Tag Archives: Costa Rica

Guatemala declares national coffee emergency

Guatemala‘s president has declared a national emergency over the spread coffee rust, a fungus that is affecting 70 percent of the country’s crop.

President Otto Molina Perez also has ordered the release of more than $14 million to aid coffee growers.

He says the funds are aimed at helping 60,000 small farmers to buy pesticides and to teach them how to prevent the disease and stop it from spreading.

Molina said Friday that the pesticides will start being applied to coffee plants in April and that two more applications will be needed during the year.

Coffee rust is currently affecting plantations in Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras and Costa Rica.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Miami man in illegal business with Cuba reportedly faces 35 years in prison

A man now jailed in Florida while awaiting a federal trial reportedly might not be behind bars if only he had waited two decades to allegedly ship $93,000 worth of goods from Miami to Cuba.

The Miami Herald reports that Pedro Adriano Borges, 68, was a couple of years ahead of a law covering the trade embargo against Cuba in 2002 and is now awaiting federal trial under a 1997 indictment alleging that he and four other men illegally shipped 18 containers to Cuba.

The goods sent between 1993 and 1996 included spices and mayonnaise as well as light bulbs and diapers, according to court documents in the case. The receivers in Cuba paid $93,000 for the shipments, the newspaper reports.

The Cuba-born Borges had fled to Costa Rica three years before those charges were filed, breaking his parole on a prior charge of money laundering in New Jersey. He was later detained in Panama in November and was put on a plane to Florida.

He now faces up to 35 years in prison, including 20 years for helping to launder the money that went from Cuba to Miami to pay for the shipments.

Click for more from the Miami Herald.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Pilot Captures UFO On Video Over Costa Rica On Jan 2013.

By ScottCWaring

Date of sighting: January 2013
Location of sighting: Costa Rica

Footage captured by a pilot over Costa Rica appears to show an unidentified flying object. The footage corresponds to a flight on Wednesday, January 23, 2013


In the video we see a rapidly moving object below the aircraft.

The video was captured by the commercial pilot Joseph Daniel Araya, who has more than 500 flight hours. Araya says he was recording with his cell phone when suddenly the camera screen saw the object moving, When he looked out of the aircraft there was nothing, said the pilot,

To find an answer to what happened we went to Jose Alberto Villalobos, astronomer and UFO researcher Alexis Astua.

Villalobos estimated that the object on the screen could have a length between 7 and 10 meters. Its speed could reach 3600 kilometers per hour, seven times more than the ship from which the footage was captured,

Meanwhile Astua does not rule out a UFO but also a secondary reflection theory.The sighting in the South is not strange, since in this region there are constant reports.

Main ADG Website: http://www.alien-disclosure-group.com/

ADG Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Alien-Disclosure-Group/189249627773146

Source: FULL ARTICLE at UFO Sightings Daily

61 killed in Venezuela prison riot, hospital says

The death toll has risen to 61 following fierce gunbattles between inmates and National Guard troops at a Venezuelan prison, a hospital director said Saturday. About 120 more people were wounded in one of the deadliest prison riots in the nation’s recent history.

Penitentiary Service Minister Iris Varela said Saturday that officials had begun evacuating inmates from the Uribana prison in Barquisimeto and transferring them to other facilities, but she did not provide an official death toll.

However, Dr. Ruy Medina, director of Central Hospital in the city of Barquisimeto, told The Associated Press that the number of dead had risen to 61. He initially told Venezuelan news media after the Friday uprising that about 50 were killed.

Medina said that nearly all of the injuries were from gunshots and that 45 of the estimated 120 people who were wounded remained hospitalized. Some underwent surgeries for their wounds.

Relatives wept outside the prison during the violence, and cried at the morgue Saturday as they waited to identify bodies.

Nayibe Mendez, the mother of a 22-year-old inmate in the prison, told the AP that she was able to talk by phone with her son and he was uninjured.

“What they say is that there were shots all over the place, and they don’t know where they came from,” Mendez said. “It was a massacre. A full list hasn’t come out of the dead and injured.”

Mendez spoke by telephone from the morgue, where she said she went out of solidarity. “We’re all hurt. No matter what, a prisoner has a right to live,” she said, demanding that the authorities fully investigate what happened.

Varela said during a news conference that officials decided to evacuate all inmates from the prison in order to “close this chapter of violence.” She did not provide any estimates of the numbers killed and injured, and instead criticized Venezuelan news media at length for their coverage of the violence.

Vice President Nicolas Maduro called the bloodshed tragic and said Prosecutor General Luisa Ortega Diaz and National Assembly President Diosdado Cabello would lead the investigation.

“The prisons have to be governed by law,” Maduro said on television early Saturday.

The riot was the deadliest in nearly two decades. In 1994, more than 100 inmates died in the country’s bloodiest prison on record, at a prison in the western city of Maracaibo. In 1994, about 60 inmates were killed in a riot in a Caracas prison.

Varela said that the violence erupted at Uribana prison on Friday when groups of inmates attacked National Guard troops who were attempting to carry out an inspection.

She said the government decided to send troops to search the prison after receiving reports of clashes between groups of inmates during the past two days.

Douglas Briceno said his nephew, who is held at the prison, was wounded in the foot during the shooting. “I think he’s out of danger,” Briceno told the AP. “I haven’t been able to communicate with him because they don’t let me pass to the prison.”

Opposition leader Henrique Capriles condemned the government‘s handling of what he and many other critics call a growing crisis in the country’s prisons.

“Our country’s prisons are an example of the incapacity of this government and its leaders. They never solved the problem,” Capriles said on his Twitter account. “How many more deaths do there have to be in the prisons for the government to acknowledge its failure and make changes?”

The riot at Uribana prison was the latest in a series of bloody clashes in the country’s severely overcrowded prisons, where inmates often freely obtain weapons and drugs with the help of corrupt guards. Venezuela currently has 33 prisons built to hold about 12,000 inmates, but officials have said the prisons’ population is about 47,000.

The Venezuelan Prisons Observatory, a watchdog group, said in a statement that in 2007 the Costa Rica-based Inter-American Court of Human Rights had ordered the government to seize weapons that inmates had in their possession at Uribana prison and to take measures to avoid deaths in the facility. The group called for the government to release a list with the names of the dead and wounded in Friday’s violence, as well as details about weapons seized in the search.

“No one doubts that inspections are necessary procedures to guarantee prison conditions in line with international standards, but they can’t be carried out with the warlike attitude as (authorities) have done it,” said Humberto Prado, an activist who leads the prison watchdog group.

“It’s clear that the inspection wasn’t coordinated or put into practice as it should have been. It was evidently a disproportionate use of force,” Prado told the AP.

His group says Uribana prison was built to hold up to 850 inmates but currently has about 1,400.

Similar though less deadly clashes have flared repeatedly during the past few years.

In April and May, a prison uprising in La Planta prison in Caracas blocked authorities from going inside for nearly three weeks. One prisoner was killed and five people were wounded, including two National Guard soldiers and three inmates.

Two months later, another riot broke out at a penitentiary in Merida, and the Venezuelan Prisons Observatory reported 30 killed.

In August, 25 people were killed and 43 wounded when two groups of inmates fought a gunbattle inside Yare I prison south of Caracas.

President Hugo Chavez‘s government has previous pledged improvements to the prison system, but opponents and activists say the government hasn’t made progress.

Varela, the prisons minister, said news media including Globovision and a local newspaper had run reports on the inspection by authorities, which she said had in fact been a “trigger for the violence.”

Prado denied that, saying: “The problem isn’t the work of the media. The problem is that the government hasn’t disarmed the prison population.”

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

UN Gun Grab On Pace For March

By Breaking News

United Nations flag SC UN Gun Grab on Pace for March

In just two months the globalists of the UN will gather in New York City to put the final touches on plans to impose strict regulations worldwide on the right of the individual to buy, sell, trade, or own guns and ammunition.

On March 18, 2013 in New York City the next round of negotiations is scheduled to begin, with one aim in mind: eradicate private gun ownership.

On Christmas Eve, 2012, the United Nations General Assembly approved a resolution to renew negotiations on the global Arms Trade Treaty (ATT).

The measure was approved by a vote of 133-0, with 17 countries abstaining.

As reported by Reuters, the foreign ministers of Argentina, Australia, Costa Rica, Finland, Japan, Kenya, and the United Kingdom — the countries that drafted the resolution — released a joint statement praising the passage of the resolution to move ahead on the global gun ban.

Read More at The New American . By Joe Wolverton, II, J.D..

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

Mothers in breastfeed protest at Costa Rica mall

At least 50 mothers sat down in a mall’s fast food area and breastfed infants for nearly two hours Saturday, protesting over the shopping center forcing a woman to stop nursing her daughter a week earlier.

The action by Lincoln Square set off a furor on Costa Rican social media and even prompted a statement from the president — a reaction that seemed to shock the mall’s management, which quickly apologized for the incident and announced that breastfeeding would be allowed anywhere in the shopping center.

Despite the retreat, some women decided to go ahead with the “mamaton” protest to show solidarity with Patricia Barrantes, who left the mall the previous weekend rather than comply with a security guard’s order to stop nursing her daughter Mariel and move to a special lactation room.

One of the mothers at the rally traveled a hundred miles from Turrialba to the mall in Costa Rica‘s capital, San Jose.

“It gave me a lot of anger … like you’re doing something dirty, as if it’s bad to remove a breast to feed your daughter,” she said while holding her 11-month-old daughter Camila.

Similar anger was widespread after reports of what happened to Barrantes. Thousands of angry comments were posted on Twitter and Facebook, mainly by women in Costa Rica and other countries in the region.

Women’s and children’s groups said the incident set a terrible example in a region where they are trying to encourage more breastfeeding instead of the widespread use of baby formula in order to improve infant health.

Governments in Costa Rica and other Central American nations try to encourage breastfeeding with laws that include mandatory time off during the work day for new mothers to feed their babies or pump breast milk. But women’s and children’s advocates say rates of breastfeeding remain far too low.

The Costa Rican National Women’s Institute sent the mall a formal letter warning that there was no legal justification for barring breastfeeding in public areas.

On Tuesday, President Laura Chinchilla admonished Lincoln Plaza‘s managers, saying interfering with breastfeeding in public was unjust and stressing that the provision of lactation rooms is only “so that women have an alternative location” to breastfeed if they wish.

The mall backed down later that day.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Chavez opponents to challenge Venezuela ruling

Venezuelan opposition politicians say they’re preparing to present a case before a regional human rights court to challenge a Supreme Court decision that permits the indefinite postponement of President Hugo Chavez‘s inauguration.

The case is being prepared by a group of lawyers for the country’s opposition coalition. Lawyer and opposition politician Gerardo Blyde says it’s not yet clear when the case will be brought before the Costa Rica-based Inter-American Court of Human Rights.

Blyde announced plans for the case during an outdoor gathering of opposition supporters in Caracas where leading Chavez opponents denounced this week’s Supreme Court decision.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Utah businessman's mail fraud case going to trial

A plea agreement for a Utah businessman accused of running a $350 million fraud scheme through his company fell apart Friday in U.S. District Court in Salt Lake City.

Federal prosecutors initially charged 37-year-old Jeremy Johnson of St. George with one count of mail fraud related to his Internet-based business operations.

Johnson was set to enter a guilty plea Friday to two additional charges of bank fraud and money laundering as part of an agreement with the government.

But the agreement fell apart after Johnson and prosecutors disagreed over the terms and a list of people that Johnson wanted to ensure would not be prosecuted.

Johnson instead decided to maintain his not guilty plea and the case is set to go to trial.

After a court hearing Friday, Johnson said he wanted a chance to prove his innocence in court.

If convicted, he could face decades in prison.

Prosecutors on Friday said they plan to file a new indictment in the case within a month, but would not comment on whether other people besides Johnson would be charged.

Prosecutors allege that Johnson’s company, iWorks, sent software to consumers for a supposedly risk-free trial but billed them anyway. The company mailed consumers CDs that contained information about government grants for personal, business and education expenses, prosecutors have said.

The Federal Trade Commission has also filed a civil suit against Johnson and nine business associates in Las Vegas.

Johnson is a well-known Utah businessman and philanthropist who has donated generously to charities and to the political campaigns of former Utah Attorney General Mark Shurtleff. Johnson also has used his personal helicopters to aid search and rescue efforts in southern.

Johnson made international headlines in January 2010 when he purchased a plane to fly doctors and other critical supplies to Haiti following a devastating earthquake.

He was arrested at a Phoenix airport in 2011, carrying more than $26,000 in cash and a one-way plane ticket to Costa Rica.

He is currently free on a $2.8 million bond.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Brazil's WTO candidate to focus on consensus

Brazil‘s candidate to head the World Trade Organization says that if he’s selected he’ll focus on restarting long-stalled global talks to lower trade barriers.

Roberto Azevedo says he’d strive to build consensus between developed and developing countries in hopes of resuming the so-called Doha Round of talks that began in 2001 but have not reached agreement.

Azevedo told a news conference Thursday in Brasilia that the talks’ failure has sparked “serious and concrete differences” among the trade organization’s 157 member states.

The 55-year-old Azevedo has been Brazil‘s ambassador to the WTO. In his bid to replace the WTO‘s outgoing director general, Pascal Lamy of France, Azevedo is up against seven other candidates from countries including South Korea, Jordan, Kenya, Costa Rica and Mexico.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Today in History for 8th January 2013

Historical Events

1955 – Louise Sugg wins LPGA LA Golf Open
1956 – Operation Auca: Five U.S. missionaries are killed by the Huaorani of Ecuador shortly after making contact with them.
1962 – Golfer Jack Nicklaus, 21, 1st pro appearance, he came in 50th
1980 – Islander Glenn Resch’s 20th shut-out opponent-Canucks 3-0
1988 – 9th largest NBA crowd 38,873-Chicago at Detroit
2009 – A 6.2 magnitude earthquake hit Costa Rica´s region of Volcan Poás, with an epicenter near Cinchona. It was caused by Varablanca-Angel fault.

More Historical Events »

Famous Birthdays

1860 – Nancy Jones, US black missionary in Africa
1891 – Storm Jameson, English writer (d. 1986)
1940 – Anthony Gaurdine, (Little Anthony and Imperials-Goin Out of My Head)
1959 – Paul Hester, Australian drummer (d. 2005)
1964 – Peter [Ped] Gill, rocker (Frankie Goes to Hollywood-Relax) [or 3/5]
1977 – Ryan Frances, actor (Trevor-Sisters)

More Famous Birthdays »

Famous Deaths

1874 – Charles Etienne Brasseur de Bourbourg, French writer and historian (b. 1814)
1950 – George Rowe, cricketer (15 wckts in 4 Tests for S Af 1895-1902), dies
1980 – John Mauchly, American physicist (b. 1907)
1993 – Asif Nawaz, Pakistani general, dies
1993 – Theo Bruins, Dutch pianist/composer (Syncope), dies at 63
1994 – Jay Blackton, US conductor/arranger (Oklahoma!), dies at 84

More Famous Deaths »

Source: FULL ARTICLE at HistoryOrb.Com – This Day in History

Colombia firm makes armored clothes for kids

A Colombian firm that makes bulletproof vests is now creating armored clothing for children.

Factory owner Miguel Caballero said he never thought about making protective clothes for kids until requests came in following the deadly attack on Sandy Hook Elementary in Connecticut last month.

“After the tragedy in Connecticut, we started getting emails from customers asking for protected (clothing) because they were afraid to take their kids to school,” Caballero said.

“We have received messages from all over the United States,” seeking the protective gear, added Giovanni Cordero, the company’s marketing director.

Products include child-sized armored vests, protective undershirts and backpacks with ballistic protection that can be used as shields.

The products are designed for children ages 8-16 years old and cost $150-$600 depending on the complexity of their construction. Each piece weighs 2-4 pounds.

“The products were created with the American market in mind, not for the Latino market,” said Caballero. “All the designs and colors, everything is thought out with them in mind.”

Caballero performed a test on a pink-and-yellow striped bulletproof backpack attached to a pale blue protective vest, firing a 9mm pistol and a machine gun to show it could withstand a barrage of bullets.

He said the backpack-vest combo and other protective gear have already been ordered by a U.S. distributor, although he would not identify it.

About 250 people work at Caballero’s factory, which has been making armored vests for adults for more than 20 years. Colombia suffers from an internal conflict that has killed thousands of people over the last half-century.

Outside Colombia, the vests for adults are sold in some 20 countries, including Ecuador, Costa Rica and Mexico. They are also marketed in parts of Europe, Asia and the Middle East.

Twenty first-graders and six educators were killed in the Dec. 14 attack at Sandy Hook Elementary in Newtown, Conn. The 20-year-old gunman, Adam Lanza, also shot and killed his mother inside their home before driving to the school and shooting his way inside. He committed suicide as police were closing in.

After the Newtown shooting, at least three American companies that were already making backpacks designed to shield children reported a spike in sales.

Massachusetts-based Bullet Blocker reported it was selling 50 to 100 bulletproof backpacks a day after the shooting, up from about 10 to 15 in an average week. The children’s backpacks, which are designed to be used as shields, cost more than $200 each.

Most of the children killed in the Sandy Hook Elementary massacre were shot at close range and likely would not have been saved by armored backpacks. At any rate, children don’t usually wear their backpacks at their desks or while walking around school.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

UN to hold arms trade treaty conference in March

The U.N. General Assembly voted overwhelmingly late Monday to hold a conference in March to try to reach agreement on a U.N. treaty to regulate the multibillion-dollar global arms trade.

A resolution approved by a vote of 133-0 with 17 abstentions will bring the 193 U.N. member states back to the negotiating table following their failure to reach agreement on a treaty in July.

Hopes of reaching a treaty in July were dashed when the United States said it needed more time to consider the proposed treaty — and Russia and China then also asked for a delay.

The draft treaty under consideration does not control the domestic use of weapons in any country, but it would require all countries to establish national regulations to control the transfer of conventional arms and to regulate arms brokers. It would prohibit states that ratify the treaty from transferring conventional weapons if they would violate arms embargoes or if they would promote acts of genocide, crimes against humanity or war crimes.

In considering whether to authorize the export of arms, the draft says a country must evaluate whether the weapon would be used to violate international human rights or humanitarian laws or be used by terrorists, organized crime or for corrupt practices.

Many countries, including the United States, control arms exports but there has never been an international treaty regulating the estimated $60 billion global arms trade. For more than a decade, activists and some governments have been pushing for international rules to try to keep illicit weapons out of the hands of terrorists, insurgent fighters and organized crime.

The National Rifle Association, the powerful gun-rights lobbying group in the U.S., has portrayed the treaty as a threat to gun ownership rights enshrined in the U.S. Constitution. The politically controversial issue of gun regulations has re-emerged since a gunman opened fire on Dec. 14 at an elementary school in Newtown, Connecticut, killing 20 children and six educators.

In July, the NRA‘s CEO Wayne LaPierre told the U.N. that “the NRA wants no part of any treaty that infringes on the precious right of lawful Americans to keep and bear arms.” He added that “any treaty that includes civilian firearms ownership in its scope will be met with the NRA‘s greatest force of opposition.”

The co-sponsors of Monday’s resolution — Argentina, Australia, Costa Rica, Finland, Japan, Kenya and Britain — welcomed adoption of the resolution and urged all countries “to work in a constructive spirit” to make the March 18-28 conference at U.N. headquarters a success.

In a statement, they said the adoption with over 100 cosponsors “was a clear sign that the vast majority of U.N. member states support a strong, balanced and effective treaty, which would set the highest possible common global standard for the international transfer of conventional arms.”

The seven countries expressed support to Australian ambassador Peter Woolcott, the president-designate of the upcoming conference, and said: “We will continue to work hard to ensure that an effective Arms Trade Treaty will be concluded and adopted by consensus at the end of March.”

Source: Fox World News

Ex-Marine arrives home after release from Mexico

A Marine veteran jailed for months in Mexico after trying to carry an heirloom shotgun across the border has returned home to South Florida.

Jon Hammar‘s father says they got back to their Palmetto Bay home Monday afternoon.

Hammar was released Friday from a detention center in Matamoros, Mexico. He was hospitalized over the weekend in Louisiana as he was driving to South Florida. The 27-year-old had a bad chest cold and a stomach ailment before his release.

Hammar was headed to Costa Rica in August when he drove across the Mexican border. U.S. authorities told him he could declare the unloaded shotgun at the border. But reports say Mexican authorities held him until they determined there was no intent to commit a crime.

Source: Fox US News

Ex-Marine hospitalized after release from Mexico

A Marine veteran jailed for months in Mexico after trying to carry an heirloom shotgun across the border had to be hospitalized on his way home to Florida.

Jon Hammar of Palmetto Bay was released Friday from a detention center in Matamoros, Mexico. Relatives say he was hospitalized over the weekend in Louisiana as he was driving to South Florida. Hammar’s mother says the 27-year-old had a bad chest cold and a stomach ailment before his release but still is expected home for Christmas.

Hammar was headed to Costa Rica in August when he drove across the Mexican border. U.S. authorities told him he could declare the unloaded shotgun at the border. But reports say Mexican authorities held him until they determined there was no intent to commit a crime.

Source: Fox US News

Costa Rica Radio Stations 2.4.0 (Amarok 2.0 Script)

ThumbnailCosta Rica Radio Stations 2.4.0 (Amarok 2.0 Script)This script is meant to all the people out there who want to hear some music from Costa Rica in Amarok, and to the ones who want to know a little more about our country. If you are learning Spanish it could help you in your hearing practices too!

The default script is in Spanish but below (in http://www.kde-apps.org/content/show.php?content=94091) you can download an English version

Tested successfully in Amarok 2.4.3

——

I just added some Costa Rican Radio Stations to the script based on “Cool Streams” from Nikolaj Hald Nielsen. Thank you Nikolaj!

Please take note that some of these stations only work a few hours during daytime or just not work 24 hours (Costa Rica is in UTC-6 timezone, so you can calculate when some of these stations are working without problems). Some have an indication but unfortunately not all of them.

I made two file versions: one with English texts to guide those who doesn’t speak Spanish through the stations, and another one in Spanish for those who want to experience the Radio Stations with all the Costa Rican flavor and spice 🙂

Any advice, comments, orthographic error warnings, suggestions or new radio stations to add, please leave me a comment below.

I hope you enjoy it and find it useful!

===TEXT IN SPANISH BELOW===

Este script es para todos aquellos ticos allá en la red que quieran oír música en Amarok, y todos aquellos que quieran conocer un poquito más de nuestro país.

Probado sin ningún problema con Amarok 2.4.3

Solo agregué algunas estaciones de Radio de Costa Rica al script “Cool Streams” de Nikolaj Hald Nielsen. ¡Gracias Nikolaj!

Algunas de estas emisoras solo trabajan algunas horas al día o no trabajan las 24 horas seguidas (Costa Rica se encuentra en la zona horaria UTC-6 de forma que puedan calcular cuando las emisoras están funcionando sin problema). Algunas están indicadas en el script pero otras no, ya que me va a tomar un poco más de tiempo chequearlas todas.

El script es uno solo, pero lo hice en dos versiones: una en inglés para aquellos extranjeros que deseen darse una idea de la emisora que van a escuchar y otro en español para los que lo hablamos.

Si desean agregar otra emisora, alguna sugerencia, comentario, o indicarme algún error ortográfico pueden indicarlo en los comentarios por favor.

¡Qué lo disfruten y ojalá les sirva bastante!
changelog:=Versión 2.4=

A maintenance script version

This script was tested successfully in Amarok 2.6.0

*More radio stations were added

*Christmas Carols station added due to Holydays

*Some radio stations were deleted, because they didn’t work anymore or now they use proprietary broadcasting protocols non-compatible with Amarok

*RIP Super Radio u_u

=Version 2.3.1=

A maintenance script version

This script was tested successfully in Amarok 2.4.3

*Fixed radiostation problems with script and classification problems

=Version 2.3=

A strictly maintenance script version

This script was tested successfully in Amarok 2.4.3

*More radio stations were added

*Christmas Carols stations added due to Holydays

*Some radio stations were deleted, because they didn’t work anymore or now they use proprietary broadcasting protocols non-compatible with Amarok

*Some non-working streams are already fixed

=Version 2.2=

A maintenance script version only

This script was tested successfully in Amarok 2.4.3

*More radio stations were added

*Some radio stations were deleted, because they didn’t work anymore or now they use proprietary broadcasting protocols non-compatible with Amarok

*Some non-working streams are already fixed

=Version 2.1=

Now with 71 full working Radio Stations!

This script was tested successfully in Amarok 2.3.2

*More radio stations were added

*Some radio stations were deleted, because they didn’t work anymore. Most non-working streams are already fixed!

*Schedules for some stations were added in order to show those that don’t broadcast 24/7

=Version 2.0=

This script was tested successfully in Amarok 2.2.2

*The stations are now classified in Music Genres

*New radio stations were added

*Some radio stations were deleted, because they didn’t work anymore. Most non-working streams are already fixed!

*A new Costa Rican flag icon was made and its non-commercial use is allowed provided that the icon author will be recognized in derivative works. The icon license is released under Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States

=Version 1.1=

*Some typos corrections and more radio stations were added

=Version 1.0=

*Script is adapted from original and some radio stations were added[read more]job recommendations:Sales Engineer full time employee ownCloud Inc. United States of America, Boston more about this offer[more jobs]
Source: KDE Apps

Appeals court exonerates ex-Costa Rican president

An appeals court in Costa Rica has exonerated a former president convicted last year on corruption charges and sentenced to five years in prison.

Miguel Angel Rodriguez had never been imprisoned because of his appeal. He was Costa Rican president in 1998-2002 and then became president of the Organization of American States in 2004 but the corruption case forced him to resign.

Rodriguez and other former government officials were charged with taking bribes in exchange for giving the Latin American branch of the French telecom company Alcatel a $149 million cellphone contract while he was president in 2001.

Rodriguez told a radio station that Friday’s ruling by the appeals court shows the case was, in his words, “a political humbug staged by an attorney general who wanted to stand out.”

Source: Fox World News

Letter from Mexican ambassador dampens hope for early release of Jon Hammar

Any hope that Jon Hammar, the Marine imprisoned in Mexico on a disputed gun charge, might be freed in time for Christmas has apparently been dashed by a terse letter a top Mexican diplomat sent to Hammar’s congresswoman.

The two-page missive from Mexican Ambassador to the United States Arturo Sarukhan to Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-Fla.), who has been aggressively advocating for Hammar’s release, leaves little hope of a diplomatic solution. In it, Sarukhan takes a thinly veiled swipe at the U.S., blaming it for gun proliferation south of the border.

“As you know well, Mexico has had very stringent gun-control laws in place for many years, and have reinforced their application as a result of the flow of weapons illicitly purchased in the U.S. and then trafficked into Mexico and into the hands of transnational criminal organizations,” Sarukhan wrote.

Hammar has been stuck in a notorious, drug cartel-controlled prison just 15 miles south of the U.S. border since Aug. 13, after he crossed into Mexico and declared an antique shotgun to Mexican customs officials.

Sarukhan failed to mention that Tamaulipas, the state which the CEDES prison in Matamoros is located, is controlled by the Los Zetas Cartel, arguably the most vicious of the cartels.

Hammar’s father said the letter is fraught with statements at odds with what he knows and what his son has told him.

“There are huge inaccuracies about what is happening in their system,” Jon Hammar Sr., said.

Sarukhan said Hammar was arrested for possession of a weapon that, according to Mexican law, is restricted for the exclusive use of the Mexican Armed Forces.

But high-ranking Mexican military officials have told Hammar’s attorney, Eddie Varon-Levy, that the gun Hammar tried to declare shortly after crossing into Mexico on his way to Costa Rica is not the type of firearm the laws are meant to block. The gun Hammar claims he also declared to U.S. Customs and border protection is a .410 gauge antique Sears Roebuck shotgun.

But Mexico‘s top diplomat to the U.S. said the letter of the law must be followed.

“Regardless of what he may have declared or stated to CBP agents and then to Mexican Customs authorities, the sole introduction or possession of this type of weapon (not withstanding its intended use or year of manufacture) in Mexican territory constitutes a federal crime in Mexico and is not subject to any prosecutorial discretion,” Sarukhan said.

Varon-Levy disagreed, saying no one can make the argument the antique, small-gauge shotgun is anything resembling a military weapon. He said the prosecutor and his team can’t even agree on specifics of the rifle.

Perhaps the biggest bone of contention Hammar’s family and legal team have with Sarukhan is the ambassador’s pledge that Hammar will be held “in conditions that ensure his well-being and his rights.” Already, Hammar, who suffers post-traumatic stress disorder from his service in Iraq and Afghanistan, has been denied an interpreter at court appearances, had his life threatened and has been chained to a steel bed.

Two days after his arrest, Hammar’s parents received a midnight extortion attempt by a male caller who said he “owned” the prison, giving credence to speculation that the criminal elements control CEDES prison.

The ambassador also neglected to appreciate the Nov. 23 incident where Hammar was brought to court before the judge — there are no jury trials in Mexico — and asked to plea without his lawyer or even the arresting customs agent present.

Sarukhan claims in the letter that, had Hammar pleaded guilty at a Nov. 23 appearance, he would have likely been released. But Varon-Levy said his client was brought before a judge with no attorney present and no way of understanding what was happening. And despite Sarukhan’s claim, conviction on the charge carries a potential penalty of 15 years in prison.

In his letter, Sarukhan alluded to the fact there will be no wiggle room for negotiation and that Hammar is going trial.

“This circumstance requires that he remain under detention during the duration of his trial,” Sarukhan said.

A trial date is set for Jan. 17.

Source: Fox World News

Nicaragua: 18 Mexicans guilty of money laundering

A Nicaraguan judge on Wednesday found 18 Mexicans detained while transporting $9.2 million in cash in the Central American country guilty of drug trafficking, money laundering and organized crime.

The group was detained in August near Nicaragua‘s border with Honduras while traveling in six vans with logos like those used by Mexican television giant Televisa. The bundles of cash had been stashed in compartments inside the vehicles.

Judge Edgard Altamirano said evidence showed the 17 men and one woman were members of organized crime.

“The way they stashed the cash in the vehicles with the Televisa logos, the large amount of money, that’s the typical way members of organized crime act,” Altamirano said.

The detainees told authorities at the time they were members of a Televisa news crew that had traveled to Nicaragua to cover the trial of suspects linked to the 2011 killing of Argentine folk singer Facundo Cabral.

Authorities haven’t said whether the group, which was led by Raquel Alatorre, was working for a drug cartel. Several were identified as employees of private security firms in Tamaulipas, the northern Mexico border state that is home to the Zetas and Gulf cartels.

Before Altamirano issued his verdict, he allowed the defendants to speak.

Only eight of the defendants, looking distraught, spoke and asked the judge for a “fair decision” and said they were not guilty. They also apologized to Nicaragua and Mexico for any inconvenience their case caused.

Alatorre spoke first and asked that she be transferred from a prison in the capital to a women’s prison in southwest Nicaragua.

Alatorre’s attorney, Ricardo Ramirez Magnali, said the prosecution didn’t prove its case but he wouldn’t say whether his client plans to appeal the verdict.

“The prosecution did not prove that the defendants came to alter our Nicaraguan financial system with money laundering,” Ramirez Magnali said.

Prosecutors said it was Alatorre who processed the group’s migration permits, and arranged for lodging and food. They said she had crossed into Nicaragua several times since 2008. They said she entered and exited Nicaragua 22 times between 2010 and 2011.

Nicaraguan authorities said the elaborate ruse was intended to smuggle the cash through Nicaragua to the neighboring nation of Costa Rica to the south.

Mexican drug cartels frequently buy Colombian cocaine to ship north to the U.S. market, and often must smuggle cash back south to pay the Colombia suppliers.

Prosecutors requested the maximum sentence of 30 years. Altamirano set the sentencing date for Jan. 18.

Source: Fox World News

Conditions in notorious Mexican prison worsens Jon Hammar's PTSD, family fears

Every day that former Marine Jon Hammar spends in a notorious Mexican prison can only worsen the Post Traumatic Stress Disorder he suffers from after serving his country in multiple combat tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, according to his family and mental health professionals.

Hammar has been in the notorious CEDES prison in Matamoros, Mexico since being arrested Aug. 13, on what his family says is a trumped up weapon charge. During the four-month ordeal, Hammar has faced death threats from the cartel gangsters that control the prison, been put in isolation and been chained to his metal bunk.

Hammar was honorably discharged from the marines in 2007 and, according to his father, Jon Hammar Sr., was diagnosed with PTSD in 2008. Hammar Sr. said his son had never been able to relax since coming home from the wars.

“He was at an alertness he never came down from,” Hammar Sr. said. “Jon had gone to appointments with the VA in Miami but had a bad reaction to the medication they gave him. The treatment they were offering him was not effective.”

Olivia Hammar, the imprisoned Marine’s mother, researched treatment facilities for PTSD and came across the Pathway Home in Yountville, Calif., which offered a residential recovery program.

Hammar completed the nine-month program where his parents saw immediate results.

“He went through exposure therapy,” Olivia told Bill O’Reilly. “It’s really an exhausting program because you are working through tough stuff.”

But Fred Gusman, Pathway Home‘s executive director, said strain of being behind bars in a foreign land could unravel whatever progress Hammar had seen.

“When he came to us he was very withdrawn and that his world view was that nobody cares,” Gusman said. “By the time he graduated, he had turned around.”

But, Gusman said, “You never get cured of post traumatic stress. When someone runs into a dilemma like this it rekindles old issues.”

Gusman said Hammar’s issue would be a violation of the trust he put in U.S. border officials who Hammar and pal Ian McDonough say gave him a sense of security that he was following the rules for bringing the rifle into Mexico.

“That can break his faith, having him ask if anything has changed,” Gusman said.

McDonough who was also arrested but later released, said his friend has been struggling with PTSD. They had planned the trip through Mexico and to Costa Rica to go surfing and hunting and forget the trauma of war.

“He was losing his mind in the city and had to get away,” McDonough said.

Now there is increasing fear of his condition in confined and deplorable prison conditions. Hammar Sr. said the conditions his son are in are likely to set him back.

While Hammar Jr., is separated from the general population for his own safety, he is being housed in a converted storage closet in a busy administrative area of the prison. where he has been chained to his bed, where he is essentially on display, separated only by a chain link fence.

“It’s like he is in a zoo,” Hammar Sr. said. “His emotions go with the day to day activity of the prison, but I expect he is relapsing.”

On a recent visit, Hammar Sr. sensed his son’s decline.

“He told me, ‘Dad, when I get out of here I’m going to have to be alone,'” Hammar Sr. said.

Despite his attempts to declare the .410 gauge antique Sears Roebuck shotgun at the border with Brownsville, Texas, Hammar was charged with possessing a gun used by the Mexican military, an aggravated felony punishable up to 15 years in prison.

Gusman is concerned if Hammar Jr. is not released.

“Jon is very resilient and if they can get him out quickly he can get his faith back in mankind,” Gusman said. “If he is convicted, it can be terrible, I don’t know if he can make it.”

Source: Fox World News

Pal of jailed Marine Jon Hammar recounts pal's last day of freedom in Mexico

The fellow Marine who was with Jon Hammar when Mexican customs officials arrested him for carrying an illegal shotgun said his friend made every effort to follow the law, but got bad information from officials on both sides of the border.

Ian McDonough, 27, told FoxNews.com that four U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents told Hammar before he crossed into Mexico that as long as the required permit, which he completed, was submitted and he declared the gun to Mexican authorities, there would be no problem in bringing the vintage shotgun across the border.

“Jon was told to fill out a form with his name and the specs of the rifle and show it to the customs agent on the Mexican side,” said McDonough, who was traveling with Hammar in an RV to Costa Rica, where they planned to hunt and surf. “I don’t know what they expected Jon to do after they gave him the registration form and sent him on his way.”

Hammar, who was arrested Aug. 13, was charged with a federal level weapon felony and faces up to 15 years in a Mexican prison for what his travel companion said was a breakdown in communication at the U.S.-Mexico border. He has been held in the notorious CEDES prison ever since.

McDonough said Hammar was willing to leave the rifle at the Brownsville, Texas, border station and pick it up when he returned. If the CBP agents had adequately explained the potential consequences of being arrested in Mexico, Hammar would never have taken the shotgun across the border, McDonough said.

“If they looked at Jon and told him not to take it, he wouldn’t have,” McDonough said. “He tried to do everything legit.”

Michael Friel, a spokesman for U.S. Customs and Border Protection, said it would be unlikely an agent would have led Hammar to believe he could have brought the shotgun, which had once belonged to his grandfather, into Mexico.

CBP does not provide advice regarding the laws of foreign governments,” Friel said.

Friel also said that given the information available, it is unlikely an investigation will be undertaken into the U.S. agent’s alleged action.

But McDonough insisted that Hammar was so concerned about regulations that he even wanted to know what the tax would be for crossing with the numerous surfboards the avid surfer also carried.

Hammar’s attorney, Eddie Varon-Levy, said even if Hammar lacked necessary permits for the gun, he should have had the gun confiscated and received a fine, not a federal charge of aggravated felony of possessing a weapon used by the military.

“High-ranking Mexican military officials told me neither the rifle nor the ammunition is used by the military,” said Varon-Levy.

In an exclusive interview with FoxNews.com, McDonough described the harrowing last day of freedom for his friend.

As they made their way into Mexico in a vintage Winnebago after stopping at U.S. Customs in Brownsville, Texas, Hammar and McDonough were met by a Mexican official who told them to proceed over the bridge and into Mexico where they would meet a customs agent.

McDonough said Hammar readily told the Mexican customs officials he had the shotgun to declare and showed them the form he was given on the U.S. side.

“They told us to go into a building to fill out some forms,” McDonough said, thinking they were probably going to have to pay a small fine.

But things quickly turned sour.

“I told Jon, ‘I think we are going to get arrested,'” McDonough said.

The two Americans were told to get in a truck with police, who took them on a 30-minute drive through Matamoros to the city jail.

“We still didn’t think it was going to be a big deal because the police were joking with us, kind of like treating us as ‘dopey’ tourists,” McDonough said.

While in the jail, McDonough said he struck up a conversation with Mexican inmates who said they were surprised to see the Americans in the jail for such a minor infraction that should have been settled with a fine. McDonough said the police station and jail he and Hammar were initially brought to was nothing like a U.S. lockup.

“It was just terrible, the toilet, sink, and water supply were in the same place,” McDonough said. “There was no real evidence room so when we got inside there was cocaine and weed in the open.”

Hammar and McDonough spent most of the day being ignored in the jail, were told they were going to have to spend the night because it was too late to see the judge, McDonough recalled.

It would be two days before the men were able to see a public defender who did not speak English.

“I was lucky enough that I spoke some Spanish,” McDonough said. “They let me go because Jon took full responsibility.”

McDonough said he paid a $20 fine and was required to have his two thumb prints taken.

While standing outside the jail, McDonough was horrified to see his friend in handcuffs being led to a truck that would take him to the notorious CEDES prison.

“He told me to get out of Mexico as fast as I can because with both of us in jail nothing good can happen,” McDonough said.

McDonough said he and Hammar planned the surfing trip, which was to last a few months, to deal with the trauma of war. McDonough, who like Hammar is a combat veteran, is concerned about his friend and the absurdity of a weapons charge.

“We saw enough killing, we just wanted to get away,” he said.

Hammar is scheduled to have a court date Jan. 17.

Source: Fox World News