Costa Rica’s Continued Fall from Grace
Costa Rica’s Continued Fall from Grace
• Costa
Rica is no "Switzerland of Latin America," but merely one
more banana republic.
• The recently-initiated investigation of current Costa Rican president Abel Pacheco is the latest in a string of presidential corruption scandals in the country.
• Three former presidents have also been implicated in fraudulent transactions, causing ignominious resignations from the leadership positions from important bodies like the Organization of American States (OAS) and the World Economic Forum.
• The overseas' interests behind the corrupt dealings include government agencies and private corporations in Taiwan, France and Finland.
• The recent investigations have severely damaged Costa Rica’s reputation as a bastion of democracy and public rectitude.
• In order to salvage the nation’s ravaged international image, the current investigations must be carried out in a scrupulously professional manner and any responsibility for dishonest transactions must be determined.
On June 1, Costa Rican President Abel
Pacheco agreed to a parliamentary inquiry into the funding
of his 2002 presidential campaign, his travel records and
his business contacts. Now the fourth president in a row to
be implicated in a string of government corruption scandals,
Pacheco hitherto has been a strong advocate for the official
investigation of dishonest practices by state officials,
calling corruption “a cancer” that was eating away at the
Central American country. Pacheco’s predecessors, former
Presidents Rafael Ángel Calderón, José Maria Figueres and
Miguel Ángel Rodríguez have all been accused of corruption
and the abuse of their offices and are currently facing
investigation by Costa Rican authorities. Calderón and
Rodríguez are under house arrest after serving short prison
sentences, while Figueres remains in Switzerland, issuing
letters to the Costa Rican government insisting on his
innocence and claiming that his political enemies are behind
the charges against him.
Past Presidents
Calderón
(president from 1990-1994) is charged with receiving nearly
$500,000 from a Finnish government loan to Costa Rica
intended for the purchase of medical supplies. Figueres
(1994-1998) allegedly confessed to receiving about $900,000
in various commissions from Alcatel, the French cellular
telephone company, during his presidency. Finally, Rodríguez
(1998-2002) is under investigation for allegedly demanding
approximately $1.2 million of a $2 million commission that
Alcatel paid to the former president’s close associate, Jose
Lobo in exchange for helping to finalize a deal between the
corporation and the state-run Telecommunications and Power
Institute. Last October, the growing revelations of his
being implicated in mushrooming scandals forced Rodríguez to
step down from his post as Organization of American States
(OAS) secretary general, which he had just assumed, and
Figueres to give up his position as the head of the World
Economic Forum. These withdrawals under the worst of
circumstances should serve to remind the outside world that
it has been a long time since Costa Rica has deserved to be
called the "Switzerland of Latin America;" rather its
broad-band corruption and steamy politics far more
accurately should see it as merely one more smarmy Central
American banana republic, as the recent CAFTA debates once
again affirmed. In those debates, all of the Central
American presidents covered up the fact that the regional
free trade area produced much more of a "win" for the U.S.
than it did for their countries.
Not Over Yet
The
current president, Pacheco, is accused of a string of
indiscretions, including irregularities in his 2002 campaign
financing. According to Costa Rican law, donations to
political campaigns cannot exceed $28,000, and there can be
no foreign donations. Pacheco’s campaign received and
acknowledged contributions of $100,000 from Alcatel and
$500,000 from various Taiwanese businessmen. In addition,
the Costa Rican government partially paid for two trips
Pacheco took to Seville last year, where he met with Spanish
businessman Bernardo Martin Moreno. Moreno, who arranged to
publish a book by Pacheco, later just happened to win the
state-controlled right to develop the Papagayo area of Costa
Rica as a tourism destination. Pacheco also appointed Moreno
the honorary consul for Costa Rica. In another twist, former
chief protocol officer Jorge Arce, who accompanied Pacheco
to Spain, resigned on May 30 after it was revealed that he
had previously worked for Moreno. The legislative
investigation of Pacheco’s activities is ongoing, even
though the president himself continues to maintain his
innocence.
International Actors
Characteristically,
Costa Rica’s corrupters are foreign governments or overseas
corporations. For example, there is a longstanding
relationship between Taiwan and Costa Rica, the latter being
one of a dwindling number of countries that still recognizes
Taiwan’s independence from China. There is little question
that such diplomatic recognition is the motive behind the
Costa Rican government’s skewed dealings with the Asian
nation, though in a statement to the Taiwanese press last
October, a spokesperson for Taiwan’s Ministry of Foreign
Affairs insisted that any government money given to Costa
Rica is intended to foster the Central American country’s
“national development,” not to buy diplomatic support for
Taipei.
In addition, in 2001, Finland loaned the Costa Rican social security system $39.5 million with which to purchase advanced medical technology on the condition that San José purchase at least half the equipment it needed in this sector from Finnish corporations. The president of Costa Rica at the time, Rafael Calderón, allegedly received a kickback from the Finnish director of the state-sponsored program. Last April, the Finnish ambassador to Central America pledged to reform the nation’s foreign aid format, acknowledging that the terms of the 2001 loan invited corrupt transactions.
Outside Reactions
The
international response to these scandals has been surprise,
consternation and perhaps even some pleasure due to Costa
Rica’s somewhat ill-deserved reputation of being the
“Switzerland of Latin America.” But the myth goes on, as was
seen last year when the Latin American Caribbean and Central
America Report described corruption in the country as
“minimal.” Since the corruption scandals broke last October,
however, several international organizations have criticized
Costa Rica’s lack of transparency. According to an article
in the San José daily La Nación, a March report co-sponsored
by the OAS and the Swedish-based International Institute for
Democracy and Electoral Assistance found Costa Rica’s system
of contributions to political campaigns as "linked to
practices that go against public interest." According to the
report, individuals and corporations are known to have
bribed legislative and executive officials to "'ease'
appointments, bids, loans, bills, decrees and regulations
for the benefit of the donors."
Declining National
Morale
All of these scandals have had a debilitating
impact on Costa Rican public opinion. According to
international watchdog organization Transparency
International, Costa Rica is the second most pessimistic
country when it comes to corruption; in December 2004, 61
percent of Costa Ricans expected government corruption to
get worse within three years, which is a dramatic increase
from 32 percent in 2003.
The Costa Rican daily La Nación conducted a survey of the country’s registered voters in May, finding that 32 percent would abstain from voting in national elections if they were held at that time. Also, the survey found that 12 percent of Costa Ricans are unsure of whether to vote in the upcoming November 2006 elections. The newspaper blames this alarmingly high percentage on “a weakening of democracy, particularly because of misuse of powers and the inefficiency of politicians.”
Grave
Implications
Costa Rica’s fall from grace has
significantly affected the country’s international image.
Long a “model of Latin American stability and prosperity,”
according to Mark Kaufman in the Washington Post, Costa Rica
has been best known for its high literacy rate and
democratic strengths as well as its low level of violence
and domestic discord. But the seemingly endless corruption
scandals plaguing the nation have gone a long way to disable
the very spirit of democracy thought to be entrenched in the
Costa Rican mentality. The country’s fate and bona fides now
rest on the government’s investigative machinery; judicial
probes being carried out must be honest and exacting in
order to save the once-respected nation from the complete
destruction of its already fast-fading reputation.
This analysis was prepared by COHA Research Associate Sara Evans.