No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeTopicsEnvironment and WildlifeMan throws religious icons into Costa Rica’s Poás Volcano

Man throws religious icons into Costa Rica’s Poás Volcano

Most people visit Costa Rica’s volcanoes to admire their beauty, but one man apparently had a different idea.

The news website CRHoy.com posted a video Thursday reportedly shot on June 7 showing a man who had driven his truck past several security checkpoints up a pedestrian walkway in Poás Volcano National Park to the overlook at the edge of the crater. There, he parked, grabbed a bag from the bed of his truck and proceeded to throw it over the fence and into the crater.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ETanBIthZLI

Shocked tourists looked on as a park guard rushed the man to restrain him. Among the items that were tossed into the crater were images of the Virgin Mary as well as religious flyers and other objects, according to park administrator Redy Conejo. All the discarded objects were collected and removed from the crater. The whole ordeal lasted less than 15 minutes, Conejo said.

Conejo told The Tico Times Friday that it was a “one in a million kind of event.” In his 10 years at the park, Conejo said he had never seen anything like it.

Conejo did not hazard a guess at the man’s motivation. The man did not say why did decided to use Poás Volcano as the dumping site for his unwanted items. The man, who was not carrying any identification, was detained by National Police. Transit Police removed the truck and the case was passed on to the Judicial Investigation Police.

The park administrator said that they had already taken steps to improve security at the popular tourist destination since the incident. New cameras have been installed along with additional protocols to review vehicles.

Conejo said that despite the new measures, the park is still understaffed. As many as 3,000 people can visit the park on a single day, with as few as five guards on duty across the park’s 6,500-hectare territory. Poás Volcano sees more than 350,000 visitors annually, Conejo said. With so few guards, events are bound to happen, he said, albeit perhaps not as bizarre as this one.

Trending Now

Costa Rica Residency Backlog Hits 38,000 in October

Immigrants in Costa Rica continue to deal with long waits for their residence cards, known as DIMEX, as the immigration system struggles with backlogs....

Panama’s Indigenous Families Relocate Amid Rising Sea Levels

Panama's government faces mounting pressure to relocate more Indigenous Guna families from low-lying Caribbean islands as sea levels continue to rise, building on the...

Costa Rica Warns on Methanol Risks in Alcohol Amid Regional Outbreaks

Costa Rica's health officials have stepped up alerts on the dangers of methanol poisoning from contaminated alcohol, aligning with similar actions across Latin America...

Costa Rican Man Dies After Health Decline in U.S. Immigration Custody

Randall Gamboa Esquivel, a 52-year-old man from Pérez Zeledón, died after nearly two months in a Costa Rican hospital. His family confirmed the death,...

Scientists Identify New Salamander in Costa Rica’s Highest Peak Ecosystem

Scientists have identified a new salamander species in the remote páramo of Chirripó National Park, highlighting our country's rich biodiversity and the pressing challenges...

Costa Rica Welcomes Ed Sheeran Back for Loop Tour Show

British singer-songwriter Ed Sheeran will wrap up the Latin American leg of his Loop Tour with a performance in Costa Rica on May 30,...
spot_img
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Rocking Chait
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica