Welcome to Panama Sol

What’s all that buzz about? Where IS Panama?

Picture this: A HUGE canal with SUPER tankers cruising through with barely a few inches of clearance on either side. Tropical weather year round, no hurricanes, reasonable real estate prices, no taxes on income earned outside the country, solid infrastructure, world class banking district. Now where IS Panama?

And picture this: White sand beaches, international gourmet cuisine, international Designer boutiques, American trained physicians with world class medical facilities, AFFORDABLE and AVAILABLE health care, American university satellite campuses. Now where IS Panama?

And this: Retiree benefits like no other country can offer—discounts on airfares, health care, movies, international privacy laws, no or low property taxes, skyscrapers with panoramic ocean views, beachfront condos at affordable prices, mountain lots with panoramic ocean views, English widely spoken. Now where IS Panama?

And this: Enrique Iglesias relocating here, Mel Gibson, Paris Hilton, Sean Connery, Jenna Bush, Kid Rock. Freeways, American franchises, Embassies from around the world, Salsa sensation Ruben Blades posing as the Minister of Tourism, world class deep sea fishing, the highest number of species of birds in the world, spas, world class all inclusive resorts. Now where IS Panama?

And this: High speed internet, WIFI, Direct TV, cell phone coverage country-wide, world class golf, private tennis clubs, wellness centers, BioFit centers, fresh herbs, fresh vegetables, fresh fruit year round, home grown, and inexpensive. Well stocked upscale supermarkets, web designers, graphic designers, all at a fraction of the cost. No recession, only BOOM, AND BOOMERS, flocking here. Now where IS Panama?

25 Jun

PANAMA REAL ESTATE

The real estate market in Panama City is definitely still active - while we are not seeing the activity that was present in 2004-2006, buyers still are coming to invest and to live either part-time or full time in Panama.  Prices are lower in the City than they are in the Pacific Beach area where there is still not a huge inventory of available housing - condos and homes.  With the nearing completion of the new Coronado Mall and all the businesses that it will house in the Pacific Beach area, prices are expected to hold, and possibly increase with the upcoming completion of some of the major projects in the area, which already has a large seasonal population.  More restaurants have already opened in the area, along with other businesses.

02 Jul

Pensioner Benefits Raised in Panama

The higher costs of everything are forcing the government to increase the money paid to the 175,000 people who receive pensions in the country. At just $60 a month increase it will amount to over $10 million a month that was not in the original budget. The combination of higher commodity prices and U.S. dollar inflation are taking a heavy toll on Panama.

From the Costa Rica Daily news

Pensioner Benefits Raised in Panama

Martin Torrijos, President of Panama, announced today new benefits and retirement pensions to help the 175 thousand pensioners face the high cost of living.

In a message to the Nation, the leader informed next July a convertible bond for 60 balboas (dollars), from a fund approved by the government, will be given to these people.

He released the news of a bill that will be subject to the approval of Parliament the 1st of September, in order to standardize this bonus every July.

Torrijos reminded that the government gives pensioners a similar amount every December, without affecting the funds in the Social Security Box.

The second regulation announced by the President is to include 10 thousand extremely poor elders without social security assistance in the Opportunities Net/

The leader stated that 15 thousand elders are included in the program that hands 35 dollars a month to almost 50 thousand poor families on the condition they pay attention to their children’s education and health.

Torrijos said these actions will contribute to mitigate the purchasing power lost, consequence of the increased the family shopping basket cost, and, thus, help pensioners live a decent old age.

The increase in the prices of crude oil and food in the international market, which has become a world crisis, affects everybody but especially the poor, said the President, and the government took some steps to help soothe its impact.

Among the governmental measures, he mentioned a subsidy for almost 41 million dollars to keep immutable the electric bill of those who consume up to 500 kilowatts a month, 90 % of the total.

He added, other subsidies keep the price of the 25 pounds gas cylinder in 4.37 dollars and public transportation tickets in 25 cents, among other measures that favor the purchase of low-price houses.

He also mentioned, as one of the results of these measures, to have saved the Social Security Box from bankruptcy and denied versions that this and Public Health-Care Services are to become private.

Source: http://primapanama.blogs.com/

02 Jul

Recipe for disaster-Wages adjusted for inflation

The proposed plan to have automatic wage adjustments in response to inflation would spell disaster for foreign investment in the country. When Panama needs investment the most investors will turn to other countries rather than bare the risk of ever increasing labor costs. On a local level, wage increases translate immediately into hire prices for goods and services for everyone, so it is a no win situation. What is needed more than anything is continued increases in employment and opportunity, especially in the interior of the country. Increased skills and a positive general business climate will encourage employers to increase wages as competition for those skills increase. If we are forced to increase wages and the high labor burdens associated with it, at a time when business is declining, you can be assured it will accelerate the decline even further. these are difficult times, but political pandering to the populous with this kind of tactic would be disastrous.
From La Prensa;

A proposal to index and adjust the wages of salaried employees, pensioners, and retirees has been prelimarily approved by the legislature.

The Cámara de Comercio, Industrias y Agricultura de Panamá (Cciap) wants the Asamblea Nacional to consider alternatives.

The Cámara de Comercio, Industrias y Agricultura de Panamá (Cciap) rejected the Asamblea Nacional’s preliminary decision to approve a wage index proposal, calling it “an act of politicking” that does not take into account the negative impact it will have on the country’s economy.

The proposal calls for indexing and adjusting the wages of salaried employees, pensioners and retirees based on the increased rate of inflation in the cost of the basic food basket from last year to the present. “We hope that the legislators are able to reconsider the proposal, which is a matter of economic planning and policy,” said Juan Ramon Varela, president of Cciap.

Even though the ComisiĂłn de Trabajo received reports from the Ministerio de EconomĂ­a y Finanzas (MEF) and specialists at the Caja de Seguro Social which did not entirely support wage indexing, “it prefers to superimpose individual interests on an issue of national interest,” Varela pointed out.

The experience of Venezuela, where inflation now exceeds 20 percent annually, presents itself as a cautionary tale about the possible economic consequences of the indexing proposal.

Varela suggested a few alternatives to mitigate inflation, including temporarily eliminating the tax on fuel, which is 60 cents a gallon for gas and 25 cents a gallon for diesel; allowing an income tax deduction for private school expenses; reducing “unnecessary” public sector expenses and using the savings from “social welfare” programs to provide lunch to all school children; and making a tax benefit plan for employees earning less than $2,500 effective now, rather than in 2009.

In a Cciap report on Panama’s current inflationary crisis and food problems the organization stated its opinion unequivocally: “The matter of inflation ought to be a matter of State.” The apparent implication is that controlling inflation and improving workers’ wages in an inflationary cycle should not cost the business sector anything at all.

The Cciap wants companies to benefit from government programs that make businesses more efficient, agile, and productive but apparently sees no reason why they should in turn embrace measures to ensure that the workers who made them profitable are paid what is known as a living wage.

Source: http://primapanama.blogs.com/

02 Jul

Number of mortgages in Panama highest in region

The article in La Prensa puts a very positive spin on the fact that Panama has the highest mortgage to GDP ratio of any country in Latin America by a factor of 400%. I certainly agree that making homes available to the population at subsidized interest rates is a viable approach to helping to get housing to those who otherwise could not afford it, but the fact is that these loans have to show up somewhere on the balance sheet which puts the debt burden on future generations. As long as the economy is growing and inflation is low the burden may not be so great, but in a down turn with decreasing revenues and increased debt burden it can put a small country like Panama in a more difficult position.

Mortgage figures lauded by bank

According to a study by the Banco de España, Panama has the most stable mortgage market of any Central American country.

Across the region, mortgage lending represents an average of 8 percent of Gross Domestic Product (GDP). According to Banco de España officials, this means that the volume of mortgage loans in the region is far below what they should be when compared to other regions.

“This is due to financial and macroeconomic instability that has prevented adequate development of financial markets in the long term,” the report stated. “Other problems are the uneven distribution of income and high unemployment rates.”

These factors have not allowed viable and sustainable housing financing to emerge.

Panama, however, has a mortgage to GDP ratio of 24 percent, which places it at the top of the region and above average for emerging markets in Europe and Asia.

According to Rolando Gordón, a professor of economics at the Universidad de Panamá, the country has a history of programs that make it easy for people to afford housing. Current programs include tax exoneration and preferential interest rates for mortgages.

“Inflation has been between 1 percent and 2 percent, so it has been easy in the past to obtain a mortgage for 30 years,” he said. “The stability of the dollar has also helped.”

According to data supplied by the banking industry, private sector mortgages totaled $4.9 billion in 2007.

Source: http://primapanama.blogs.com/

01 Jul

Panama and Taiwan deal brings quick benefits to Panama

On June 22nd the President announced that they had signed an agreement with Taiwan to extend their free trade agreement. Coincidentally just one week later, Taiwan donates $2.6 million for a new hospital. Sounds like a good deal to me!

Panama, Taiwan, ink FTA

Panama and Taiwan have agreed to renew the four-year-old free trade agreement between the two countries.

Panama has received expanded quotas for some pork products, chicken, milk, pineapple, bananas, beef and citrus products.

Taiwan received increased quotas for industrial products such as plastic plates, and cups, clothes hangers, Christmas ornaments, metal furniture and toys for children.

Total trade between the two countries totals $60 million, with Panama exporting about $31.5 million worth of goods to Taiwan.

“It was a priority to pursue negotiations…to take advantage of treaties that we already have in place,” said Ministra de Comercio e Industrias Carmen Gisela Vergara.

Gregorio Huang, economic advisor to Taiwan’s trade office in Panama, said that the agreement benefits both companies.

Panama’s chief export to Taiwan is scrap metal, but agricultural products could soon overtake it as the primary export.

Taiwan also has free trade agreements with Nicaragua and Guatemala.

Taiwan Donates 2.6m US Dollars to Help Panama Build Hospital

Posted on: Sunday, 29 June 2008, 12:02 CDT

Text of report in English by Taiwanese Central News Agency website

[By Ramon Huang and Y.L. Kao]

Panama City, Panama, June 28 (CNA) - Republic of China Ambassador to Panama Tomas Ping-fu Hou donated US$2.6 million to the Panamanian government Friday to help the Central American country build a hospital in an impoverished area of Panama City.

After accepting the donation, Panamanian Minister of Health Rosario Turner expressed gratitude to Hou, saying that establishing the Hospital de Panama Este in an eastern suburb of the city is one of the ministry’s main construction projects.

“So far, about 24.6 per cent of the hospital has been completed,” Turner noted, adding that once it is inaugurated, the hospital, equipped with advanced facilities, is expected to provide some 342,000 local residents with a wide range of medical services, including hospital care, operations, outpatient treatment and emergency care, as well as women’s and children’s health care.

She said the establishment of the hospital will help assuage a chronic shortage of medical care for residents in the area.

Hou said the donation is aimed at helping Panama improve its medical care and further enhancing bilateral relations.

Originally published by Central News Agency website, Taipei, in English 0926 29 Jun 08.

Source: http://primapanama.blogs.com/

29 Jun

Cruise ports get it wrong along with IPAT

An article in La Prensa today quotes port authority excuses for declining numbers in cruise ships. There are a number of reasons for the decline none of which are mentioned in the article but are obvious to any in the industry. You can read a well written piece about the cruise industry difficulties with Panama on Richard Dietrich’s blog. But, what I find so telling is the mentality of the authorities and operators that people are coming to panama to visit the city. Here is a quote.

“Bonilla noted that one of Panama’s weaknesses is the relatively few tourist attractions in ColĂłn in comparison to the city of Panama. “Ideally, the terminal would be closer to the city of Panama, so that tourists would prolong their stay, generating more revenue for the country.” Another problem might be the distance between the airport and the port, Bonilla said. But Terracina commented that with the expansion of the Corredor Norte and the road between Panama and ColĂłn, the trip between Tocumen International Airport and ColĂłn will take only 45 minutes.”

For some unknown reason Panamanians believe that foreigners want to come and visit the city which is shown time and again to be untrue. They want to see the countryside, the old forts and the indigenous peoples. Certainly the Panama Canal is an attraction, but it does not take a day or two to get your fill of the big ditch.

From La Prensa

The number of tourists who arrived at ColĂłn 2000 in April 2008 fell 46.7% compared to April 2007.

The total number of cruise ship visitors for 2008 is expected to exceed last year’s figures.

The Panamanian tourism authority is pinning its hopes on the arrival of two major cruise ships at the port of ColĂłn 2000 in October and December of this year.

That’s because the number of tourists who arrived in Panama by sea so far this year as compared to the same period last year has declined nearly 12 percent. And just last April, according to the Instituto Panameño de Turismo (Ipat), the total number of tourists who came to the country on cruise ships swooned 42.7 percent in April 2008 with respect to April 2007.

In April 2008, the number of tourists who arrived at the port of ColĂłn 2000 alone, which is the principal point of entry for cruise ships visiting Panama, fell 46.92 percent, from 39,000 in April 2007 to 20,700 this year , according to a ColĂłn 2000 report. The total number of tourists that ColĂłn 2000 has taken in all this year has fallen 11.78 percent.

Sources at Ipat say that various cruise ships cancelled their visits because of bad weather.

But Augusto Terracina, the director of Colón 2000, said that such cancellations are an aberration because Panama lies outside the zone of influence of extreme weather. “Neither does Panama have to deal with labor conflicts in the ports,” he added, “since they have been privatized, unlike those in other countries of the region.”

Terracina pointed out that some ships operated by MSC Cruceros which came in April 2007 didn’t come in 2008. The rest of the cruise lines have continued coming, but with less frequency, he said. Such is the case of Holland America, which brought three cruise ships to Panama in 2007 and only one in 2008.

Ernesto Orillac, vice president of the AsociaciĂłn de Touroperadores and director of Margo Tours, confirmed that tour operators have felt the falling numbers, too, but he isn’t troubled by the decline. He attributes it to the typical behavior of the cruise industry, bearing in mind that Panama is not yet a well-established cruise destination.

That could change on Dec. 7, when Royal Caribbean’s Enchantment of the Seas embarks for the first time from ColĂłn 2000, making Panama its home port. “Then Panama will be on the map,” Orillac said.

Two months before that, in October, the Carnival Freedom will start bringing 3,500 tourists to the country once a month for the next two and half years, Terracina said, adding that 2008 will then close with an increase of 1.56 percent more tourists arriving at ColĂłn 2000 than in 2007, for a total of 271,200 passengers.

Panama will have to face the challenge of meeting the needs of all those visitors. Fernando Bonilla, executive director ejecutivo of the Autoridad de los Puertos de Puerto Rico, said that Panama’s success as a home port will depend on good airlines connections and good transportation between the airport and the cruise port.

Bonilla noted that one of Panama’s weaknesses is the relatively few tourist attractions in ColĂłn in comparison to the city of Panama. “Ideally, the terminal would be closer to the city of Panama, so that tourists would prolong their stay, generating more revenue for the country.” Another problem might be the distance between the airport and the port, Bonilla said. But Terracina commented that with the expansion of the Corredor Norte and the road between Panama and ColĂłn, the trip between Tocumen International Airport and ColĂłn will take only 45 minutes.

Source: http://primapanama.blogs.com/_panama_residential_devel/2008/06/cruise-ports-ge.html#more

26 Jun

Because of escalating prices contracts must be revised

This article points out that many of the contractors performing public works in the country did not have an escalation clause in their contracts and did not count on the huge increases in construction costs that have been seen over the last year or so. Of course when this happens they just stop the work. We see it happen here on residential projects as well. In the end the one requesting the work will end up paying.
The question that needs to be asked and answered is what price contingencies do the canal contractors have in place to protect them. You can bet that any international company will be covering itself from increases in material costs over the time it takes to fulfill these contracts. I believe the canal had a 28% contingency plan for material increases. I don’t think that will be nearly enough.

The state authorized contracts for public works projects that had no contingency clauses.

Benjamin Colamarco, who was in charge of those contracts, now admits they will have to be revised.

Evidently neither the Ministerio de Obras PĂşblicas (MOP) nor some of the businesses it contracted for various public works projects thought to include any contingency clauses in their agreements covering unforeseen cost increases, availability of materials, labor problems or construction delays.

With the steep rise in the price of oil and construction materials, coupled with shortages in labor and supplies, those contracts now have to be revised. Many projects will cost considerably more than first expected, and they are falling behind schedule.

“The original contracts didn’t include price adjustment clauses. As a consequence, in order to make those kinds of adjustments, you have to add addenda, and that is one of the factors causing delays in the completion of the work,” confirmed Benjamin Colamarco, head of the Ministerio de Obras PĂşblicas (MOP).

Another factor is that the Panamanian construction sector can’t keep up with the real estate boom. “Between 2006 and 2007, the construction sector grew nearly 20 percent annually. That generated a lot of demand, and, since the existing operational ability of many businesses had already reached its limit, construction activity began to fall behind,” Colamarco acknowledged.

Because of these circumstances, many state contractors are having problems delivering their promised work on time and within budget.

“When a project is going to be done, evaluations are made at least a year before the order to proceed is given. So, if I give the order to proceed this month, the assessment that worked for [the terms and requirements of the contract] was done in June 2007, and the prices then are now completely out of date,” explained Colamarco. “In that time, oil, asphalt, cement, steel, and stone aggregate have increased markedly.

Officials from the MOP will meet with officials from the ContralorĂ­a General de la RepĂşblica and the Ministerio de EconomĂ­a y Finanzas (MEF) prĂłximamente to address the issue and try to come up with ideas for avoiding further delays in public works projects.

With respect to the request made by business groups to include price adjustment clauses in the contracts, Colamarco had no comment.

Source: http://primapanama.blogs.com/

26 Jun

Another Condo project canceled and residents continue protest in reverted areas

This article is about the continued battle by residents of the reverted areas against the supreme court decision to change the zoning law of the areas. Allowing high rises in an other wise low rise residential area has caused those folks enough grief that they have been protesting for weeks. They may not have to worry though because there are cracks beginning to be seen in the condo market in the city that may force the cancellation of many of these projects. I received a note today that the Canal 360 project has been canceled due to “rising construction costs” and to” zoning laws in Amador hills” where the project was to be erected. I know of investors who got into that project over a year ago who were looking to make money by flipping who will now get only their money back plus 6% interest.

Residents continue protesting zoning changes

As of yesterday, residents of Albrook and Clayton and their supporters have been protesting in front of the Corte Suprema for two weeks.

The protestors insist that a recent law that changes the zoning rules in their neighborhoods is unconstitutional and opens the way for unwanted high density developments in what are known as the reverted areas, that is, property that the U.S. government “reverted” to Panama when it turned over the Canal and its administration.

“The Palacio de Justicia is for correcting errors, not for condoning horrors,” the protestors shouted yesterday. They said they would continue protesting indefinitely.

Residents of the reverted areas suffered a setback last week, however, when the Corte Suprema affirmed the constitutionality of the law when it resolved a complaint brought before it by legislator Leopoldo Benedetti.

Yet they have not given up hope. Two other complaints of unconstitutionality, brought by residents and their lawyers, are still pending before the court.

In the first judgement, four of the nine Supreme Court justices abstained from voting: Hipólito Gill, Esmeralda de Troitiño, Luis Mario Carrasco and Oydén Ortega, who apparently consider the law unconstitutional.

Source: http://primapanama.blogs.com/

26 Jun

Nicaragua: The Inherent Dangers of Being a Militant Mecca

I sometimes post news on other countries in Central America that I find might be of interest to expat’s considering buying property in those lands. Since last year’s election of Daniel Ortega to the Presidency of Nicaragua, I have been following the events there more closely. Nicaragua is a beautiful country and a visit there two years ago amazed me at the number of foreigners investing in the country either as developers or as home buyers. Since the election we have seen little sign of the old Marxist Ortega turned Christian, but a sign of the old leftist has come to light when he recently grated asylum to several FARC rebels.

I subscribe to a regular intelligence report from an organization called Strafor who cover geo-political events from around the world. They sent me this report on Nicaragua this morning that I think is important for those considering residing there. I am posting it here with their permission.

Terrorism Intelligence report from Stratfor

By Fred Burton and Scott Stewart

Diplomatic relations between Colombia and Nicaragua are once again in the news, with the two countries trading broadsides over the Nicaraguan government’s recent decision to grant asylum to three female members of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC).

Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega in June said that the FARC members in question reportedly survived the March 1 attack on a FARC camp just over the Colombian border in Ecuador that resulted in the death of Raul Reyes (Luis Edgar Devia Silva), FARC’s No. 2 and one of its most long-standing and experienced operational commanders. After the March 1 raid, Nicaragua briefly severed diplomatic relations with Colombia in protest of the country’s violation of Ecuador’s sovereignty.

Ortega accused the Colombian government of conducting “state-sponsored terrorism” against the FARC members in his explanation of why he granted them asylum. To emphasize this point, Ortega further accused the Colombian government of plotting to assassinate the three FARC members in Nicaragua. He then stressed that the three need Nicaraguan protection so they can serve as witnesses in a future trial of Colombian President Alvaro Uribe Velez for “crimes against humanity.”

Nicaragua’s granting of asylum and Ortega’s rhetoric have outraged the Colombian government, which had formally requested extradition of the three FARC members. Colombia has said it finds it inconceivable that the Nicaraguan government should make heroines out of people who had been residing in the camp of a recognized “terrorist” organization — a group that has killed thousands of Colombian citizens, kidnapped more than 700 people and constantly attempted to overthrow the Colombian government. The Colombians have also said that it is unacceptable, offensive and irresponsible for the Nicaraguan president to accuse Uribe of committing crimes against humanity.

Ortega’s granting of asylum to the FARC members is consistent with the way the Sandinistas granted shelter, and even citizenship, to hundreds of Marxist militants when the Sandinistas ruled Nicaragua from 1979 to 1990. Similarly, Nicaragua’s growing relationship with Iran is very similar to the relationships it enjoyed with U.S. foes such as Libya’s Moammar Gadhafi and Iraq’s Saddam Hussein during the first Sandinista reign.

Nicaragua’s status as a sanctuary (and even an operational base) for these militants nearly resulted in terrible consequences for Ortega and his Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) in 1993, when a group of jihadist militants attacked the World Trade Center in New York and one of the militants was found to have Nicaraguan identification documents in his jacket pocket.

Friend of Pariahs and a Marxist Sanctuary

There has always been a tight relationship between the Marxist FSLN and its ideological brethren and patrons in places like Cuba and the Soviet Union. This relationship manifested not only in terms of military training and equipment, but also in terms of foreign aid such as food, health care and education. This aid was made doubly important by the trade embargo placed on Nicaragua by U.S. President Ronald Reagan in 1985. In addition to receiving aid, the FSLN also assisted the Cubans and Soviets in providing aid to like-minded revolutionary groups in the region, such as the Salvadoran Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN), the Guatemalan National Revolutionary Unity (URNG), FARC and others.

As the Soviet Union suffered economically in the late 1980s and eventually collapsed in early 1990, the amount of aid Soviets could provide to their Marxist friends and proxies declined dramatically. This drop in aid significantly affected Cuba’s economy. As a consequence, Cuba lost much of its ability to assist partners in the hemisphere such as the FSLN. This caused the Sandinistas to seek new sources of funding, and they found some help from the pariah nations of Libya and Iraq. In fact, at the end of the first Sandinista reign in 1990, the Libyan Embassy in Managua was several times larger than the U.S. Embassy there. The Libyans were situated in a large and imposing building, while the U.S. Embassy was literally housed in trailers — a temporary setup established after the 1972 Managua earthquake destroyed the former embassy.

The Libyans did have a presence at the United Nations in New York, but since those personnel were so closely scrutinized by U.S. authorities, they decided to use their embassy in Managua as the base for the vast majority of their intelligence operations in the Western Hemisphere.

However, the fall of the Soviet Union affected more than just economics. As the political landscape shifted in the late 1980s, places that had served as havens and training bases for Marxist militants, such as South Yemen and East Germany, became less welcoming. In 1990, both of those countries ceased to exist. This left a lot of fugitive Marxist militants looking for a place to go, and many of them relocated to Managua. What resulted was an influx of Marxist militants from European groups such as the Irish Republican Army, ETA and the Red Brigades, as well as Middle Eastern militants, such as representatives of the various Palestinian Marxist-oriented groups.

Some of the fugitives who moved to Managua were educated, skilled and surprisingly entrepreneurial. A couple from the Italian Red Brigades opened a popular Italian restaurant in downtown Managua, and members of the Basque group ETA opened an automobile repair garage in Managua’s Santa Rosa neighborhood.

Operational Base

Managua was not only a place of refuge, but also a base for operations. The automobile repair shop run by the ETA members made headlines on May 23, 1993, when a powerful explosion ripped through an arms and document cache stored in a sophisticated vault hidden under the shop. The explosion, which resulted in the deaths of two men, emphasized how unwise it is to store mortar rounds with their fuses installed (especially if those rounds get knocked over). It also provided an unprecedented glimpse into the activities of the international Marxist networks that called Managua home in the late 1980s and early 1990s.

While much attention was paid to the arms found in the cache (which included 19 surface-to-air missiles and a number of other weapons), it was a stack of surviving documents that shed the most light on the group’s activities. The stack included a large number of identification documents (more than 300 passports) as well as a number of targeting dossiers that had been assembled — and several actually used — to kidnap a number of industrialists in other Latin American countries, such as Mexico and Brazil. The cache was owned by the Popular Liberation Forces (PLF) faction of FMLN, which had to admit ownership after identification documents bearing the photographs of several PLF leaders were uncovered in the cache.

A U.S. team scanned the thousands of pages of documents, then loaded them in digital form onto a searchable database contained on a set of CDs. The documents revealed that as financial aid from the Soviet Union and Cuba began to diminish, the FMLN sought new ways to fund its revolution. One PLF group decided to use its foreign allies to kidnap wealthy industrialists in Latin America and hold them for ransom. The kidnapping scheme was truly an international endeavor, with the muscle for the operation being provided by experienced Chilean and Argentine Marxists and the cover provided by young Canadians. The Canadians, David Spencer and Christine Lamont, were members of the Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador (CISPES) who moved to Managua to help the FMLN and became involved with the PLF. The Canadians rented the safe-houses and cars used in the abductions, and they also conducted much of the pre-operational surveillance for the kidnappings. One way they accomplished the surveillance was by posing as graduate students and conducting ruse interviews of the victims as a way to assess their personal security arrangements. The industrialists seemed especially vulnerable to the wiles of Lamont, a beautiful young redhead.

The wheels fell off the kidnapping scheme in 1989, when Brazilian police stormed a safe-house the group was using to hold Brazilian supermarket mogul Abilio dos Santos Diniz. The police arrested five Chileans, two Argentines and a Brazilian, along with Spencer and Lamont, in connection with the crime. In addition to the targeting dossier on Diniz and newspaper accounts of the kidnapping and police raid, the Managua cache also contained a number of personal documents belonging to Spencer and Lamont — including Lamont’s Canadian passport, which had been oddly altered by attaching the photo of a middle-aged FMLN leader to the young woman’s identity document. The FMLN had managed to deny any connection to the case until the 1993 mishap at the arms cache made further denial impossible.

The U.S. investigation into the case uncovered that members of the Sandinista government, including the powerful Sandinista politician Tomas Borge, had known of and even sanctioned the group’s unorthodox fundraising activities. Borge also knew about the secret FMLN arms cache that exploded. According to credible eyewitness reports, Borge was among the first to respond to the scene of the blast — in his bathrobe.

Blowback

Ortega and the Sandinistas lost the presidential election in 1990 to Violeta Chamorro and the National Opposition Union. In the two months between the election and the inauguration of Chamorro, the Sandinistas held a sort of “going out of business” sale on Nicaraguan citizenship. During that time, the Sandinistas granted citizenship (and passports) to 890 foreigners from more than 30 countries. The list of naturalized people contained not only Marxists from Spain, Italy, Germany, Argentina and Chile, but also Palestinians, Iraqis, Algerians, Lebanese and Libyans. Although the Sandinistas would maintain tight control over Nicaragua’s military, police and interior ministry even after the inauguration, they would no longer control the entire executive branch. By granting citizenship to their friends, they hoped to protect them from extradition or deportation.

This policy was nearly disastrous for the Sandinistas. In March 1993, shortly after the bombing of the World Trade Center, U.S. federal agents executed a search warrant at the address listed on the driver’s license of Mohammed Salameh, the Palestinian jihadist who rented the van used in the bombing. Living at the address was Ibrahim Elgabrowny, an Egyptian who attempted to assault one of the agents executing the search warrant. Upon arresting him, the agents found a packet of Nicaraguan identity documents in Elgabrowny’s jacket pocket.

The documents — birth certificates, passports, cedulas (national identity cards) and driver’s licenses — had been issued under innocuous names but bore the photos of Elgabrowny’s cousin, El Sayyid Nosair, his wife Karen and their three children. At the time of this discovery, Nosair was serving time in Attica Prison for a conviction related to the 1990 assassination of Rabbi Meir Kahane, and Elgabrowny and his colleagues were planning an operation to free Nosair from prison.

Initially, there was strong suspicion that the Sandinista government had knowingly assisted the militants in issuing the documents — especially in light of their 1990 last-minute citizenship-granting spree. However, an exhaustive U.S. government investigation determined that the documents found in Elgabrowny’s possession had been issued in a very different manner from those the Sandinistas knowingly issued to militants. Some U.S. politicians had hoped the Nicaraguan documents would provide them with a smoking gun they could use to go after the Sandinistas with both barrels, and they were very disappointed by the results of the investigation. In fact, one powerful senator’s staff attempted to pressure the lead investigator in the case to change the findings of his investigation to show Sandinista complicity in the bombing in New York. Unfortunately for these politicians, the case was not an elaborate Sandinista plot to strike the United States. It was just plain old fraud, something that occurs with great frequency in Latin America as in other regions.

However, this case could provide a relevant warning for the Sandinistas today in the post-9/11 world. In 1993, the U.S. response to Sandinista complicity in an attack against the United States would likely have consisted of a renewal of the trade boycott and a ton of international pressure intended to drive them out of their posts in the Nicaraguan military, intelligence and police. But the world is a different place in 2008. The blowback on the Sandinistas could prove to be very severe if militants taking refuge in Nicaragua (or based out of a diplomatic mission in Managua) are implicated in a terrorist attack — especially an attack against the United States.

Source: http://primapanama.blogs.com/_panama_residential_devel/2008/06/nicaragua-the-i.html#more

25 Jun

Panama April economic activity up 9.48 pct

PANAMA CITY, June 24 (Reuters) - Panama’s economic activity rose 9.48 percent in April over the year-ago period, the government said on Tuesday, rebounding from a near five-year low posted in March.

Growths in the construction, mining, hotel and restaurant sectors were the strongest performers, according to the Comptroller General’s office.

Analysts said the figures for March, which on Tuesday were revised upward to 2.2 percent growth from 1.9 percent reported last month, may have been artificially low because of the timing of Easter holidays this year compared to a year earlier.

Analysts said they would wait for May’s figures to be released to judge the full impact that global conditions were having on the Panamanian economy.

“May will be much more important,” Alejandro Cuadrado, an analyst with Merrill Lynch, told Reuters.

Although the rising prices of fuel and food continue to act as a brake on the economy — which grew at 11 percent last year and is expected to grow around 8 percent this year — observers are largely positive about the economic outlook.

“Even with the sharp slowdown in growth in March, first-quarter year-on-year growth reached close to 7 percent and is still quite strong relative to regional growth rates,” Theresa Paiz, an analyst with Fitch Ratings told Reuters.

With 12-month inflation running at 8.8 percent investors are watching how Panama, which uses the dollar as its national currency, can bring higher living costs under control.

Last week the government announced a series of measures to cap inflation, including subsidies on fuel and electricity for most consumers. “We will be closely monitoring fiscal trends and the government’s policy response in general to contain inflationary pressures,” said Paiz.

Source: http://www.reuters.com/article/marketsNews/idUSN2438247020080624?pageNumber=1&virtualBrandChannel=0