COSTA RICA HEALTH
Geography
of Costa Rica
Costa Rica is known for its volcanos. The country
is divided by a backbone of volcanoes and mountains, an extension
of the Andes-Sierra Madre chain which runs along the western side
of the Americas. Costa Rica has four distinct cordilleras or mountain
ranges -- Guanacaste and Tilaran in the north, Central and Talamanca
in the south. Costa Rica is part of the Pacific "Rim of Fire"
and has seven of the isthmus's 42 active volcanoes plus dozens of
dormant or extinct cones. Earth tremors and small quakes shake the
country from time to time.
The last major quake hit on April 22, 1991. Centered
on the Caribbean side southeast of San Jose, it measured 7.4 on
the Richter scale. The country's highest point is Mt. Chirripo (3,797
meters). The capital, San Jose, and the neighboring major cities
of Alajuela and Heredie lies in the middle of the Meseta Central
(Central Valley). Almost two-thirds of the nation's population live
in this small, fertile valley. The Pacific coastal plain is much
narrower than its Caribbean counterpart. Both coasts are lined with
white and black sand beaches.
Costa Rica's Climate
Costa Rica is a tropical country which contains
several distinct climatic zones. There is no winter or summer as
such and most regions have a rainy season from May to November and
a dry season from December to April. Annual rainfall averages 100
inches nationwide with some mountainous regions getting as much
as 25 feet on exposed eastern slopes. Temperature is more a matter
of elevation than location with a mean of around 72 degrees in the
Central Valley, 82 degrees on the Atlantic coast and 89 degrees
on the Pacific coast.
A Brief History of Costa Rica
Human habitation can be traced back more than
10,000 years but it appears Costa Rica was sparsely populated and
a relative backwater in the pre-Columbian era. There is little sign
of major communities and none of the impressive stone architecture
that characterized the more advanced civilizations of Mesoamerica
to the north and the Andes to the south. When Columbus arrived near
Lim¢n on September 18, 1502 on his third and last voyage to
the Americas, there were probably no more than 20,000 indigenous
inhabitants They lived in several autonomous tribes, all with distinct
cultures and customs. Costa Rica's only major archaeological site
is at Guayabo, 30 miles east of San Jos‚, where an ancient
city, dating back to 1000 B.C. and though to have contained 10,000
people at its peak, is currently being excavated. Many interesting
gold, jade and pottery artefacts have been found throughout the
region and are on display in several museums in San Jose.
The Indians gave Columbus gold and he returned
to Europe with reports of a plentiful supply of the yellow metal.
But the adventurers who arrived to cash in found only hostile Indians,
swamps and disease for their trouble. Several early attempts to
colonize the Atlantic coast failed for the same reasons and for
almost half a century Costa Rica was passed over while colonization
gathered pace in countries to the north and south. In 1562, the
Spanish main's administrative center in Guatemala sent Juan Vasquez
de Coronado to Costa Rica as governor and Cartago was established
as the capital the following year. With no Indian slaves to work
the land, the colonists were forced to work the land themselves,
scratching out a meagre subsistence by tilling small plots. The
impoverished colony grew slowly and was virtually ignored by the
Spanish rulers in Guatemala. By the late 18th century, the settlements
that would buela had been founded and exports of wheat and tobacco
were making economic conditions somewhat better.
Central America gained independence from Spain
on September 15, 1821. The news reached Costa Rica a month after
the event. The question of whether Costa Rica should join newly
independent Mexico or join a new confederation of Central American
states resulted in a bitter quarrel between the leaders of San Jose
and their counterparts in Cartago and Heredia. A brief civil war
in 1823 was won by San Jose and Costa Rica joined the confederation.
Juan Mora Fernandez was elected the country's first
head of state in 1824. His progressive administration expanded public
education and encouraged the cultivation of coffee with land grants
for growers. This quickly led to the establishment of a new Costa
Rican elite, the coffee barons, who quickly put their power to use
by overthrowing the first Costa Rican president, Jos‚ Maria
Castro. His successor, Juan Rafael Mora, is remembered as the man
who mobilized a force of Costa Rican volunteers and defeated William
Walker, ending the persistent North American adventurer's ambitions
to turn Central America into a slave state and annex it to the United
States.
After more than a decade of political turmoil,
General Tom s Guardia seized power in 1870. Though he ruled as a
military dictator, his 12 years in power were marked by progressive
policies like free and compulsory primary education, restraining
the excesses of the military and taxing coffee earnings to finance
public works. It was Guardia who contracted Minor Keith to build
the Atlantic railroad from San Jose to the Caribbean. The post-Guardia
years witnessed the fitful transition to full democracy.
The next important era began with the election
of Dr. Rafael Angel Calder¢n Guardia in 1940. His enlightened
policies included land reform, a guaranteed minimum wage and progressive
taxation. But when Calder¢n's United Social Christian Party
refused to step down after losing the 1948 election, civil war erupted.
The anti-Calder¢n forces were led by Jose Mar¡a (Don
Pepe) Figueres Ferrer who had been exiled to Mexico in 1942. Supported
by the governments of Guatemala and Cuba, he won the war which lasted
40 days and cost 2,000 lives.
Figueres became head of the Founding Junta of the
Second Republic of Costa Rica. He consolidated the reforms introduced
by Calder¢n and introduced many of his own: He banned the Communist
Party, gave women the vote and granted full citizenship to blacks,
abolished the armed forces, established a term limit for presidents
and nationalized the banks and insurance companies. He also founded
the Partido de Liberacion Nacional. (The PLN won last year's presidential
election behind Don Pepe's son, now President Jose Mar¡a Figueres
Olsen.
Don Pepe died in 1990 a national hero, his deeds
having set the scene for the social and economic progress that would
earn Costa Rica the reputation as a peaceful and stable island of
democracy in one of the world's most politically unstable, and often
war-torn regions. When civil war broke out in neighboring Nicaragua,
Costa Rica was drawn reluctantly into the conflict, its northern
zone being used as a base first for Sandinista and later for "contra"
forces. In 1986, a young lawyer called Oscar Arias Sanchez was elected
president on the platform of peace. Arias' tireless efforts to promote
peace in the region were rewarded when the five Central American
presidents signed his peace plan in Guatamala City in 1987, an achievement
that earned him the Nobel Peace Prize.
Costa Rica's Government
Costa Rica is a democratic republic. Under the
1949 constitution, all citizens are guaranteed equality before the
law, the right to own property, the right of petititon and assembly,
freedom of speech and the right of habeas corpus. The constitution
also divides the government into independent executive, legislative
and judicial branches. The executive branch is composed of the president,
two vice presidents and a cabinet. The legislature is the National
Assembly, composed of 57 members (diputados) elected by proportional
representation. National elections are held every four years, on
the first Sunday of February. Under a constitutional amendment enacted
in 1969, a president may serve only one four-year term during his
lifetime. Diputados also are elected for four years and may serve
a second term four years after the first ends. The largest political
party is the National Liberation Party (PLN). Its main rival is
the more conservative Social Christian Unity Party.
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