Scandal-weary Costa Rica electing new president
By John McPhaul
SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (Reuters) – Fed up with scandal, Costa
Rica voted for a new leader on Sunday with Nobel laureate and
former president Oscar Arias favored to return to power in the
Central American nation.
Arias, 65, a free-market moderate, has held a commanding
lead in polls for months, unscathed by the kickback scandals
that have rocked a nation that prides itself on being a cut
above the rest of the region.
Costa Rica, which abolished its army almost 60 years ago,
was stable in the 1980s when its neighbors were ravaged by
civil war.
But the coffee- and banana-growing country, also famous for
its ecotourism resorts and rain forests, has been knocked
sideways by bribery scandals. Two former presidents were jailed
briefly in 2004.
Voting stations opened at dawn, but lines were thin all day
as many Costa Ricans, wary of politics after the improprieties,
were expected to shun the election altogether.
Activists from the main parties drove cars and jeeps around
the streets of San Jose honking horns and flying flags out of
windows trying to drum up support.
“People are very disillusioned because in recent elections
we have not been able to elect a good president and because two
former presidents were corrupt,” said Lourdes Moras, 34, a
graphic designer voting in the capital city.
Ex-presidents Rafael Angel Calderon and Miguel Angel
Rodriguez were both put behind bars for taking kickbacks from
foreign companies. A third former leader is refusing to return
from Europe to face grilling on similar allegations.
LOOKING FOR DIGNITY
Arias became a national icon after winning the Nobel Peace
Prize in 1987 for producing a peace plan that helped end civil
wars elsewhere in Central America. Voters are looking to him to
help restore their dignity, analysts said.
“He has the experience that the other candidates lack, ”
said Vicente Martin, 43, a public works employee.
In a telephone interview with Mexican radio before the
polls closed, Arias sounded confident and took the opportunity
to criticize the United States for neglecting Central America
since the end of its civil wars during the Cold War era, when
Washington sent military aid to stop leftist rebel
insurgencies.
“Instead of rewarding us for putting down arms, they
punished us,” said Arias said.
Former planning minister Otton Solis, 51, an
anti-corruption centrist who leads the Citizen Action Party, is
the main rival to Arias, scion of a coffee-farming family.
An economist, Solis wants to rewrite parts of the Central
American Free Trade Agreement with the United States before it
is ratified by Costa Rica’s Congress.
Arias supports the accord.
“We cannot go backward and elect a past president,” said
Marcela Zuniga, 62, a hairdresser. “We must go forward and
redesign politics in this beautiful but sick country.”
Polls had Arias taking more than the 40 percent of votes
needed for a first-round win to avoid an April 2 run-off
between the top two candidates. A poll last week gave him 42.6
percent.
Leftists have won a string of recent elections in Latin
America but the left in Costa Rica is split into several
factions with virtually no chance of grabbing power.
Costa Rica’s long-standing two-party system has been shaken
by the scandals and the Social Christian Unity Party of
President Abel Pacheco has little support now.
(Additional reporting by Chris Aspin and Lorraine Orlandi)
