Saturday, March 13, 2010

Chinchilla Begins Naming Of Ministers and Vice-Ministers For Her Government

President-elect Laura Chinchilla has begun announcing her choice of ministers and vice-ministers as she prepares to take office on May 8th,looking within the current government for her choices.

Tuesday, the president-elect announced that Marco Vargas will be the ministro de la Presidencia. Vargas is currently the ministro de Coordinación Interinstitucional and the ministrode Obras Públicas y Transportes (MOPT), taking over from Karla Gonzalez who resigned after the fatal accident of the Turrucares bridge.

Mario Zamora, the current director of the Dirección de Migración y Extranjería (the immigration service) is named the vice-ministro de de Gobernación.

Mauricio Boraschi, the current director of the Instituto Costarricense sobre Drogas (drug institute) will become the national commissioner against drug use.

José María Tijerino, the former Fiscal General de la República (1990-1995) as ministreo de Seguridad. Tijerino is the only new face announced so far to form the Chinchilla government.

Doña Laura said she has known Vargas and Tijerino from the Figueres Olsen administration and both are men of great integrity and hold valued experience in government and security in the case of Tijerino.

Yesterday's announcements are in addition tot he naming of Rene Castro as ministro de Relaciones Exteriores (Foregin ministry), replacing Bruno Stagno, who has been named as Costa Rica's ambassador to the United Nationas,

Chinchilla has said she is committed to filling at least half of her cabinet post with women, however, has yet to name one woman to any post.

Source:insidecostarica.com/

COSTA RICA’S FIRST WOMAN PRESIDENT HAS MANY CHALLENGERS

PUTARENAS, COSTA RICA, March 11 (NNN-PRENSA LATINA) – Laura Chinchilla, first woman to be elected president in Costa Rica will take over on May 8 a country with huge problems and social debts heaped together from former governments.

Chinchilla won on the first electoral round even when a female representative in the small 51 thousand-square-kilometer nation had never run for president from a majority party.

In the elections, she got more than 20 points ahead of Otton Solis, of the Citizens’ Action Party (Pac, by its abbreviation in Spanish) and Otto Guevara, of the Libertarian Movement Party who compiled 25.1 and 20.8 percent of votes in their favour respectively.

A population harassed by growing social insecurity, corruption and poverty gave their vote to a smart 50-year-old woman.

The Central American country, with shortly more than four million 500 thousand inhabitants has 18.5 percent of the population in poverty and saw violence skyrocket 25 percent, according to figures from the state-run National Institute of Statistics and Census (INEC).

Changing that situation becomes two of the greatest challenges for the future president, who got the presidency with 46.7 percent of electors’ votes, according to analysts at Costa Rica University.

“We will have many challenges ahead in the next few years. Perhaps, the main one being the deployment of organised crime bands toward this area”, the president-elect said in her first speech to the nation.

Other necessary urgencies inherited by Chinchilla are improving the public education system, strengthening the Costa Rican Social Security Fund (CCSS, by its abbreviation in Spanish), environmental sustainability and promoting economic development, analysts said.

In education, its goal is avoiding drop-outs, improving funds for school scholarships, spreading education and making way for each school center in the country to access information and communications technologies.

Moreover, her government is committed to making more Basic Devices for Integral Assistance in health, providing the CCSS with more specialists, encouraging afternoon surgical operations and reducing a waiting list which are some of the main faults in the health.

Increasing infrastructures and creating jobs are other priorities envisioned by the new government in the country, whose work force consists of two million 121 thousand 451 people; 165 thousand 944 of them being unemployed.

Furthermore, the president-elect should manage to deal with a split Legislative Assembly in which her political grouping, the ruling National Liberation Party (PLN, by its abbreviation in Spanish), could hardly reach 23 out of 29 seats for the necessary simple minority for passing projects.

After the election returns for renewing the one-chambered Congress, the Supreme Court of Elections reported that the PLN had got a 46,8 percent win in the Legislative body.

On the other hand, the PAC, regarded the second political force in Costa Rica, saw the number of its supporters diminish by 14 percent and the PML was reaffirmed as the third party in rank.

According to analysts, the president-to-be will have no other way out than reaching agreements with opposition groupings for meeting her campaign promises.

Among the prioritised ones are those dealing with environmental topics, where she promised to arrange how the territory is used, protecting conservation areas, managing water, promoting clean energies and turning Costa Rica into the first neuter-carbon country in the world.

Likewise, Chinchilla said that she would push forward economic development making use of knowledge and implementing science and technology.

She also bets on international trade as a way for development as well as on Free Trade Treaty (FTA) with the European Union and China encouraged by outgoing president, Oscar Arias.

However, except for the initiative to crack down on increasing criminal delinquency, during her election campaign she did not present any convincing scheme to face such scourge, which is her main challenge, analysts said.

No changes are expected in fields such as citizens’ freedom.

When she was vying for the presidency, Chinchilla pointed out that she opposed depenalising abortion and gay marriage as well as leaving out Catholicism as the official state religion.

Laura Chinchilla Miranda, who was born on March 28, 1959, in San Jose, was the first vice-president of the Republic and Minister of Justice in Oscar Arias’s administration.

On March 8, she left the post for driving forward her candidacy to be president on behalf of the National Liberation Party.

But her race had started long before that. In 1990, she was a counsellor for some international bodies in Latin America and Africa in the sphere of institutional reform, especially in law reform and public security reform.

She has various publications, either in Spanish or English (books, monographies and articles) on topics dealing with law administration, citizen security and police reform.

As part of her work in the public sphere, her tenure as deputy minister of Public Security (1994-1996) and Minister of Public Security (1996-1998) are worth mentioning. — NNN-PRENSA LATINA

Source:brunei.fm/

Chinchilla presents economic ideas to Chamber of Commerce

In her first appearance at the Costa Rican Chamber of Commerce since being elected president of the nation on Feb. 7, Laura Chinchilla and her economic team presented their ideas for this and coming years.

Though some sectors of the economy have begun to show signs of recovery in recent months, Chinchilla and company assured listeners that the seeds of stability must be planted first.

“Costa Rica finds itself, surprisingly, in a good position after a type of crisis that we had never experienced, and I think that, thanks to the action taken by the government of President Oscar Arias and thanks to the steps that we have taken in the financial system, we didn't see a dramatic reduction in the gross domestic product (GDP),” said Luis Liberman, Chinchilla's second vice president and a former general manager of Scotiabank. “However, we did see the unemployment rate grow by almost 4 percent. That is not acceptable. So, in our case, we are looking at the things that we need to do to establish the levels of growth necessary for people both young and old to find work and reactivate the economy.”

Liberman explained that, in order to reactivate economic growth, a Chinchilla administration will center economic efforts on three central themes: generating public investment, housing, and the development of small projects within communities and municipalities. Due to a decrease in investment in the country – both foreign and local – several sectors of the country, such as construction, experienced significant drops in production in 2009. Lieberman explained that while foreign direct investment is expected to remain steady, it would be the investment of local businesses and municipalities that boosts production in the ailing sectors.

“We need to promote a series of projects at the local and municipal levels,” he said. “Local projects are much easier than big projects and, more than that, local projects create jobs for local workers while developing the city. We hope that funds will be contributed to these projects in the short term and that this will lead to longer-term development.”

Chinchilla concluded by reiterating that economic opportunity exists in the environment sector, as further development of environmentally sustainable practices are expected to generate more jobs in the upcoming years. Throughout her campaign, Chinchilla mentioned the creation of “green” jobs through improving environmental practices as an aid to increase employment.

“Two of the biggest treasures of this country are the intelligence of the people and the wealth and beauty of the environment,” she said. “And, because of that, we must keep generating wealth by continuing to develop the great opportunity that the creation of a sustainable environment presents.”

Source:ticotimes.net/

Chinchilla Inauguration To Take Place In The Sabana Park

The Parque Metropolitano La Sabana on the west side of San José will be the site of the transfer of power ceremonies on May 8th, when Costa Rica ushers in the first woman president, Laura Chinchilla.

The decision was announced on Thursday by the Adrían Chinchilla and Silvia Arias, who headed the panel organizing the event.

Arias, daughter of president Oscar Arias, said the park was chosen as it is place that allows the maximum number of Costa Ricans to take part in the historic event.

The park is also represents "authentic value" for Costa Ricans.

The Sabana Park, by way of the old Estadio Nacional (national stadium) has been the venue for many a presidential inauguration since 1949.

The panel considered holding the ceremony in the new stadium that is under construction, but concluded that the construction is not advanced enough for such an event and the large number of people expected to attend.

Source:insidecostarica.com/

Next Security Minister Says He Will Be Tough On Crime

The future ministro de Seguridad, José María Tijerino, promises more police in the streets and more resources for security and the "professionalism" of police officers once he takes office on May 8th.

Appointed on Tuesday by Laura Chinchilla, Tijerino, a former Fiscal General (top prosecutor) between 1990 and 1995, promises to get tough on crime and is hopeful that the new legislative assembly will support his reforms.

Asked where he would get the financing, Tijerino said he would ask for financial help by governemts who are friends, like the United States and Canada.

Tijerino assures that the problem of insecurity that has swept the country is a reality and not just a perception.

Joining Tijerino in the fight agaisnt crime will be Jorge Chavarría, who has been named vice-ministro de Seguridad and Mario Zamora, the current director of immigration, moving to the post of vice-ministro de Gobernación.

Tijerino takes over the job from Janian Del Vecchio, who took over from , who quit amid controversy when he got tough on drug traffickers.

Source:insidecostarica.com/

Arias Presents Chinchilla To Latin American & Caribbean Leaders

With pride and honour, Costa Rican president, Oscar Arias, presented president-elect Laura Chinchilla to the Latin American and Caribbean Unity summit in Mexico.

"I have the honour to present to you, the first woman president of the Republic of Costa Rica, whose integrity, honesty and courage make her worth of office. I am pleased and honoured and I am very proud to introduce to you Mrs. Laura Chinchilla", said president Arias to his counterparts of the region, streeing the role of women in society and politics of the new millennium.


PlusSizeGym.com Buy Now At www.sedo.com 
http://bit.ly/3JDEwVi

FoxSenate.com Buy Now At www.sedo.com https://bit.ly/3zzA0m4

FoxHollyWood.com Buy Now At www.sedo.com https://bit.ly/3QWnVyo



The Latin and Caribbean summit is being held in Playa del Carmen, Mexico, where over 30 Latin American and Caribbean leaders are taking part in their support to strengthen Latin American and Caribbean integration.

The leaders and officials present in the two-day summit will debate a wide agenda but the priority is for a greater unity. Top on the agenda is the forming of a new expanded organization that would include all those present.

This will be the first act outside of Costa Rica of president-elect Chinchilla since wining the presidential elections on February 7.

Source:insidecostarica.com/

Costa Rica Elects First Female President

Have you ever been in an historic event that people all over the U.S. were talking about? Well of course you have. Remember when Obama became our first African American president and he was talked about on the news, myspace, facebook, and even twitter? Well, in Cost Rica the people have voted for their first woman president!

On Sunday, January 7th, 2010, it was announced that Laura Chinchilla (an activist) won 46.8% of the votes and would become the first female president. Although she is not the first female president in South America, it will still become a part in history! Laura’s opponent, Otton Solis, unfortunately only won 22.46% of the votes, and he says that he is happy for Laura and wonders what she has to bring the new future.
Laura Chinchilla was born in Desamparados, Costa Rica, and is the eldest of four siblings. She has studied political science at the University of Costa Rica. Then she attended Georgetown receiving a master's degree in public policy. Not to mention, after two years of serving as vice minister of public security, she became first woman to become minister of public security.

Source:my.hsj.org/

Thursday, March 4, 2010

At least six dead after floods trigger mudslides in Peru


(NECN/CANAL 7) - At least six people have died after rains pounded the Cusco region in Peru, causing deadly mudslides, police said.

Police officials said the downpours caused a mudslide on Sunday near the village of Cochahuasi in the district of Taray. Calca police said five adults from one family and one girl had perished.
However a government official who traveled to the affected area to deliver humanitarian aid said the number of casualties was seven.

There was no explanation for the discrepancy.

The government official also said there were 20 people missing.

The official said 70 percent of the houses had been destroyed in the village of two-thousand inhabitants.

The village is located in the so called Sacred Valley of the Incas.

Heavy rains have persisted this year in south east Peru.

At the end of January this year, rivers in the Cusco region destroyed the tourist rail track that transports tourists to the legendary Machu Picchu.

The Inca citadel will remain closed until April when the train service is expected to be repaired and back in service.

Machu Picchu, the main touristic attraction of Peru, is located 500 kilometers (310 miles) southeast of the capital, Lima.

Source:necn.com/