No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeArchiveOrtega, Arias Meet In San José

Ortega, Arias Meet In San José

President Oscar Arias met with Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega yesterday in San José to warm a frosty relationship and work toward reaching elusive agreements.

Arias said Costa Rica could forgive “an important part” of Nicaragua’s $630 million debt, while the Presidents will seek help from other developed countries in paying the rest.

The Presidents also decided to meet in Nicaragua in January to discuss tourism and the environment, among other issues.

Despite previous appeals from Ortega, Arias said he would not drop a case over navigation rights to the San Juan River, now under consideration in the International Court of Justice in The Hague.

Arias and Ortega are working to restart the Bilateral Commission, a 1990s project to create a permanent dialogue to address issues of common interest between the two nations. The Commission was suspended in 1997 during an escalation of tensions over the San Juan River (TT, Aug. 24).

Ortega arrived more than two hours late yesterday morning at the JuanSantamaríaInternationalAirport just outside San José, where he was greeted by Arias and a group of students carrying Nicaraguan and Costa Rican flags.

The two Presidents then met at the Foreign Ministry in downtown San José, accompanied by Ortega’s wife, Rosario Murillo, and the ambassadors and foreign ministers of both countries. The Presidents signed a list of general accords at a press conference yesterday afternoon.

Immigration cooperation, long a thorny issue for the two countries, was one item on the list. Ortega and Arias agreed to work on improving conditions for Nicaraguan immigrants here.

Both said they support a bill, now in the Legislative Assembly, that would allow foreigners to apply for residency from Costa Rica, instead of from their home country (TT, July 6). Ortega said a group of Nicaraguan politicians would visit Costa Rica to speak to legislators here about immigration issues.

Still, the differences between the two Presidents were clear yesterday. Arias, in his coat and tie, sat grinning as Ortega, in a windbreaker, gave rambling responses to journalists’ questions.

Ortega mentioned several times that Central America should work on integration – perhaps a jab at Arias’ unwillingness to join regional bodies such as the Central American Parliament (Parlacen). The Nicaraguan president also stressed that he opposes the Central American Free-Trade Agreement (CAFTA), perhaps the defining issue for Arias’ administration so far.

Personal and ideological tensions go back more than 20 years for Arias and Ortega, who were Presidents of their respective countries in the late 1980s.

This was the Presidents’ second meeting since their respective re-elections. The first took place in Managua in August. Arias was in Nicaragua then not at Ortega’s invitation, but at the request of Nicaraguan Cardinal Miguel Obando y Bravo, who organized an event commemorating the 20th anniversary of the Central American Peace Accords.

 

Trending Now

El Salvador Opens Mass Trial Against Gang leaders

El Salvador’s justice system on Monday opened a trial against some 486 people accused of belonging to the Mara Salvatrucha (MS-13), including several founders...

Costa Rica Rainy Season 2026 Expected to Start Unevenly and Stay Drier

Costa Rica is heading into a rainy season that may begin on schedule on the calendar, but not in the usual pattern. The Instituto...

Costa Rica Says Deported Migrants May Seek Asylum Over Return Fears

Eight of the 25 migrants deported from the United States to Costa Rica in the first flight under a new third-country agreement have told...

Costa Rica’s Liberia Airport Posts Best Quarter in History

Guanacaste’s main international airport in Liberia just posted the strongest first quarter in its history, another sign that Costa Rica’s Pacific gateway is carrying...

Costa Rica Assembly Races the Clock on Sanction Against Fabricio Alvarado

The sexual harassment case that has dominated the final weeks of Costa Rica's Legislative Assembly reached its final stage on Friday, though with an...

Costa Rica Marks Earth Day With a Reputation to Defend

As the world observes Earth Day today, Costa Rica finds itself in familiar territory: held up once again as a global example of what...
Avatar

Latest News from Costa Rica

Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel