Chairman
of the European Parliament visits the Isthmus
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José Borrel. |
The chairman
of the European Parliament, José Borrell, recently visited
Panama to discuss a future agreement between the European Union, the
Central American countries and Panama. During his two-day stay, Borrell
met with Panama’s president, Martín Torrijos and the
president of the National Assembly, Elías Castillo, who discussed
the expansion of the Panama Canal, the state of European investments
on the Isthmus and trade issues. In recent years, Panama and the rest
of Central American countries have accused the European Union of discriminatory
practices trade in the banana between Latin America and the Old Continent.
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Panamanian
government auctions Canal area properties
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This month,
Panama’s Ministry of Economy and Finance started to auction
property that once belonged to the former Panama Canal Zone, administered
between 1995 and 2005 by the defunct Inter-Oceanic Region Authority
(ARI). The first auction involves eight properties, in Arco Iris and
Telfers Island (province of Colón) and in La Boca, Curundu,
Cárdenas, Diablo, and Albrook, on the Pacific side of the Isthmus.
The total value of the properties amounts to US$11 million.
The ministry
publishes the public bid requirements for properties in the Panama
Canal area every Friday in local newspapers. The next public bid will
take place August 24.
In 1994,
the Panamanian government created the Inter-Oceanic Authority as a
semi-autonomous entity designed to manage the hundreds of thousands
of hectares of forests, residential areas, recreational facilities,
ports and public works that were systematically being transferred
from U.S. to Panamanian control, as agreed in the 1977 Panama Canal
Treaties.
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A
restored house in Albrook. There are still thousands of hectares available
in the former Canal Zone.
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Thanks
to a strong promotional campaign by ARI officials, a number of international
firms showed interest in investing in Panama during the mid-1990’s
–a time of great optimism in the country’s transport,
manufacturing and tourism industry. Local companies also successfully
transformed the once austere U.S. military residential communities
into landscaped suburbs for the middle and upper classes. However,
a number of situations, including the world-wide recession of the
early 2000’s forced many international firms to abandon their
projects, leaving thousands of hectares without official ownership
at the time of ARI’s expiration date on December 31, 2005.
With the
strong recovery of Panama’s economy in the last four years,
there is a renewed interest in eco-tourism and real estate projects
in the Canal area as a result of a boom sparked by the arrival of
thousands of second-home buyers and retirees from northern countries.
After
the expiration of ARI, the Ministry of Economy and Finance has allocated
a number of properties to a handful of government institutions and
nature conservation agencies. The entity currently managers 59,300
hectares, of which 46,100 are expected to be incorporated into the
country’s protected areas.
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Tourism
Board signs training agreement with private sector
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The president
of the Panama Chamber of Tourism (CAMTUR), Jaime Campusano, and the
Deputy Manager of the Panama Tourism Board (IPAT), Carl Fredrik Nordstrom,
signed an agreement earlier this month by which IPAT agrees to fund
a number of personnel training programs organized by CAMTUR –the
largest, private-sector organization of Panama’s tourist industry.
"The
establishment of nine labor training programs will help us to be more
competitive and efficient in customer service and other areas related
to industry," said Mr. Campusano of CAMTUR.
Panama’s
tourist industry generated 11,743 direct jobs in 2005, which represents
an increase of 6,943 jobs compared to 2004.
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