Archive | October, 2008

Nicaragua can help belarus improve ties with Latin America

Posted on 31 October 2008 by admin

MINSK, Oct 31 (NNN-BELTA) — By intensifying relations with Nicaragua, Belarus will expand co-operation with the countries of Central and Latin America, President Alexander Lukashenko said at a meeting with Nicaraguan Foreign Minister Samuel Santos Lopez heer Thursday.

“We open a new page in the history of relations. not only with Nicaragua but with Central America in general. When developing trade and economic relations, we need to have a footing in that part of America not only to co-operate with your country but through you with the neighbouring regions,” he added.

Full Story

Comments (0)

Condez being lined up for title fight with “Chocolate” Gonzalez

Posted on 31 October 2008 by nicaraguanpost

Full Story">Full Story" alt="" width="300" height="261" />

Full Story" alt="" />

American Dante Ortiz who negotiated for Florante Condes to get a mandatory title fight against Raul “Rayito” Garcia which Condes lost largely due to his wrong tactics in the early rounds, is this time working on a WBA title fight against Nicaragua’s Roman “Chocalatito” Gonzalez early next year.

In an email to www.insidesports.ph, Standard Today and Viva Sports, Ortiz said he had a “long talk” with matchmaker Alex Marin and promoter Silvio Conrado of Promotora Prodesa in Nicaragua and said “they both welcomed the proposal” of a title defense against Condes.

Ortiz said he had promosed that Rey Labao who he manages fighting for a regional super featherweight title against a Japanese since well-known Japanese businessman-sportsman Akihiko Honda promotes Gonzales in Asia.

Ortiz said he had discussed Condes fight plans with well-known promoter Sammy Gello-ani who is flying to Manila over the weekend to meet with Condes regarding a possible ten-round tune-up fight on November 30.

Condes will need to fight since he hasn’t seen action since the loss to Garcia in Mexico last June.

Ortiz expressed the hope that Condes who is currently ranked No. 4 minimum weight by the WBA will “take advantage of this opportunity” even as he expressed confidence in the experience and power of “The Little Pacquiao” to become a world champion again.

Condes won the IBF title with a hard-fought twelve round decision of Indonesia’s Muhammad Rachman in July 2007 but problems with his manager and contractual dispute with his American promoter delayed the title defense for almost one year,

Comments (0)

Nicaragua: Protect Rights Advocates from Harassment and Intimidation

Posted on 30 October 2008 by nicaraguanpost

Women’s Groups Feel Pressured in Campaign Against Blanket Abortion Ban

The Nicaraguan government should take steps to ensure that human rights defenders are free to promote and protect women’s rights without harassment or intimidation, Human Rights Watch said today.

Since beginning a campaign against a newly enacted absolute ban on abortion in 2006, women’s rights advocates have been subject to official investigations into their work, and some have reported suffering acts of intimidation from unknown sources.

Full Story

Comments (0)

Nicaraguan foreign minister in Belarus

Posted on 30 October 2008 by nicaraguanpost

The Nicaraguan Foreign Minister has been received at the Foreign Ministry of Belarus by Minister Sergey Martynov.

Samuel Santos Lopez noted the importance of the accords regarding the creation of a legal basis that will facilitate joint trade projects. Nicaragua may become a platform through which Belarusian products will be promoted in Central American countries.

Comments (1)

Nicaragua’s ‘Witch Hunt’ Raises Electoral Concerns

Posted on 30 October 2008 by nicaraguanpost

Blake Schmidt | 30 Oct 2008,

MANAGUA, Nicaragua - A government probe of political dissidents and journalists has caused violent clashes in Nicaragua and concern abroad as the country heads into municipal elections Nov. 9.

A statement by U.S. State Department spokesman Robert Wood criticized Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega’s verbal attacks against opponents, as well as police raids against two non-governmental organizations in what Ortega’s critics say is a wide-reaching “witch hunt” against the opposition.

Full Story

Comments (0)

Cal Ripken Jr. will visit Nicaragua next month with former Braves pitcher Dennis Martinez

Posted on 30 October 2008 by nicaraguanpost

Full Story">Full Story" alt="" width="238" height="300" />

WASHINGTON - Cal Ripken, Jr. will visit Nicaragua from November 13-18, the second trip that the baseball great will make in his role as an American Public Diplomacy Envoy for the State Department’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs.

Ripken was appointed to the position in August 2007 by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.

Full Story

Comments (1)

Letter From Nicaragua: As Elections Approach, What’ll It Be — Lula or Hugo?

Posted on 30 October 2008 by nicaraguanpost

By David Appell.  Anybody recall when, back in the Cold-Wartime era of the legendary Ronaldus Rex, this wee country — Central America’s largest, but still just over the size of New York State — made our headlines practically weekly? Things are mucho más tranquilas nowadays — god knows the place is still one of the dirt-poorest in the hemisphere, but the crime rate, for example, is a fraction of that in neighboring El Salvador and Honduras. And though in November 2006 the Sandinistas slipped back into power, this time around president Daniel Ortega tempers his hoary “anti-imperialista” boilerplate (which may get at least somewhat toned down with the arrival of the Obama Administration) with vigorous bids for Euro and even damn yanqui investment, especially in the area of tourism.

In fact, earlier this month Managua for the first time hosted the annual Central American Tourism Market (CATM) and is following up next spring with a Full Story">Central America Tourism & Hotel Investment Exchange. At the CATM exhibition hall in Managua’s Crowne Plaza, I found nearly a thousand tourism businesses — a goodly chunk of them Nicaraguan — enthusiastically hawking some very attractive wares to foreign (mostly European) wholesalers and media.

It’s certainly Full Story">a beautiful and safe land to visit — practically 80-percent virgin, with some amazing eco-tourism, beaches, colonial cities, coffee and cigar country, rainforests, volcanoes, lovely people, and some of the lowest prices in the hemisphere. So naturally at least some foreign capital has been very interested in getting in on what’s essentially the ground floor; a 2,300-acre condo/resort/golf complex called Full Story">Gran Pacífica has recently opened on the Pacific coast, and other, complete with Jack Nicklaus golf course, starts construction in ‘09, while a 40-megawatt windpower project is due to break wind (as it were) in November, also on the Pacific coast. The government has agreements with the IDB, the IMF and the World Bank, and has been courting foreign investment with an agency called Full Story">ProNicaragua.

Unlike during Sandinismo 1.0, the usual global suspects (Pizza Hut, Shell, The Gap) pepper the capital, if not yet the hinterland. In fact, there’s enough going on to support not one but two expat-run English-language newspapers, The Nicaraguan Post and Full Story">The Nica Times. Sí, señor, it may still be one of the hemisphere’s poorest countries, but crime is relatively low and Nicaragua does seem open for business. Foreign direct investment grew from $282 million in 2006 to $335 million last year, according to ProNicaragua director Javier Chamorro (a distant but Sandinista-affiliated relation of former president Violeta Chamorro).

Indeed, if anyone up here in Norteamérica was paying attention during the national elections here two years ago, they saw a supposedly “new” Daniel Ortega, in both good ways and bad. There was, for example, softpedaling of the revolutionary stemwinders cozying up to the rightwing oligarchy, the business community, even the Catholic Church. Some saw in this the possibility that Ortega’s faction of Sandinistas might be aiming for the “third-way” approach of Brazil’s center leftist president Lula da Silva instead of the Fidel Castro retread hawked by Venezuela’s Hugo Chávez and his Bolivian sidekick Evo Morales. Thanks to this, a split opposition, and “El Pacto,” a sleazy deal in place with the supporters of spectacularly corrupt and famously obese rightwing president Arnoldo Alemán to allow him to stay out of jail for embezzlement, the “Danielistas” (aka Orteguistas) managed to squeak back into power with a mere 38 percent of the votes.

Yet what has happened since seems simply schizophrenic. Some anti-poverty and education programs have had some (limited) impact, especially in the countryside, and at the same time the pro-business alliance and pro-investment attitude has for the most part held, as has the church connection. In fact, this last has infuriated more than a few Nicaraguans. Women’s groups had already been upset with Ortega and his wife Rosario Murillo because of their attacks against her daughter Zoilamérica Narváez, who a decade ago accused him of sexual abuse but last month finally dropped her official complaint (some in the media here speculated she was paid off to go away, to the tune of US$200,000). These days, supported by the U.N. Council on Human Rights, they’re livid over the fact that the Danielistas proceeded to kill a century-old abortion-ban exception for the health of the mother (no word on whether air-quotes were used on “health”) and are now attacking attempts to reinstate the exception as “illegal.”

And remember the old Rocky Horror Picture Show lyrics, “Let’s Do the Time Warp Again”? “It’s just a jump to the left, and then a step to the right…” Or rather, vice-versa: increasingly, the so-called “new Ortega” is being pushed aside by flashes of Cold-War-era déjà vu, as tired old anti-imperialista yanqui firebreathing has once more become a staple. Don’t make too much of the rhetoric, I was told by tourism and infrastructure Mario Salinas, “Americans are very welcome — we love the American people. Besides,” he winked, “last I heard, most Americans weren’t too thrilled with Señor Bush, either.” Added ProNicaragua’s slightly chagrined Javier Chamorro, “it’s been more rhetorical than practical, but still, we could create less noise on the public side. It’s something we need to work on.”

It does go well beyond mere gum-flapping, however. The government and its supporters have actively been ratcheting up attempts to demonize its opponents. Several political parties have been banned, foreign ambassadors harassed (take that, Sweden!), and NGO’s criminally investigated, including the highly respected Oxfam (a real enemy of the people, that one); meanwhile, Reporters Without Borders has protested smear campaigns against dissident journalists. During my visit, I noted every downtown traffic circle filled, day and night, with people waving black-and-red Sandinista flags, and the cult of personality back in force, with so many billboards of Ortega, fist raised, promising “more victories!” that at times it felt like being back in Havana. Ah, sweet nostalgia…

All the while, corruption continues apace — this past year Nicaragua was ranked 123 out of 180 countries in Transparency International’s “Corruption Perceptions Index” — and Freedom House ranks the country as only “partly free,” with a downward trend since 2006. As a result of all the above, it’s fair to say that many if not most Nicaraguans feel disgusted with and betrayed by the Danielistas these days (graffiti spotted in lovely colonial Granada: “Ortega , Alemán & Somoza Are the Same Thing”); a new Sandinista party has formed, and seven out of the revolution’s eight original comandantes have repudiated Ortega, as have many former U.S. supporters. “I’m totally disenchanted with Daniel Ortega,” Council on Hemispheric Affairs (COHA) director Larry Birns told me. “After losing election after election he got to a point that he was so anxious to be president again that he was willing to pay any price. And in the process of doing so he’s basically dismantled his personality and became a figure of ridicule.” And furthermore, many Nicaraguans believe that behind the scenes First lady Rosario Murillo is the one pulling the strings.

Abroad, Ortega’s firmly realigned Nicaragua with the “Bolivarian” leftist bloc led by neo-Castroite sugar daddy Hugo Chávez, and has been playing footsie with other unsavory players like Colombia’s FARC, the neo-Soviet Alexander Lukashenko dictatorship of Belarus, and Vladimir Putin’s Russia (even becoming the only country to recognize “independent” South Ossetia and Abkhazia, militarily wrenched from Georgia this past summer).

And now, after racking up Central America’s lowest growth rate for 2007, even the business climate may be turning south again, according to a September 26 piece in the Nica Times and Full Story">echoed October 27 in the U.S.-based Latin Business Chronicle; recently, the country has reportedly lost 17,000 jobs just in its apparel and textile industry. The reasons include problems regarding infrastructure, the judiciary, and the spreading international crisis — but also in no small measure the Danielistas’ bloviations; Ortega’s own economic adviser, Bayardo Arce, was quoted in the Times as saying, “the government is not innocent.”

So what lies ahead? The Danielistas may be getting more mouthy and thuggish, but observers like Birns still feel that for the time being they’ll respect the results of elections, including the upcoming mayoral races November 9. Others are less optimistic; Nica Times editor Tim Rogers observes that “the Supreme Electoral has very little credibility; it’s seen as an instrument that belongs to Ortega. Meanwhile, the U.S. embassy just released a statement expressing doubt about the mayoral contests, which Full Story">an October 22 Universidad Centroamericana poll put Ortega’s Sandinistas behind in eight of the country’s 17 top municipalities, including Managua, Granada, and the booming Pacific resort San Juan del Sur. The reason? The regime has refused to accredit international observers; meanwhile the opposition is doing what it can to boost turnout, to make electoral theft tougher (sound familiar?). As for the next national polls, due in 2012, word is that Danny, Rosie, and the gang are hankering to change the constitution to allow them to stay in power indefinitely. It feels increasingly less like they’ll make the same mistake they made in 1990: of abiding by the will of the voters and hopping off the gravy train (it’s true that election wasn’t without controverysy; COHA and others maintain it was essentially bought by Washington, but it was certified reasonably free and fair by most international observers including the Full Story">Carter Center).

What the United States needs to do under the Obama administration is, first off, pay more attention and engage not just with Nicaragua but to Latin America in general. Beyond Mexico (obviously important because of immigration) and Cuba (blind obsession with the failed pseudo-embargo), Washington’s attitude has been one of neglect, both benign and malign. That of course has allowed a host of evils to flourish, from drug trafficking and gangs to poverty and corruption that leads to the rise of demagogues like Chávez and Ortega. Stating the obvious, Nicaragua’s president earlier this year called the next U.S. president’s campaign “revolutionary,” but, says Rogers, “I think Ortega secretly wants Obama to lose, because he doesn’t want a leftist U.S. president — it would screw up his anti-yanqui ranting.” And judging from his Latin American policy speech this past summer as well as other pronouncements, Barack Obama is highly unlikely to return the compliment. The key challenge, though, is to walk the walk, even in a world full of seemingly more pressing challenges. Central America has exploded in the past — and its convulsions distorted U.S. foreign policy and even ended up subverting our own Constitution. If the worldwide recession keeps spreading and times grow more desperate, there’s nothing to say it can’t happen again.

Comments (0)

Nicaraguan Boxing update October 29th 2008

Posted on 29 October 2008 by nicaraguanpost

By Darrell Williams, This Sunday night marks the 6th attempt at a world title by a Nicaraguan fighter this year.
In La Feria de San Marcos, Mexico Nerys Espinosa (25-4) takes on WBA light Flyweight champion Ulisis Solis (27-1).
Espinosa has been waiting patiently for his shot at a title. But in Solis he faces the number one rated fighter in the division.
Solis is a slick fighter with a tremendous left hook that has speed and devastating power on it.
Espinosa is in great shape and very hungry for the title but will not be able to make any errors if he wants to be the 3rd World champion from Nicaragua this year, following in the footsteps of Roman “Chocolate’ Gonzales and Juan Palacios.
On the 14th of this month we have the return to the ring of former World lightweight champion Jose Alfaro. Alfaro has not fought since the loss of his title in Japan earlier this year.
The fight at Pharaohs Casino in Managua will headline a 10-bout card, which will include Nicaragua’s newest sensation, 16-year-old Carlos (El Chocorronito) Buitrago.
Buitrago has a pro record of (6-0) and although not blessed with the punching power of “Chocolate” yet, is as technically gifted a fighter as Nicaragua as seen for many a year. The boy is a pure joy to watch and although still only fighting four rounders, it is something not to be missed.
This event will be completely enclosed inside the big tent at Pharaohs Caretera A Masaya location. Rain or shine, the fights will go on.
World champion Juan Palacios is also back in the ring shortly, with the 1st defense of his 105lb title. He takes on Teruo Masawa in China, Nov 7th, on the undercard of Andrew Golota versus Ray Austin. This should be a comfortable night for the Nicaraguan, but he will do well to remember the fate of Alfaro, who went to Japan in very similar circumstances, only to be upset.
And finally, in one of the most bizarre situations of recent times; after 4 postponements, William Gonzalez will finally step into the ring Dec 13th for his title shot against Joseph Agbeko. William’s is often overlooked because of the trials and tribulations that have continually derailed his career. But make no doubt about it, he is an excellent fighter, and come Dec 13th, don’t be surprised if once again, El Presidente is digging in to the government coffers, for yet another house in an ever growing list of Nicaraguan World champions.

Comments (0)

Beyond beach cabanas – Paraiso Beach Hotel highlights the importance of eco tourism

Posted on 28 October 2008 by nicaraguanpost


By Francoise Snobel.
Sustainable tourism is paramount to Paraiso Beach Hotel owners, Ton Bos and Mike Brower, two management consultants that left their company in Holland for a very different life on Big Corn Island. Their journey into hotelier status started out as a faraway dream that quickly become a reality after backpacking through Brazil. “We either had to stop talking about it or do it,” said Ton. And they chose the latter when their travels took them to Corn Island. The original owners of Paraiso Beach Hotel were returning to Canada and the property had just gone up for sale. “It was a real synchronization,” said Ton. “We passed the gate and just knew it would be a big turning point in our lives.” Three weeks later a deal was made. In January of 2005, Ton and Mike re-opened Paraiso Beach Hotel, a collection of Caribbean style cabanas that feel authentically “Corn Island”.

But their story does not end there, as running the hotel was just a small part of their relocation plans. Through their previous business contacts, Ton and Mike were able to gain the support of non-profit organization MITIALTO, where they raised enough funds to renovate one Big Corn Island school and build two more. In addition to this, Ton and Mike have improved the island’s education through teacher training initiatives and purchasing school materials. The next eagerly anticipated challenge for Ton and Mike is a Big Corn water project that is in the works, with the goals of clean drinking water, halting erosion and reducing garbage.
“These projects have nothing to do with reputation,” said Mike. “It’s just something you do.”
Paraiso Beach Hotel – Big Corn Island, Nicaragua
Tel: +(505) 575 5111
Website: www.paraisoclub.com
Accommodation:
15 cosy cabanas are dotted throughout the property, which is only 80 meters away from the beach. With palm tree thatched roofs and a well-maintained tropical landscaped garden, Paraiso Beach Hotel’s accommodation is a little piece of Nicaraguan paradise. Rooms are simple, but impeccably clean and very comfortable. Crisp white sheets, mosquito nets and Nicaraguan style furnishings adorn the wooden walled rooms and colourful hammocks hang outside private verandas. Cabanas are air-conditioned and have clean private bathrooms with showers.
Atmosphere:
Laid-back and friendly, the staff and guests make the Paraiso Beach Hotel experience a memorable one. The charm of the island is not lost at Paraiso, which is a big issue many developments face when introducing tourism. This has a lot to do with the owners, as they have become part of the community and want their accommodation to be authentic and non-intrusive. There is a real Caribbean feel here.
Food and Drink:
Paraiso has just recently renovated their bar, restaurant and kitchen. The restaurant, called The Buccaneer, is amidst the gardens in the open air and under a thatched roof. The menu is quite expansive and reasonably priced. Those looking for some fresh seafood can indulge in lobster, shrimp and whole fish, served Caribbean style, with garlic or with lime salt and pepper – all of which are mouth-wateringly tasty. Pizza, pasta, salads and soups are also available. A continental breakfast is complimentary for Paraiso Beach Hotel guests. The bar is stocked with plenty of drink options, from pina coladas to nica libres, guests can be choosy with their tipple.
Activities:
The Little Corn Island snorkelling trip is a must. Here guests have a scenic boat ride with plenty of snorkelling opportunities. Amazing marine life can be seen, including rays, nurse sharks, and brightly coloured tropical fish and coral. During this trip, the boat stops off at Little Corn Island, first to explore and then back again on a secluded part of the beach for some fresh coconut water (and rum, if you choose!). Those who want to kneeboard are offered a bit of watersport excitement and those who prefer a mellower afternoon can soak up the sun on the white sandy beach
The Last Word:
An authentically Caribbean retreat that prides itself on sustainable tourism – Paraiso Beach Hotel on Big Corn Island truly is a little piece of paradise.

Comments (0)

Rancho Santana: A jewel on Nicaragua’s Pacific coast

Posted on 28 October 2008 by nicaraguanpost


While some residential communities have suffered as a result of the real estate recession in the USA, Rancho Santana continues to thrive with new houses going up every month.
In addition to the healthy rate of single-family construction that is going on, there are five more neighborhoods currently underway: the Seagate condominiums, 24 oceanfront luxury condominiums with unobstructed views and beach access, well located just a few steps from the clubhouse and spa. The Seagate beach village, 90 oversized single-family home lots, starting at $46,000 that comes with a choice of three building plans for a beach cottage.
These sites are set in a village environment along the picturesque Limon River and within walking distance to the beach and all the Ranch Santana amenities.
Visto Del mar, a condo-hotel development consisting of110 income producing hillside cottages with sea and mountain views starting as low as $139,000.
The Estates, a privately gated, upscale community of 50one+ acre lots with spectacular ocean valley and mountain views, and finally a new 200 acre eco-friendly mountainside reserve which will feature 100 eco-friendly cabins in a natural tranquil forest environment with stunning panoramic views.
Rancho Santana was once my dream and the dream of my American and Nicaraguan partners. But now it’s a reality for more than 350 property owners and residents who have come here to take advantage of Nicaragua’s Riviera coast. Around us other, smaller developments have popped up in recent years. Together they have created thousands of jobs for local residents and pumped tens of millions of dollars into the Tola community and into Rivas and Managua, the two cities that most directly benefit from this new and exciting surge of development.
Ranch Santana retains all its immense natural beauty in developing our community; we took plans to ensure that the natural integrity of the land was never altered. The groomed dirt roads were groomed along the cow paths. The ravines and gullies that bring the rainwater to the sea are undisturbed. The hillsides have not been leveled to accommodate track housing, as has now been done elsewhere around here.
The monkeys and parrots are thriving. The turtles come to nest on our beaches. And the waves are still amazing.
The hiking, biking and horseback riding at Ranch Santana are spectacular. But the crown jewel of our bedizened community is out five beaches. Two of these beaches are beautiful hidden coves that can only be reached on foot from within the community. The other three beaches are wide with pinks sands and a beautiful shoreline.
Because of nearby Lake Nicaragua, these beaches enjoy offshore winds about 3330 days a year. This creates two constantly great surf breaks nearly all year long; one in Playa Santana and one in Playa Rosada.
From the south end of Ranch Santana surfers have access to two more great breaks, Panga drops and Colorado are just a short walk down the beach.
All around Ranch Santana you can see signs of what the future will bring. Many of the small, wooded framed shacks that once housed the local farming families, have being renovated or replaced entirely with brick and stucco homes, that are painted in bright colors and fronted by little gardens and and colorful native flowers. In the towns of La Salinas and Limon you will find dozens of new local restaurants, serving local residents along with visitors from Nicaragua and abroad.
The children at the local schools have new bags and uniforms (thanks to donations given by Rancho Santana’s development office and many of it’s residents)
Many of the employees at Ranch Santana receive free English training. And the Roberto Clemente Health Clinic established in 2002 by the developers of Rancho Santana, services more than 1000 patients a year, on 24/7 basis.
Rancho Santana is a proven community with a 10-year history of continual expansion and improvements and a record of servicing it’s ever- growing population of US Nicaraguan and international property owners.

Comments (1)