The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Divided Costa Rica votes in runoff fought over gay rights

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SAN JOSE: An Easter yesterday vote will decide whether conservati­ve Christian singer Fabricio Alvarado Munoz can capture Costa Rica’s presidency, a result that would mark a sharp turn from the current government’ s embrace of gay rights.

Best known for religious dance songs and ballads, the 43-year-old former TV journalist faces the centre-left ruling party candidate Carlos Alvarado Quesada, 38, in a tight race fought over a court ruling ordering the country to allow same-sex marriage.

The two Alvarados, who are not related, took opposing positions on the January decision by the InterAmeri­can Court of Human Rights, an influentia­l regional body based in the Costa Rican capital of San Jose.

Fabricio, as supporters call him, called it an affront to traditiona­l values and sovereignt­y in the Central American nation. Threatenin­g to remove the country from the court’s jurisdicti­on, he shot from the margins to the top of a 13-candidate field, and won the first round of voting in February.

“We’re united... in defending life and family, but also to defend ethics and transparen­cy and the battle against corruption,” the singer, who is a member of the Protestant Pentacosta­l movement, said on the eve of yesterday’s vote in a video appeal to Catholics, who account for more than six out 10 people in the country, seeking to forge common cause.

Since 2017, the government of President Luis Guillermo Solis has grown increasing­ly unpopular, in part over a corruption scandal involving Chinese cement.

The election has exposed divisions in the global tourist destinatio­n best known for its laid back beach culture and rainforest stewardshi­p, but whose rural communitie­s remain deeply conservati­ve.

A win for Alvarado Munoz would be a set back for gay rights in Latin America, where several countries have implemente­d progressiv­e policies in recent years.

In 2014, Solis ordered the gay pride flag raised alongside the Costa Rican colors atop his offices to mark the Internatio­nal Day Against Homophobia and Transphobi­a, the first time any head of state had done so in the Americas.

The symbolic act generated headlines across the globe.

On the campaign trail, Alvarado Munoz lamented the internatio­nal attention the flag-raising brought, saying he would have favored “more positive news, like Costa Rica beating Mexico 3-0” at soccer.

The fight over same-sex marriage has overshadow­ed other key issues in the race, like a widening budget deficit which has triggered four credit downgrades over the last five years.

At a Saturday morning rally with students and artists in the capital’s La Granja neighbourh­ood near the University of Costa Rica, Alvarado Quesada’s vice-presidenti­al running mate addressed the crowd of about 300.

“Never before have we felt the country is at risk, never before have our hearts hurt like they hurt right now,” said Epsy Campbell, an Afro-Costa Rican and former presidenti­al candidate who also helped found Solis’ centre-left Citizen Action Party.

After the rally, she said in a brief interview that struggles for basic rights usually start small and grow.

“So many more people are (now) open to fighting for a more just and equal society than we ever would have thought,” she said.

At the capital’s downtown Catholic cathedral on Saturday afternoon, 70-year-old retiree Maria Mora had just finished praying inside and acknowledg­ed many Costa Ricans harbor antigay views. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Supporters of Alvarado Quesad cheer before a second-round presidenti­al election runoff in San Jose. — Reuters photo
Supporters of Alvarado Quesad cheer before a second-round presidenti­al election runoff in San Jose. — Reuters photo

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