Thursday, 15 May 2014

The office of the first lady


A lot has been said about the illegality of the office of first lady and the abuse of power. In some publications, reference has been made to her involvement in the search of the “Chibok girls”, she has been termed meddlesome and a disruption of justice.

The fact that it is not written in the constitution does not make the office illegal.

The office of the Chief of Staff cannot be found in the Nigerian constitution either but this is an accepted norm.

The office of the first lady has been in contention since after independence with some school of thought believing that the office should be more of a social one, dedicated to hosting dignitaries and being a quiet decoration on the arm of the president.

But nullifying the power behind the man is tantamount to claiming the woman’s role beside her husband is useless. The duty of the first lady is to first and foremost be a wife.
A wife’s job, contrary to popular belief does not stop with cleaning the house, cooking the meals and looking after the children rather the wife serves as a back bone to her husband, his confidant and his sounding board for his issues. In the case where the wife has a good head over her shoulders and can think, she aids her husband in the running of the house hold, his businesses and SHE DOESN’T TAKE over but she supports.
Why should the case of the first lady of Nigeria be any different?

The First Lady is an International celebrity, she can and should leverage her title to serve as an advocate for social issues.

Looking back at history we see various first ladies leave their mark in the sands of time, acknowledged some of these marks are better served erased than remembered but those marks remain indelible. 

Every First Lady is different; she has a different set of ideals and manner of approach. Dame Patience Jonathan has proven to be first a mother and then a woman of peace. 

During the passing of bill of marriage to under age women, the media was bombarded with videos from Nollywood actors  complaining about her inaction in preventing the bill for child marriage. It was conveniently forgotten at the time that the first lady has no power over the senators and bills of legislature and cannot force them to take any stand that favours her

If I recall correctly the statement was
“Oh wait a minute, where is the first lady of Nigeria, Patience Jonathan? Why haven’t we heard your voice? You derive pleasure in lending your voice to issue that do not concern you but this issue is right under you and we expect to hear your voice because you are the mother of Nigeria…mother of the nation…If you do not stand up and put a stop to this madness, then I’m really sorry, it’s a shame!”

There was a huge consensus as the video went viral. 

Nigerians being a vocal set of people were in agreement therefore it is strange that when the same woman takes an active role in bringing back our children, the same people criticize her.


She has been quite vocal of her pain in the abduction of the girls, this shows that she is human. She broke down in tears when it was obvious that those who claimed to be stake holders in this affair showed a lackadaisical attitude when it came to the investigation of the series of unfortunate events, this shows that is a mother.

How many people can claim to (and believe me, I verified this) provide surgical care to 43 children with holes in their heart, work in collaborative partnership with governmental agencies on maternal and child health programs, reach out and offer a sense of validity to over 3000 persons living with HIV and AIDS, provide an opportunity for skill acquisitions of which to date, over 3000 Nigerian women have benefited of.

I can hear you say, so what? I’m sure she could afford it. And to that I ask you, how many other well to do Nigerians who can afford to be philanthropic, actually spend their own money, or take the time to raise the funds to better the lives of their fellow man? Yet these people are not criticized on every turn. Rather they are praised in hopes that bread crumbs may one day drop from their tables into the awaiting masses mouths.

Let us call a spade a spade.

Dame Patience Jonathan has always been an advocate for women and the girl child in general. 


Becoming the wife of the President did not mean that she would abandon her inherent beliefs and ideals or that she would change from the person she is. Rather she entered a position where lives can be positively affected by her actions and she utilizes it to the fullest of her abilities. 

No one should be prosecuted for caring.

Tuesday, 21 January 2014

INTERVIEW; RIVERS STATE SPEAKER SPITS FIRE!

The political turmoil in Rivers State took a different dimension, as the Rivers State Governor, Rotimi Amaechi pulled out with his supporters from Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, to join All Progressives Congress, APC.

The Hon. Speaker of the Rivers State House of Assembly, Evans Bipi, spoke to some journalists about the political situation in Rivers State and some national salient issues.

Excerpts:

In your opinion, what necessitated the defection of the Governor to another party?
Nobody drove him away; he became power drunk, obsessed by the little money he had seen and decided to dance naked in the market square. So we have no other alternative, but to make the party unbearable for his maladministration, foul language usage and mannerisms.

We all know that Amaechi has been a mole in our midst before now; cross carpeting is good for democracy, especially only if the opposition is constructive and has an alternative idea. Amaechi’s exit from PDP has been long overdue; he had insulted elder statesmen of the party in Rivers, even at the national level, including his mentors who brought him to politics, believing that he would be given a plum job by the bunch of strange bed fellows whose only interest is to grab power at all costs for their bellies.

Show me one progressive in their midst?  Show me one progressive in Nigeria? They are all crying foul because the present administration of Goodluck Jonathan is not only focused but determined to change the destiny of Nigerians through various reconstructions within the economic spheres of our nation.
I am saddened and pained when people refer to Amaechi glowingly with regard to the development of Rivers State. Amaechi right from day one has not meant well for the Rivers people; he had harmed the people, starting from demolition of the waterfronts, to people’s houses and shops, and yet he is consistently buying the press over and feeding the public with propaganda. Can you call his actions achievements? Or is it the monorail you can call an achievement when it has no economic value to state?


With every sense of duty, Amaechi had done more harm than good! Rivers PDP was one of the strongest in the South-South before he became governor. But look at what he had succeeded in doing to the party that took him to a place he never imagined in his life-time. He has failed the people, polarized the people across ethnic, religious and geographic boundary lines, but we are ready to re-build the party to where it was before. His exit is a good riddance to bad rubbish.

Now that the governor had gone, how can you rate the party?
We are very strong at the grassroots and with leaders like the former governor of the state, Sir Peter Odili, elders, senior party faithful, stakeholders and the present Minister of Education, Nyesom Wike, the party is right back to recovering its lost glory. We are more than focused, united in our common goal and objectives and ready to face any splinter group, whose sole and only purpose is to castigate every policy and plan of government, including throwing stones at or name calling the President.


Amaechi and his ilk are so lucky that he is the most educated, forthright, God fearing and good natured person, Nigeria has ever had as a president. If not, by now all these rogues, criminals in government stealing the people’s wealth, would have been rotting in jail. Could they have tried this during the OBJ’s days?
Their only ideology is their stomach and the ‘I and my family’ slogan. None of them is a nationalist in approach, not to talk of ideals. Nigerians know them very well. They are no alternative to the PDP led government but a bandwagon of people who have pauperized their people for their own benefit and self-aggrandizement in their various leadership positions.

The governor said recently that the PDP has failed the nation. What is your opinion?
How has the PDP failed the nation? When people like them go about funding different groups to disrupt development and change the focus of government. We thank God that in spite of all their plans the government is focused and on the path to recovery from the security challenges which are not only peculiar to Nigeria but across the world. The present government is just two years in power and has done a lot for Nigerians in terms of agriculture, power, education, economy, among others. And if not because of the flurry of their planned and systematic distractions, by now the Jonathan administration will have taken Nigeria to Eldorado. But all is not lost, as the administration is daily working on some national issues to see how Nigeria can be better compared to what we inherited.

The governor insinuated that the Federal Government had never given him free hand to govern the state, how true is this assertion?
 I had said this before that the President has a lot to cope with at the national level and will not bog himself with small issues of Rivers State. Instead of blaming himself for not being able to govern a state successfully, he goes about looking for people to hang his ineptitude on. All the stories emanating from Rivers today, if the governor was mature, forthright and steadfast, the problems should have been all resolved by now. But because he does not have leadership qualities, he is busy governing Rivers on the pages of newspapers, and on television, and throwing stones at the President for his personal failures. Up till today, has the President said a word or replied to him? The answer is well known to all Nigerians.

Amaechi is the cause of all the problems confronting Rivers State; nobody has held him down, but he has held himself down due to his nonchalant attitude and disrespect for superior authorities, and his vituperations against the elders of the party both at state and national levels. Looking at the body language of Amaechi, do you think he is mature? The answer is capital NO! He does not have what it takes to be a leader. He had been weighed in the scale of governance and found wanting. He cannot give what he does not have.

The bomb blast at the courts was instigated by you according to the governor.
For Christ’s sake, I am still the Speaker of the House, and as a noble man from a good background. You do not expect me to behave in an uncivilized manner like Amaechi. I will never do such a thing, not to talk of contemplating doing it or sending people at my level to do it. It takes a minute to destroy but years to rebuild or build anything that is tangible, so how can I decide to bomb the court, my last hope, which is the conscience of the common man? The people should ask the governor because he is the Chief Security Officer of the state. He is the person orchestrating all you are seeing in Rivers State just to elicit sympathy and public support, all in a bid to achieve his selfish ambition and to satisfy his paymasters.


I want to say this for all to hear: how many governors do you see fighting with their Police Commissioners, and shouting everyday on the pages of papers? There must be definitely something wrong with Amaechi, that people should pause and take a second look at! You cannot see a single respected elder in the state behind him or supporting him because he is fighting a lost battle and cannot be trusted. Look at how my other colleagues hurriedly passed and assented to the budget behind closed doors. It was a sad day indeed for democracy; it is very unfortunate and undemocratic. The governor is treading on a path very alien to the state and I say it with all sense of purpose that he shall surely crash.

Knowing full well, what I intend to do next, they went bombing the court. On the day of the bombing, I was supposed to have been heard at the court. Then how can I stop myself from getting victory or how will I plan against myself? So it was Amaechi and co that bombed the courts to disallow me from getting a fair hearing and justice in my case.

Look, let me tell you – all the drama going on in Rivers State including the bombing, the melodrama acted by the Senator, about tear-gas or not, and everything you see today, is being orchestrated by Amaechi, all in a bid to paint the President in a bad light. The police in Rivers State do not use rubber bullets and I thank God you heard it from the Commissioner of Police himself. Magnus Abe is just acting a script written by the APC because he is being promised a governorship slot, all to drag the good name of the present administration into the mud. But they will certainly fail because the truth cannot be hidden for long.

Can you comment more on the passing of the budget in an office in Government House?
What a rape of democracy, trying to get legitimacy for fleecing the state funds, the budget approved by the house is null, void and illegal! You cannot pass a budget without the Speaker on seat. I am still the Speaker of Rivers State House of Assembly; Nigerians can attest to that and the fact that it was conducted in a Kangaroo office in Government House shows you the desperation of Amaechi to fleece the people’s wealth at all costs. So whosoever has financial dealings with Amaechi as regards the budget is doing so at his/her own risk. The endorsement is a private arrangement and a grand gangsterism by Amaechi and his rubber stamp loyalists, who do not mean well for the people. Where have you seen that brazen act by any governor or President endorsing a budget outside the hallowed chambers of the State Assembly or National Assembly and without the presence of the Speaker? It is unacceptable, unlawful and inconsistent with the constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. It is ultra-vires, null and void and cannot be acceptable to Nigerians.

Where in the world have you ever seen a governor presenting a budget in his residence or office? It then means the President of a country can as well present a budget in the Presidential Villa. You can see people condemning it from far and wide and prominent lawyers and persons across the country have castigated the illegal approval in its entirety. But you can see how silent APC has become as regards this shameful act. Lai Mohammed and others known for always shouting nunc dimitis and crying foul, are now shamelessly silent. But because it concerns them, they have all kept quiet so as to continue to rip off Rivers people.

We will not accept it and whatever money that is spent out of this illegal budget will be returned by Amaechi and his co-travellers. You can see the mass exodus of commissioners from his cabinet. It shows that he is leading them to nowhere. The will of the people will prevail over Amaechi’s maladministration in Rivers State and he will be made to account for every kobo he spends in Rivers State.


Mark my word. We have decided to challenge him in the court of law. Amaechi has failed the people who elected him to power. He has exhibited his real melancholy to the people and he can do anything and everything to corner the funds meant for development of the state to his personal use and for cronies in APC.

Friday, 6 December 2013

NELSON MANDELA; IN LIFE AND IN DEATH

South African President Jacob Zuma announced that Mandela, "the founding president of our democratic nation, has departed," adding that he "passed on peacefully."
"Our nation has lost its greatest son. Our people have lost a father."

Mandela's respiratory problems in recent years may have been connected to his imprisonment, when he contracted tuberculosis after working in a prison quarry. He had been in hospital in recent months. 

President Jacob Zuma's announcement of the death late on Thursday shook South Africa. The streets of the capital Pretoria and of Johannesburg were hushed, and in bars and nightclubs, music was turned off as people gathered to quietly talk about the news.

A sombre Zuma told the nation in a televised address that Mandela "passed on peacefully in the company of his family around 8:50pm on the 5th of December 2013".


"He is now resting. He is now at peace," Zuma said.

BIOGRAPHY

Born the son of a tribal chief on July 18, 1918, in the village of Mvezo in Transkei in the Eastern Cape province, he was given the name Rolihlaha Mandela. Rolihlaha roughly translates from Xhosa as "troublemaker." For the white South African government, he would soon live up to his name.

When Mandela was nine, his father died, and he was sent to live with the chief of the Thembu people.
After Mandela was expelled from university because of his protest activity, the Thembu chief arranged a marriage for Mandela, which he avoided by leaving the Transkei for Johannesburg in 1941. 

He earned a BA from the University of South Africa in 1943 and then a law degree. 
Mandela in the office of Mandela & Tambo, a law practice set up in Johannesburg by Mandela and Oliver Tambo to provide free or affordable legal representation to black South Africans.
Around this time, he joined the African National Congress (ANC).
Mandela became president of the African National Congress Youth League in 1951.
In 1944, Mandela co-founded the ANC Youth League. He and other ANCYL leaders pushed for a more militant strategy, one that paid more attention to the needs of the black masses.
That same year, Mandela married Evelyn Mase, a cousin of ANC leader Walter Sisulu. Nelson and Evelyn had four children.

The implementation of apartheid in 1948 gave added urgency to the ANCYL's cause, and by 1949 it had taken over the leadership of the ANC. A new program emphasized self-determination for blacks, which was to be achieved through boycotts, strikes, demonstrations and civil disobedience.
In 1948, Mandela was elected ANCYL secretary and, in 1951, its president.

The new ANC program was implemented in 1952 as the "Defiance Against Unjust Laws Campaign." That led to a violent government response and increased prominence for Mandela, who was elected president of the Transvaal ANC and national deputy president that year.

4½-year treason trial
The South African government continued to implement apartheid laws and intensify repression. In 1956, with the protest movement gaining strength, the government charged Mandela and 155 other leaders with treason and other charges.

Mandela led the defence in the 4½-year trial, using the courtroom to defend the ANC and the anti-apartheid cause.
While the trial dragged on, police attacked unarmed protesters in the Johannesburg suburb of Sharpeville in 1960. That sparked a new wave of protests, which led the government to ban the ANC and declare a national emergency. Mandela was again detained.

Finally, in March 1961, the judge acquitted all the defendants in the treason trial, finding there was insufficient evidence and that the ANC policy was non-violent.
From left: Patrick Molaoa, Robert Resha and Mandela walk to the courtroom for their treason trial in Johannesburg.

During the trial years, Mandela's marriage to Evelyn "collapsed because of differences in politics," according to Mandela, and they divorced. (Evelyn died in 2004.) In 1958, he married Winnie Madikileza and became father to two more daughters.
Mandela married his second wife, social worker Winnie Madikizela, in 1958. At the time, he was an active member of the African National Congress and had begun his lifelong commitment to ending segregation in South Africa.
After the trial, Mandela went underground. In August 1962, Mandela was arrested and charged with helping organize a three-day general strike and leaving the country without a valid travel document.
Once again, Mandela used the courtroom to present his ideas of equality. He argued he could not receive a fair trial from a judicial system intended to enforce white supremacy. He was convicted on both charges and sentenced to five years in prison.

A police raid on the ANC underground headquarters in 1963 uncovered documents about an ANC guerrilla movement called Umkhonto we Sizwe (Spear of the Nation), which Mandela had helped found in 1961. Umkonto claimed to have carried out more than 70 acts of sabotage against the government. Mandela was charged with treason and sabotage.

During the trial, Mandela declared from the dock, "I have cherished the idea of a democratic and free society, in which all persons will live together in harmony, and with equal opportunities. It is an idea for which I hope to live and to see, but, my lord, if it need be, it is an idea for which I am prepared to die." He received a life sentence.

27 years in prison

Mandela spent 18 years in the Robben Island prison, in which time he was forced to quarry limestone, harvest seaweed and endure brutality from the guards.
In 1982, along with other imprisoned ANC leaders, he was transferred to Pollsmoor prison outside Capetown. He was hospitalized with tuberculosis in 1988, recovered and returned to prison.
During his years of imprisonment, Mandela had no contact with the outside world, except visits with Winnie.

In 1989, reformer F. W. de Klerk became leader of the governing party and then South African president. Mandela's release seemed imminent.
On Feb. 11, 1990, TV networks around the world broadcast Mandela's walk out of the prison gates to freedom.
Mandela votes for the first time in his life on March 26, 1994.

That summer, he embarked on a tour of 13 countries, including Canada, to advocate for a continuation of the international economic sanctions campaign.
In 1993, Mandela and de Klerk finally reached agreement on ending apartheid and holding democratic elections. That year, the two men were jointly awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.
The next year, Mandela published his autobiography, Long Walk to Freedom.
Democratic South Africa's first president

In 1994, not only did Mandela vote for the first time, but he was also elected democratic South Africa's first president. The ANC received 63 per cent of the vote.

Many predicted bloodshed and feared the possibility of civil war, fuelled by those seeking retribution for years of apartheid policies. But Mandela oversaw a peaceful transition, embarking on a strategy of reconciliation and urging forgiveness for the perpetrators of past apartheid-era crimes.

He helped establish the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, which sought to  record human rights violations from all sides of the apartheid struggle, but also had the power to grant amnesty to those who committed abuses.

For two years, Mandela headed a coalition government, with de Klerk as deputy president, until de Klerk and his party left the government.

In 1996, Nelson divorced Winnie and two years later married Graca Machel, the former first lady of Mozambique.

The new South Africa was not easy to govern. In addition to other challenges, the crime rate soared as Mandela's government worked to improve social conditions and rebuild the economy.
After one term as president, Mandela stepped down. Thabo Mvuyelwa Mbeki, at right, was sworn in as his replacement in June 1999.
In 1999, at the completion of one term in office, Mandela stepped down as president, "an old man who wants to go into eternity with a smile on his face," he said.

International mediator
However, the "old man" kept up the pace, mediating peace talks in Burundi that year and the next year overseeing negotiations between Libya and the west concerning the 1988 Lockerbie bombing.
In 2001, he visited Canada for the third time, becoming an honorary Canadian citizen.

In 2003, he established the Mandela Rhodes Foundation to provide scholarships and mentoring for African youth.
Mandela sits with his wife, Graca Machel, and his grandchildren at his son's funeral on January 15, 2005. He disclosed that his son, Makgatho Lewanika Mandela, had died of AIDS and said the disease should be given publicity so people would stop viewing it as extraordinary.

Mandela attends an HIV/AIDs concert in Johannesburg on February 17, 2005.
The following year, he established 46664, a global HIV/AIDS campaign named for Mandela's prisoner number at Robben Island and famous for organizing benefit concerts around the world. (Mandela's son Makgatho died of AIDS in 2005.)

While Mandela said in 2004 that he was officially retiring from public life, he nevertheless went on to initiate The Elders in 2007. This group of former global leaders focuses on peace building, securing the release of political prisoners, humanitarian relief and women's rights.

Nelson Mandela, who guided South Africa from the shackles of apartheid to multi-racial democracy and became an international icon of peace and reconciliation, died Thursday at age 95.

Imprisoned for nearly three decades for his fight against white minority rule, Mandela emerged determined to use his prestige and charisma to bring down apartheid while avoiding a civil war.
"The time for the healing of the wounds has come. The moment to bridge the chasms that divide us has come," Mandela said in his acceptance speech on becoming South Africa's first black president in 1994.







Tributes began flooding in almost immediately for a man who was a global symbol of struggle against injustice and of racial reconciliation.

UK Prime Minister David Cameron called Mandela "a hero of our time". "A great light has gone out in the world," he said.

Praise also came from African leaders. Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan said the death "will create a huge vacuum that will be difficult to fill in our continent."

Israel's prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu said Mandela was "one of the most honorable figures of our time ... a man of vision, a freedom fighter who rejected violence."

Ordinary South Africans were in shock. "It feels like it's my father who has died. He was such a good man, who had good values the nation could look up to. He was a role model unlike our leaders of today," said Annah Khokhozela, 37, a nanny, speaking in Johannesburg.
Mourners gathered outside Mandela's home and spontaneous tributes sprang up around the world.

The famed Apollo Theater in the Harlem neighborhood of Manhattan, which Mandela visited in 1990, lit its marquee with the words: "In memory of Nelson Mandela ... He changed our world."

In Washington, flowers and candles were set at the base of a statue of Mandela outside the South African Embassy.

Outside Mandela's old house in Vilakazi Street, Soweto, a crowd of people, some with South African flags draped around them, gathered to sing songs in praise of the revered statesman. "Mandela you brought us peace" was one of the songs.

"I have mixed feelings. I am happy that he is resting, but I am also sad to see him go," said Molebogeng Ntheledi, 45, reflecting the mix of reverence and resignation with which South Africans had been following Mandela's fight against illness.

National figures were quick to play down fears expressed by a minority that the passing of the great conciliator might lead again to a return of the racial and political tensions that racked South Africa during the apartheid era.

The loss of its most beloved leader comes at a time when the nation has been experiencing bloody labour unrest, growing protests against poor services, poverty, crime and unemployment and corruption scandals tainting Zuma's rule.

Wednesday, 23 October 2013

Protesters Clash in Abuja Over Aviation Minister Stella Oduah

A mild fracas ensued at the Federal Secretariat Abuja on Wednesday the 23rd of October, 2013 when two groups of protesters with opposing views on the behaviour of the “not so popular at the moment” Minister of Aviation Stella Oduah, clashed over who had the right to use the particular space adjacent the car park of the secretariat complex.

One of the groups led by former House of Representatives member, Dino Melaye, had arrived the spot with about 12 placard carrying youths wearing red T-shirts, demanding for the resignation of the minister of aviation, when another group in support of the minister arrived. Shoving and shouting ensued according to eye witness reports.


Melaye accused the other group of being sponsored to disrupt his protest.The youths, however, explained to him that they were on a mission to ensure that things are done in the right manner and would not succumb to his blackmail.

Both sides started chanting slogans at the spot with one group hailing the aviation minister for her contribution to the development of the aviation sector while the Melaye group called on the minister to resign for alleged corruption.
He stated that the aviation minister had to go because of the recent allegation that she bought two BMW cars for N255 million.

The scene was eventually broken up with the intervention of the police who invited the protesters to their office.

Funeral Arrangements for Dame Patience Jonathan's Mother



Thursday, 12 September 2013

FIRSTLADY ARRIVES COSTA-RICA FOR GLOBAL YOUTHS SUMMIT ON INTERNET SECURITY

FIRSTLADY DAME PATIENCE GOODLUCK JONATHAN HERE BEING WELCOMED ON ARRIVAL AT THE SAN JOSE AIRPORT FOR THIS YEARS GLOBAL YOUTH SUMMIT ON INTERNET SECURITY BY AMBASSADOR ZHIRI HYDIA NIGERIAN AMBASSADOR TO MEXICO 8 /9/2013.

FIRSTLADY DAME PATIENCE GOODLUCK JONATHAN AND MRS SALAMATU ALMAKURA WIFE OF THE GOVERNOR OF NASARAWA STATE AT THIS YEAR'S GLOBAL YOUTH SUMMIT ON INTERNET SECURITY 8/9/2013

DAME PATIENCE GOODLUCK JONATHAN OF NIGERIA BEING WELCOMED BY PRESIDENT LAURA CHINCHILLA OF COSTA RICA 8/9/2013

THE SECRETARY GENERAL OF ITU DR. HAMADOU TOURE,PRESIDENT LAURA CHINCHILLA OF COSTA RICA,DAME PATIENCE GOODLUCK JONATHAN THE FIRSTLADY OF NIGERIA AND OTHERS AT A DINNER MARKING THE OPENING CEREMONY OF THE GLOBAL YOUTH SUMMIT ON INTERNET SECURITY IN COSTA RICA  8/9/2013

PRESIDENT LAURA CHINCHILLA OF COSTA RICA AND THE FIRSTLADY OF NIGERIA DAME PATIENCE GOODLUCK JONATHAN MIDDLE FLANKED LEFT BY THE SECRETARY GENERAL ITU DR. MAMADOU TOURE AND RIGHT BY SHIEKH ABDULLA BIN  MUHAMMED BIN SAUD  AL THANI AT THE OPENING CEREMONY OF THE GLOBAL YOUTH SUMMIT ON INTERNET SECURITY IN COSTA RICA 8/9/2013