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31/08/2009 | Costa Rican President Calls for New Constitution

Inside Costa Rica

Costa Rican president Oscar Arias is joining the trend in Latin America calling for constitutional changes that would expand executive powers, allow re-elections and get rid of unnecessary checks on presidential authority.

 

Arias has nine months to go before his second term as president and can't run for re-election.  His brother, Rodrigo Arias, however, who has been the ministro de la Presidencia in the current constitutional convention was like “killing a mouse with cannon fire.”

The newspaper also said that the idea of dismantling the checks and balances on executive power sounds like an effort to create an “imperial presidency.”

However, the most disturbing aspect of Arias’ call was his harsh criticism of the media.

Borrowing from the script of Rafael Correa in Ecuador and Hugo Chávez in Venezuela, described news outlets as “corporations interested in making a profit” that don’t necessarily pursue the “public good.”

He asked the media to “tone down” its criticism of government officials, and said that journalists “should understand their role within a higher framework.” He complained that news outlets claim to represent the public interest, without any control or accountability.

That a politician with a thin skin complains about media criticism is hardly news. However, the fact that Arias
did it while calling for a new constitution that would change the institutional and legal framework of Costa
Rica (including the role of the media) should be interpreted as a threat to freedom of the press.

Most people outside Costa Rica see Arias as an accomplished democrat who won the Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts to bring peace to Central America during the 1980s.

Most recently he attempted to mediate the conflict in Honduras after Manuel Zelaya was removed from office.

However, many people in Costa Rica fret about what they perceive as an increasingly controlling style of governing by and his brother, intimidating the media, bullying the opposition, crowding key government posts with allies and cronies, and now hoping for a dynastical succession in 2014.

Inside Costa Rica (Costa Rica)

 


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