caballero, missing since May 14, 2003 , and Leticia González was murdered in June 2004.Other NamesBut perhaps the most dangerous villain on the list is Victor Antonio McCrae , 44 , born in Panama and also a U.S. citizen.This man, 1.76 meters tall and 72 kilos in weight, brown eyes and black hair, is wanted by the authorities of the Eastern District of North Carolina and Prince Georges County in Maryland, USA, for crimes against children , homicide , crimes involving the use of firearms and explosives, sexual crimes and theft.Finally, 10 positions higher on the list is Jose Pirtea , 32, sought for homicide. In 2008, Pirtea ranked fifth in the list of " most wanted " in Panama, because of its alleged links to drug lie down . He said as a suspect in the murder of Alkis Arana, committed in 2008 in Hato Pintado.Pirtea , of course lieutenant David Viteri (now fugitive ) was arrested last May 11 when he tried to rob a bank branch in the capital were analyzed using a police uniform . His name, however, remains on the list.The youngest on the list is Emilio Santos Amador , 21 , wanted for crimes against life and health . The higher Noriega , 76 years.Are lacking , but it does the jobSince the demise of the Judicial Technical Police and consequent establishment of the Directorate of Judicial Investigation (DIJ ) , a process that took place between December 2007 and March 2008 , the local branch of Interpol became a dependency of the new entity and the director of this came to be in charge of international police in Panama. Thus DIJ chief , Javier Carrillo, is also the head of Interpol, an organization that, according to Carrillo himself admitted , works with shortcomings similar to those that have other units of the National Police. "But the job is done , "he said . "Missing personnel and resources. " He explained that the search for suspects in Panama is constantly active . "If you have any requested information that is in the country , immediately activates the quest to win his arrest or exclude the information, " he said. The start of operations of the International Criminal Police Organization dates back to 1923, although the idea of creation came nine years earlier, in 1914, after a series of meetings between officers of European countries. Since 1989, its headquarters are in Lyon , France with offices in 184 countries. Its status as of 1956 , prohibits engaging in political, religious or racial .Until 1970 it was usual to find common criminals among the most searched , but later these were replaced by antisocial organized crime figures , drug traffickers and murderers in series. After the attacks of September 11, 2001 , most of which top the list are Middle Eastern terrorists .
Panama & Costa Rica may be next
Argentina legalizes gay marriage in historic voteAssociated Press Writer Michael WarrenBUENOS AIRES, Argentina – Argentina legalized same-sex marriage Thursday, becoming the first country in Latin America to grant gays and lesbians all the legal rights, responsibilities and protections that marriage brings to heterosexual couples.After a marathon debate, 33 lawmakers voted in favor, 27 were against it and 3 abstained in Argentina's Senate in a vote that ended after 4 a.m. Since the lower house already approved it, and President Cristina Fernandez is a strong supporter, it now becomes law as soon as it is published in the official bulletin.The law is sure to bring a wave of marriages by gays and lesbians who have increasingly found Buenos Aires to be more accepting than many other places in the region.The approval came despite a concerted campaign by the Roman Catholic Church and evangelical groups, which drew 60,000 people to march on Congress and urged parents in churches and schools to work against passage.Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio said "everyone loses" with gay marriage, and "children need to have the right to be raised and educated by a father and a mother."Nine gay couples had already married in Argentina after persuading judges that the constitutional mandate of equality supports their marriage rights, but some of these marriages were later declared invalid.As the debate stretched on for nearly 16 hours, supporters and opponents of held rival vigils through the frigid night outside the Congress building in Buenos Aires."Marriage between a man and a woman has existed for centuries, and is essential for the perpetuation of the species," insisted Sen. Juan Perez Alsina, who is usually a loyal supporter of the president but gave a passionate speech against gay marriage.But Sen. Norma Morandini, another member of the president's party, compared the discrimination closeted gays face to the oppression imposed by Argentina's dictators decades ago."What defines us is our humanity, and what runs against humanity is intolerance," she said.Same-sex civil unions have been legalized in Uruguay, Buenos Aires and some states in Mexico and Brazil. Mexico City has legalized gay marriage. Colombia's Constitutional Court granted same-sex couples inheritance rights and allowed them to add their partners to health insurance plans.But Argentina now becomes the first country in Latin America to legalize same-sex marriage nationwide, granting gays and lesbians all the same rights and responsibilities that heterosexuals have. These include many more rights than civil unions, including adopting children and inheriting wealth.Gay rights advocates said Argentina's historic step adds momentum to similar efforts around the world."Today's historic vote shows how far Catholic Argentina has come, from dictatorship to true democratic values, and how far the freedom to marry movement has come, as twelve countries on four continents now embrace marriage equality," said Evan Wolfson, who runs the U.S. Freedom to Marry lobby.He urged U.S. lawmakers to stand up "for the Constitution and all families here in the United States. America should lead, not lag, when it comes to treating everyone equally under the law."Among the opponents were teacher Eduardo Morales, who said he believes the legislation was concocted by Buenos Aires residents who are out step with the views of the country."They want to convert this city into the gay capital of the world," said Morales of San Luis province.Ines Franck, director of the group Familias Argentinas, said the legislation cuts against centuries of tradition. Opposing the measure "is not discrimination, because the essence of a family is between two people of opposite sexes," he said. "Any variation goes against the law, and against nature." The president, currently on a state visit to China, spoke out from there against the Argentine Catholic Church's campaign and the tone she said some religious groups have taken. "It's very worrisome to hear words like 'God's war' or 'the devil's project,' things that recall the times of the Inquisition," she said. Some opposition leaders have accused her of promoting the initiative to gain votes in next year's presidential elections, when Fernandez's husband, former President Nestor Kirchner, is expected to run again. The vote came after Sen. Daniel Filmus urged fellow lawmakers to show the world how much Argentina has matured. "Society has grown up. We aren't the same as we were before," he said. ___ Associated Press Staff Writers Almudena Calatrava, Debora Rey and Bridget Huber contributed to this report.
Chavez: Venezuela rethinks relations with Vatican
associated pressCARACAS, Venezuela – President Hugo Chavez announced Wednesday that Venezuela would rethink its relations with the Vatican as tensions rise between his government and Catholic Church representatives who accuse the socialist leader of becoming increasingly authoritarian.During a televised speech, Chavez instructed his foreign minister to "examine" relations with the Vatican. Without elaborating, he questioned the validity of an agreement giving the Catholic Church privileges that are not extended to other religious organizations in Venezuela.Chavez also challenged the authority of Pope Benedict XVI, saying the pope "isn't God's emissary on Earth."There was no immediately reaction from the papal nuncio in Caracas.Chavez and Venezuela's Catholic Church are clashing like never before.In recent weeks, Chavez has said that Christ would whip church leaders for suggesting that he's steering Venezuela toward a Cuban-style Marxist dictatorship. He also accused Cardinal Jorge Urosa of misleading the Vatican with warnings that Venezuela is drifting toward dictatorship.Urosa has defended his decision to tell the Vatican that Chavez is curbing freedoms.Chavez said Urosa represents the interests of "fascist, extreme right-wing" elites and accused the clergy of siding with opposition parties ahead of September legislative elections.Priests critical of his government "are trying to manipulate the people," Chavez said.The Venezuelan Bishops' Conference issued a statement this week warning that political polarization is creating a hostile environment ahead of the Sept. 26 vote.Venezuela is overwhelmingly Roman Catholic.Chavez claims that Christianity has a big influence on his socialist movement.
Report cites discrimination
against Latin women
Special to A.M. Costa Rica
Women in Latin America and the Caribbean are still discriminated against in the labor market and receive lower wages than men for the same work, according to a new United Nations report which also points to women in the region spending more time on unpaid domestic or care work.
“It will not be possible to achieve equality for women in the workplace until the burden of unpaid and care work which they have historically shouldered has been resolved,” sasid Alicia Bárcena, executive secretary of the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean as she presented the report in Brazil.
“This calls for the establishment of a new virtuous equation that encompasses the state, the market and the family,” she stated.
The report – entitled “What kind of State? What kind of equality?” – reviews achievements made as well as the challenges facing countries in the region.
According to a news release issued by the commission, studies of the total workload, including paid and unpaid, of men and women in different countries in the region shows two trends. In all cases, total work time is greater for women than for men, and women devote more of their time to unpaid work than men.
Women in Brazil, for example, devote 56.6 hours per week to total work, compared to 52 hours for men. In Mexico, women spend a total of 76.3 hours working, whereas men spend only 58.4 hours.
Figures from 2008 show that 31.6 per cent of women over the age of 15 had no income of their own, while only 10.4 per cent of men were in the same position. Also, more women than men were unemployed, at 8.3 per cent and 5.7 per cent respectively.
While the wage gap has narrowed – women’s average income rose from 69 per cent of that of men in 1990 to 79 per cent in 2008 – women continue to be overrepresented in lower-income occupations and underrepresented in senior positions. Women still receive lower wages than men for work of equal value.
The report emphasizes the need to raise awareness of the economic and social value of the unpaid and care work performed by women in the region. It also stresses the importance of empowering women to exercise their right to choice, so that they can participate under equal conditions in the labor market and in decision-making.
Panama
The report was presented at the 11th session of the Regional Conference on Women in Latin America and the Caribbean, which began Tuesday in the Brazilian capital, Brasilia.
a does not recognize the jurisdiction of the Central American Court
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story by la prensa
- The Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced tonight that the Panamanian government recognizes neither the jurisdiction nor the competence of the Central American Court of Justice ( CCJ).
Panama revealed this position after a representative of the CCJ delivered two papers this morning about some claims against the State of Panama for their retirement Parliament (Parlacen ).
According to a press release from the Foreign Ministry, the lawsuits were filed by both the Central American Parliament as members of that regional body .
He added that they received these documents, but the Panamanian government does not give notice in view that recognizes neither the jurisdiction nor the jurisdiction of the CCJ .
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Panama reported that the Agreement on the Statute of the CCJ has not been ratified by all States , including Panama , so that their specific skills can not be binding on the states that have not ratified it . That is, are not mandatory for Panama , Costa Rica and Belize.
Spain Wins World Cup
Pamnama Parties Big
Building's and cars Burned in Panama
story La Prensa
lootng in panama
After nine days of protests by workers BANANA AND TWO OF DISTURBANCES , THE NUMBER OF WOUNDED It rises to 105Bocas del Toro , beset by violenceOfficial reports realize that yesterday there was looting in several stores of Changuinola and Almirante. Cars and buildings were burnedstory La PrensaAfter completing nine days of the strike carried out by workers of the Union of Banana Industry Act against 30 to "9 in 1 ", and despite the curfew imposed by the government since last Thursday , the violence continued yesterday for almost all the day Almirante and Changuinola , major towns in Bocas del Toro.Official sources confirmed that there was looting, while several cars , two buses and several buildings were burned , and four police officials were held against their will.According to the count of the Social Security Fund (CSS ) to yesterday a worker had died and the number of injured rose to 105, of which 35 had to be moved to the capital.Both in the Changuinola Almirante as businesses closed their doors , accelerating the shortage of basic products and appliances .More than 15 barricades were placed along the main street of Changuinola , and the center of the city was under siege.At the midway were burned the offices of the Authority Consumer Protection and Competition , Ministry of Health and even the Juvenile Police . Also, the branch of Global Bank and partially the clinic Santa Isabel.Several stores , restaurants and gas stations were also affected.Surprisingly, the journalists who came to the scene to report the facts became the target of the protesters , who accused them of not telling the truth.Throughout the day there was no dialogue between workers and government officials who traveled to Changuinola, between the Minister of the Presidency , Demetrio Papadimitriu to solve the conflict.HostilitiesThe riots began yesterday about 8:00 am, after riot officers tried to replicate the National Police to workers in the community of Finca 11, which at that hour of the morning and began throwing stones and sticks against soldiers stationed in the area since last Thursday.Although initially the police were able to move the protesters , they regrouped in the afternoon and regained control of the area, including airport facilities Changuinola. In fact, when it was thought that the Police had controlled the central area of the city , a mob took the police station for Children and Adolescents, in Finca 6, looted , damaged the furniture and torched the place , while tied four officers.The incident occurred at 2:00 p.m. It was not until 4:00 p.m. when other officers arrived and freed their comrades.DepartedThe National Police director , Gustavo Perez , called the protest illegal banana workers and warned that vandalism in several shops in the Changuinola Central was led by criminals who took advantage of the situation. "These hooligans have begun to blur everything. Police have maintained my sanity, so we have maintained an upright position , ensuring the best for the population, " he said. The population , rather, speaks of excesses. Perez said the first objective of the institution to reach the province was to recover the airport and this was accomplished in the morning. " We are once again placing the order, " he said.He acknowledged they have had difficulty controlling the situation because " criminals " cover their faces , and other crops are introduced into the banana and mix with other people.Perez confirmed that already identified the authors of "kidnapping "of the four agents. For its part , the secretary of Control of Banana Unions of Bocas Fruit Company, Orlando Lopez, described as a "disrespect "that government officials asked the Bocatorenos sanity when President Ricardo Martinelli has not even been submitted in the province, which he said has caused the workers to remain on a war footing and that the community will join the protests. Requested the Executive to discuss the content of Law No. 30 within the assembly, otherwise the situation will come out of their hands. " In fact , reported that a large number of people in the communities of Loma Mulet , La Gloria and El Junquito Teribe are coming to the area to support the banana workers.BarriersReach the area of conflict is an almost impossible task , as indigenous and peasant knocked at least 100 trees and crossed at different points of the route that leads from Silico Creek to Almirante and Changuinola .To get to Changuinola must walk 22 kilometers (about 11 hours from Columbus ) or an hour's travel by river boat .But the route does not guarantee that it can pass the primary seal that is on the Changuinola River , if you go by land .Must be negotiated with the leaders and pass a thorough review. "Check pa see if they are police, "he shouted as he reached the area the team at La Prensa.Long distanceAlong the 89 km distance between Almirante and Changuinola Rambala and be seen long lines of trucks filled with food , fuel , cooking gas and perishables.From early yesterday morning in Rambala everyone talks about what happens in Almirante and Changuinola , where he still pumps and pellets rumble . That way to go, but I just can not. A single carrier will have to wait. Commercial activity in that part of the province is paralyzed from the beginning of the fray, and losses are millionaires [see related story ].The shops have closed and has limited passenger trips for fear of being burned buses . " The peasants are afraid. No more chicken and there is no rice , " Loo told Ching , one of the merchants concerned .The phones do not stop playing on Rambala . Some carriers , such as Jose Pitti , were desperate because their shipment was to be at 8:00 am Admiral in order to board the ferry bound for Isla Colon. European and South American tourists were confused. The buses that transported them from Panama were left to their fate and some took risks to hire taxis in the hope to get as close to the port of Almirante."We leave here in this place ( Rambala ), and we do not know where we are , "he repeated , annoyed , Sebastian Piati , who traveled from Argentina to see the beaches of Isla Colon.From David in Chiriqui, traveling about 35 buses a day to Changuinola , but in the past two days everything has been suspended.The trucks that distribute LPG have not been able to advance the state of siege that live in these villages. "It's only 20 minutes to arrive, but it is impossible and everything is closed, " he said Pitti .AirliftFirst thing yesterday morning was completed on the first shipment of wounded from David to the capital.Initially , 12 workers were brought to St. Thomas Hospital by air, most of them with bird shot in the face and , especially, in the eyes.All came to the Hospital Rafael Hernandez David, Chiriqui, from Rambala , Bocas del Toro , where he has installed a sort of reception center injured. According to the regional director of the Ministry of Health, Jose Luis Castillo , were sent to the capital by the lack of technology required to meet eye lesions were registered .Some of those injured were identified as Luis Alfredo Jimenez, Hortensio Villagra , Joel Antonio Gonzalez, Teber Horacio Castillo , Benito Quintero and Luis Alfredo Santos. The National Police Lieutenant Benjamin Vazquez was also treated at the hospital of David with his left shoulder injuries caused by stones .In VeraguasMeanwhile, students of the Juan Demosthenes Arosemena Normal School of Santiago and educators veragüenses made yesterday two street closures in support of the population Bocas , both without any major protests .First came the students, who closed for 30 minutes on sixth street , next to campus, and then did the same teachers , who were stationed in the central avenue for half an hour. Luis Puga , a spokesman for the students, and Yadira Pino , head teachers , said they remain in the streets this weekend .Continued ...And in that same direction, made one of the wounded transferred yesterday from David to the capital, who warned that the protests will continue , while spokesmen for the National Front for the Defense of Social Rights , chapter of Chiriqui, declared their support for the strikers and announced upcoming events."This is for the president , Ricardo Martinelli , learn to respect and know that Indians do not play with us and respect our rights , "said the wounded man , who preferred not to be named .Meanwhile, the Central Labor Council of Provinces of the Trade Union of Construction Workers and Allied gave a press conference in Aguadulce and announced that the labor sector in the region of the country is on alert , while his call spread workers in other sectors , unions and people in general. (With information Sanjur Pedro Rodriguez , Leonardo Flores , Dustin Guerra, Bocharel Flor , Sandra Alicia Rivera , Teofilo A. Gonzalez, Zabdy Barria, Ney Abdiel Castillo)
Roits in Panama Boca Del Toro
Story Nacion
Panama. ( AFP). The government and the union movement in Panama today began negotiations aimed at normalizing the situation in the west of the country under curfew after clashes between workers and police on Thursday that left one dead and one hundred injured.The protests spread to the capital Friday , where groups of university students and labor unions took to the streets in solidarity with banana workers in the city of Changuinola.According to the Ministry of Security, the situation remained tense in Changuinola , where demonstrators burned a police station and an officer was wounded in the leg , the result of " a bullet fired by a protester armed with a rifle. "The government also asserts that demonstrators " have been burned several shops and vehicles used as barricades in the streets " , so it has been decreed a new curfew.Riots broke out on Thursday in this city of the province of Bocas del Toro , where a worker was killed over a hundred were injured and another 115 were detained by the authorities.The workers are protesting against a set of labor laws, including a rule that removes the requirement on companies to pay union dues and allows employers to replace workers during strikes .Despite the climate of protests , government and unions began a dialogue seeking to end the unrest." We see no immediate solution , "he told AFP Genario Lopez , leader of the Single Union of Construction Workers and Allied , and reiterated that employees " will continue to demand the repeal of the law " has caused protests.Government spokeswoman , Judy Meana , told AFP that is being called the workers " not to take these attitudes and acts of violence because the government has always been willing to dialogue . ""It is not through stones or damaging public property that does attract attention, but through the arguments , "he added .The Catholic Church and business organizations called on the government and trade unions to exercise caution and remain calm, while the University of Panama offered to mediate the conflict .The government accused the opposition right-wing Social Democrat of being behind the protests , but said the company Bocas Fruit Company, whose workers initiated the movement , " broke the law to withhold wages of workers and failing to deduct the fee -union workers " .Moreover, three policemen held by workers in the conflict zone revealed on Friday they feared for their lives and called on the authorities to the exchange of detained protesters."The life of us is at risk because people here are deeply felt "by the demonstrator who died in the town of Changuinola , told private first RPC Radio National Border Service , Abilio Cerracín , who is being held with two other Police members .Cerracín asked the security minister , Jose Raul Mulino, that " there to loosen those in Changuinola for us, because if not the life of us in danger . "
Roits in 9th day Boca Del Toro one more dead in Panama
Leonardo Flores Pedro Rodriguez sanjur
la prensa
The ninth day of strike in Changuinola another fatality recorded by the fighting between unionists , indigenous, and the National Police .Virgilio Castillo, 41, became the second fatality from the chaos that exists in Bocas del Toro , which has left millions in losses to trade, and about 120 wounded, many with serious effects on the eyes. Government attempts to achieve a negotiated solution to the crisis , made the chancellor and vice-president , Juan Carlos Varela, travel to Changuinola to join the efforts he has been doing the Minister of the Presidency , Demetrio Papadimitriu . He also traveled to Bocas del Toro , among other officials , Minister of Government , Roxana Mendez, and the director of Social Investment Fund , Giacomo Tamburrelli .Up to press time (11:30 pm ), negotiations continued without success, while the manifestations of violence remained. The Changuinola River Bridge was taken by the Indians , and was reported to the headquarters of the Ministry of Labour and the institution 's vehicle had been vandalized.A Changuinola events joined yesterday the arrests of activists in the capital city , who decided to hold a general strike next Tuesday.
Republic of Panama to search for natural gas and oil
A study for the exploration of oil, natural gas and other petroleum products, to be held in Panama, was approved by the National Economic Council (CENA), reported yesterday by Deputy Economy Minister Frank de Lima. The company will identify potential areas near the Colombian-Panamanian border region, which could be exploited. "There are good indications of the existence of oil, and the commercial viability will be analyzed," he said. De Lima announced that as part of the study they will conduct drilling and geological analysis. The work will cost $ 476,765. (La Critica)
Costa Rica, San Jose News
story by Nacion Members of the PLN and the PUSC PAC agree to limit the use of weapons by citizens and push through new restrictions on law reform
.Law makers of the National Liberation Party ( PLN) and Citizen Action (PAC ) and the Social Christian Unity Party (PUSC ) agree that access to the register and purchase of weapons is permissive in the country, that the requirements are minimal (and the fact that the population is armed promotes a culture of violence which worsen the security landscape .Therefore, the bill proposes to prohibit 16 317 use of firearms to aliens who do not have at least five years of residence in Costa Rica.Nor shall they tread under- age , a situation which is not currently regulated by the 7530 law called the Law of Arms and Explosives. The draft also provides that the Ministry of Public Security sent a monthly inventory of weapons registered , both by individuals and by private security companies .The bill states that the Security Ministry to limit the importation of knives and daggers, when it deems appropriate.The plan also seeks to State bodies with arms surrender right to enter a quarterly report of their inventory , not six months, which is the rule which currently governs .Easy access. The initiative aims to curb the increase in the purchase and registration of such devices.Currently, to register a gun , any citizen should submit only four conditions: a psychological examination , two photographs , photocopy of identity card and fill out a form for this purpose.Data from the Directorate General for Armaments of the Ministry of Public Security show that the average number of weapons registered per month increased from 300 in 2009 to 550 in each of the first six months of this year. The most difficult position to make the registration of that type of equipment , and avoid accidents and reduce levels of violence , has the backing of President of the Legislative Assembly , Luis Gerardo Villanueva. Why the change? "I think desirable for the carrying of weapons is restricted to very skilled , in which proof of the necessity of carrying for self-defense , "said Villanueva.Meanwhile , Rep. Carmen Muñoz Citizen Action said that more accidents triggered using that " the misfortunes which are to be avoided . "For his part, Deputy of the Social Christian Unity Party ( PUSC ), Luis Fishman, considered: "Obviously , it should be a review of laws, at least to determine that people can access registered weapons have no problems psychological . "Support for limiting access to weapons comes to Congress a week after a college student Montebello, Mercedes Sur , Heredia , fired the gun from his father against the institution's director , Nancy Maria Chaverri Jimenez, 49.This is the first cousin of Victor Hugo Viquez liberationist deputy and Minister of Transport, Francisco Jiménez.After that attack, the president , Laura Chinchilla , asked school principals to review student packages .Only Rep. Carlos Gongora, the Libertarian Movement, objected to the bill. He argues that hinder the entry of weapons encourages the black market."You have to find a proper balance , that not all walk with arms but with some consistency and regulation that are not conducive to the black market , "the deputy libertarian. PANAMA CITY, Republic of Panama – A Panamanian court has dropped money laundering charges against former Nicaraguan President Arnoldo Aleman.
Story by Associated Press
The court has ruled that the case against Aleman violated his right to only be tried for a crime once.
The court argued the charges against Aleman were similar to charges he has faced in Nicaragua. The July 2 decision was released to The Associated Press on Friday.
Aleman had been accused of using bank accounts in Panama to launder about $58 million allegedly stolen from Nicaraguan government coffers. He denied the charges.
In January, Nicaragua's Supreme Court overturned Aleman's conviction for money laundering, but an appeals court later reopened three cases against him.
Aleman governed from 1997-2001.
Banama Worker Killed in Panama, Boca Del Toro
story Associated Press
PANAMA CITY , Republic of Panama – Striking banana plantation workers and police clashed in western Panama on Thursday, leaving one man dead and 100 people hurt.
Eighteen of the injured in
Bocas del Toro province, on the border with Costa Rica, were in critical condition, the national emergency agency said in a statement.
The National Front for the Defense of Economic and
Social Rights, a non-governmental labor umbrella group, identified the dead man as banana union leader Antonio Smith.
Striking banana plantation workers began protesting last week against a new law that critics say weakens unions.
News broadcasts showed streets near the town of Changuinola blocked with tree trunks and burning tires. Protesters threw rocks at police, who fired tear gas.
Public Safety Minister Jose Mulino said in a statement that three
police officers were being held by the workers late Thursday and that a border agent had been beaten.
Big World Cup final set
for Spain and Netherlands
By the A.M. Costa Rica wire services and republic of PANAMA vISITORS gUIDE
Spain will play the Netherlands in Sunday's World Cup football final in South Africa. Spain advanced to the title game for the first time on Wednesday by beating Germany, 1-0.
Spain dominated possession in the match at Moses Mabhida Stadium in South Africa's coastal city of Durban. Spanish midfielders controlled the action from the opening whistle with quick and precise passes. But they had trouble finishing, until central defender Carles Puyol broke a scoreless deadlock in the 73rd minute. Puyol, who plays for Barcelona, leaped high to head in a goal from Xavi Hernandez's corner kick.
The game was a rematch of the 2008 European Championship final that Spain won by the same score.
Spain's head coach, Vicente del Bosque, said he thought his team played a great game -- from defense through to attack. Spanish star David Villa, who is tied with Wesley Sneijder of the Netherlands for the tournament scoring lead with five goals each, said his team should have scored more goals, but he said, "the one from Puyol has put us in the final."
In Sunday's final, Spain will play a Dutch squad that also has never won football's premier event. The Netherlands lost the 1974 title game to Germany, and the 1978 final to Argentina.
Dutch police say more than 60,000 fans poured into downtown Amsterdam to watch the team's 3-2 victory over Uruguay in the semifinals on a giant TV screen. Afterward, some fans expressed their jubilation about the Netherlands being back in a World Cup final after a 32-year break.
A crowd of almost 61,000 people attended the Spain-Germany semifinal.
Among the dignitaries on hand was Queen Sofia of Spain, who sat between Sepp Blatter, the president of world football's governing body, and South African President Jacob Zuma.
World Cup attendance in South Africa has passed three million. Africa's first World Cup is expected to place third in attendance behind the 1994 World Cup in the United States and the 2006 tournament in Germany. The 1994 World Cup set an attendance record with 3.59 million fans.
The Dutch victory was well-recieved in Costa Rica by the country's expats here.
this."
Coment by Panama Jack
These cunts are a little late finding these submarines, I have seen pictures of much better submarines 2 years ago.
It time these fucking cunts the DEA get to work getting rid of these drug loards. It only takes 1 bullet to get rid of a fuck drugloard.
The Convention Center will host Atlapa The Americas Luxury Travel Expo ( TALTExpo ), the luxury travel fair , bringing together suppliers and buyers from around the world related to this sector.
The Convention Center will host Atlapa The Americas Luxury Travel Expo ( TALTExpo ), the luxury travel fair , bringing together suppliers and buyers from around the world related to this sector. stories by The Panama Post
This activity will be 12 to May 15 to open the doors to all countries in Latin America and the Caribbean and , in turn , attract exhibitors and buyers from Africa , Asia , Europe , North America and Middle East are in our region a lot of potential and growth.
Carlos Cordoba , president of TALTExpo said it was the first time you do a fair of this kind in the region , also said the luxury market has been somewhat forgotten that such fairs are held in Europe , Asia and North America .
" We are opening the doors to our sister countries of Latin America , the Caribbean and Europe and inviting exhibitors , "said the executive.
Cordoba said the idea is to bring together not only to buyers who are focused on the segment of tour operation, but will bring decision makers in the homes of incentives, which organizes events and are responsible to find the country hotel where they will host their executives .
TALTExpo will be the meeting between suppliers and buyers from Europe , Asia , Africa , Middle East , Oceania , America and the Caribbean with a variety of products such as hotels , villas , airlines and charters, and yacht cruises , tour operators, adventure travel , eco- tourism and more.
Shamah Solomon , manager of the Tourism Authority of Panama ( ATP) expressed the willingness to contribute in organizing this important tourism fair , given the benefits it represents for the country to boost the image of Panama as a tourist destination .
Latin America and the Caribbean are virgin markets for most businesses in Europe , Asia , Africa , North America and the Middle East , so TALTExpo provides an excellent opportunity to bring together exhibitors and buyers in a different market and accessible at the level of logistics and economy to supply up to that point fairs such as FITUR in Madrid, IMEX in Frankfurt , among others.
Argentina and Paraguay World Cup dismissed
Latin America held yesterday , Saturday, a bad day at the World Cup in South Africa, after Argentina and Paraguay were eliminated . Figures Argentine Diego Maradona and Lionel Messi left the field shattered when his team lost 4-0 to Germany. Meanwhile, the Paraguayans fell 1-0 to Spain. On Tuesday , in the semifinals, will face Uruguay and Holland on Wednesday, German and Spanish do . Noriega with ' selective memory 'story by
Betty Brannan Jaén
Valeria Rodriguez
Paris , France
Yesterday, on the second day of their trial in Paris for alleged drug money laundering , Manuel Antonio Noriega was his version of events that took power and have led to his imprisonment over the past 20 years , but was very elusive front to specific questions .
In a rant at the start of yesterday's session , Noriega told his life from the day of his birth , describing himself as " professional soldier "and a ruler who sought to bring democracy to Panama . Ensures that the charges against him are " a show "and said "victim" of a conspiracy by the United States.
When the president of the Court pressed him to explain the origin of the money deposited in France , Noriega was so elusive that she accused him of having " selective memory . " He defended himself with phrases like " I do not remember "and said he did not know how or why these funds were moved in this way. Perhaps it was " imaginary movements , "he said . He said he took money from Panama , because of U.S. embargo decreed against him.
A lawyer representing Panama in the process called for a moral and material damages of 27 million euros ( 33.1 million dollars).
The trial should conclude today, but it is likely that the judges did not announce his verdict until September or October this year.
Panama Casino Industry
story by Don Winner
Panama has the third most organized and developed casino and gaming industry in Latin America, according to a report of the Board of Gaming Regulatory Agencies Gaming. Recently casino operators in the region met in the country during the international SAGSE Gaming convention, which made Panama the capital of gambling for two days. Some 40 companies exhibited slot machines, table games, roulette and safety equipment technology. Also present were representatives of textile companies, dedicated to the production of carpets, and others responsible for designing uniforms for casino employees, parts suppliers, equipment maintenance companies, as well as architecture and design firms. Giorio Gennari Litta, the chairman of the event, was optimistic on the results of this international exhibition, with the quality of the companies involved and the variety of products on display, mostly consumables. (La Critica)
World Cup Tournament Brazil meets Dutch FridayBy the AM. Costa Rica wire services
Brazil beat South American rival Chile on Monday night, 3-0, to advance to the quarterfinals of the World Cup football tournament in South Africa. It's been a decade of dominance by the Brazilians over the Chileans. Before a crowd of more than 54,000 people, Brazil recorded its eighth consecutive victory over Chile, a winning streak spanning 10 years.
Brazil will next play the Netherlands on Friday in Port Elizabeth.
The Dutch are through to the quarterfinals after a 2-1 victory over Slovakia earlier Monday in Durban.
The field for the World Cup quarterfinals will be complete by the end of Tuesday's matches. In the day's first game, Paraguay will play Japan in Pretoria. That will be followed by a match between Spain and Portugal in Cape Town.
iPhone getting good reviews
in countries where it is soldBy the A.M. Costa Rica wire services
After much anticipation, people are lining up at stores around the world to purchase the latest smartphone by Apple. The iPhone 4 is now available in the United States, Britain, France, Germany and Japan.
In the United States, Britain and Japan, Apple's iPhone has reached celerity status.
Customers lined up for hours for Apple's newest phone, the iPhone 4. Alex Lee lives in Dubai, but traveled to London for his phone. "The reason why we want to come to this one is because we really want this phone," he said.
The iPhone 4 is faster, thinner, has a longer battery life, and it features video calling. Apple is not the only company that makes so-called smartphones that allow users to access the Internet. But loyal customers say its simplicity makes the iPhone stand out.
"The user friendliness on the IPhone is unbelievable. It's like even a layman can use it," said one man.
By the end of July, Apple says the iPhone 4 will be available in 18 additional countries. By the end of September, in 88 countries worldwide.
But technology expert Rob Atkinson says smartphones will most likely not be widely used in many developing nations because of their cost, and the cost of connected on-line data plans. "So I don't think we're going to see a lot of deployment in a region or continent like Africa. You might see some among the smaller groups of higher income users there but what I do think you will see is growth in countries in places like Latin America," he said.
Atkinson says countries with a growing middle class will embrace smartphones much faster. "In developing countries, that's going to be a longer process where you'll have perhaps business people, farmers, small business people, professionals who will be the first adopters - the doctors, government officials - and then it will slowly as you get more apps slowly permeate out probably," he said.
Atkinson says Apple's iPhone faces growing competition from other companies, such as Google, that make their own smartphones.
With competition, experts expect prices to drop, making smartphones much more accessible to consumers around the world.
Costa Rica serial rapist appears to have worked his way east to west |
By the A.M. Costa Rica staff
The man who committed a string of rapes and a murder appears to have begun his reign of terror June 17 when a woman was accosted and abused sexually in Sabana Norte in a bus stop not far from the Más x Menos supermarket there.
The next day a student walking on her way to English classes became a victim but managed to get away from her attacker. That assault took place only a kilometer west of the first attack.
June 20, a Sunday, a woman on her way to work a short
distance away became a murder victim when a rapist killed her with a knife. Her body was found the next day. |
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