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Costa Rica Digest, Nov. 8
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Costa Rica News Digest ========================================= A publication of Destiny Worldwide Net http://www.destiny-worldwide.net Also Visit the Costa Rica Page: http://www.destiny-worldwide.net/costa-rica/ Subscribe: Unsubscribe: ========================================= TODAY'S CONTENTS ========================================= *Feature Article: Nicaragua Beaches Gaining Popularity Among Busy Americans *Feature Article: Costa Rican Band Big Hit in Colorado *News Digest ========================================= LUXURY OFFICES FOR RENT IN SAN PEDRO! ========================================= TWo small luxury offices are available for immediate occupancy in the finest office building in San Pedro Montes de Oca. High speed internet available. Building has power generator so when power outages occur, YOUR business is not interrupted. Can be used as professional offices or turn key call center. Email us at for full details and to make arrangements to talk to the listing agent. ========================================= FEATURE ARTICLE ========================================= Nicaragua Beaches Gaining Popularity Among Busy Americans Publish Date : 11/7/2004 10:17:00 AM Source : Advertising and Business News Tico Travel, long known for its tours to Costa Rica, announced today it is expanding its Nicaraguan operations by offering additional tours to the Central American country. A list of new packages is on the tour company's website, www.ticotravel.com. In a related development, the Central American regional airline Grupo TACA recently announced it has permanently reduced its fares as much as 50 percent for destinations in Central America and Mexico. The price reduction will affect fares for flights between Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama, Belize and Mexico. Tico Travel says a growing number of customers like Sean Keating, a bond trader in New York City, are choosing Nicaragua. When Keating was trying to decide where to spend his precious vacation days this year, he wanted to go somewhere off the beaten path but not spend a day getting there. Keating, who works in the high-pressure world of bond-trading in downtown Manhattan, wanted to get far away from the busy streets of New York. He decided due to its proximity to the US to go someplace in Latin America, but he found many of the tour companies offered packages to the same standard list of locations. Then he heard about Nicaragua. "I never considered Nicaragua but the more I heard about it, the more it sounded like what I was looking for. All I remember was what I heard as a kid about the revolution, but once I went, I am really glad I did," said Keating. "It is unlike anyplace I have ever been. They have authentic colonial towns, really active volcanoes, and the beaches are like out of a movie. I even learned to surf on a beach where we did not see anyone else for three days. The Nicaraguan people are super friendly and the tourists you meet there are different too. Most have traveled to places all over the world but they all love Nicaragua." Keating is not alone. With virgin beaches, low prices and its close proximity to the United States, Central America as a whole has become more popular with American tourists. But until recently, Nicaragua was one of those often left off the list of countries tour operators were offering to their clients. Keating did, however, find Tico Travel (www.ticotravel.com) and CentralAmerica.com, companies owned in whole or in part by brothers Steve and Rob Hodel, who offer tours and packages to Nicaragua and are expanding this part of their growing tour business. Rob Hodel first traveled to Nicaragua in 1987 from Costa Rica despite the ongoing civil war. "I was young and invincible then, and was invited to a party in Managua so I went from Costa Rica by bus. It was not the best idea, so I was lucky that it was not worse," he added. Hodel gives few details of his adventure 17 years ago other than to say his guardian angel was with him. But today, he is very bullish on Nicaragua. "After I got out in 1987 I swore I would never go back and now I own two houses in Granada," he said. As a specialist on Costa Rica and Central America, Rob Hodel now travels year-round throughout the region, dropping in unannounced on hotels and tour operators that are part of his Tico Travel network. In the year 2000 Hodel was visiting Nicaragua again to check on progress of their destinations there when he made the leap from visitor and tour operator to homeowner. "I was visiting some friends in Granada and was very impressed with the progress. I could see it had really turned a corner and I wanted in," said Hodel. "I could not decide between two houses but since they were such a bargain, I bought them both. I made 30 trips by car from my house in Costa Rica and spent nine months restoring one home in the traditional way. It was a great experience." The town of Granada is a designated World Heritage Site by the United Nations. Most homes have tile roofs 30-foot high and three-foot thick walls with charming indoor courtyards. As the oldest city in the Americas, Granada is like a museum in and of itself, and has seen more than its share of marauding pirates, privateers and revolutions. Most of the homes in Granada were in poor shape just four years go, but there is a revival going, partly due to foreigners like Hodel who are helping bring them back to life. The experience also gave Hodel a chance to become familiar with what Nicaragua has to offer and develop relationships with those working in the tourism sector. Hodel's expertise has also made him a valuable resource for the region. Hodel has just returned from Nicaragua after a consulting assignment with Carana Corporation, a leader in economic development throughout the world. Carana is working under contract with US AID in Nicaragua to promote the huge potential in the tourism sector. Hodel says there are a number of unknown positives about the country that deserve notice. For example, in just the past couple of years 43 private nature reserves have been created in Nicaragua and nearly 20 percent of the country's land is protected by law. "For investors, the incentives could not be better, and for visitors the value is enormous, so it's just a matter of time before it's the next Costa Rica," he said. "The only difference is that Nicaragua does not have to attract tourists all the way from the United States like Costa Rica did, Nicaragua just has to get them to come over the border from Costa Rica to take a peak." Hodel should know. He and his brother Steve were pioneers in the Costa Rica travel business when they started Tico Travel more than 10 years ago and have witnessed Costa Rica evolve from being confused with Puerto Rico to the most popular destination in the region. He also says that some of his oldest customers of Tico Travel are now mixing Nicaragua into their visits to Costa Rica. "Its not that they don't enjoy Costa Rica as much as they are nostalgic for the days when there was nobody else on the beaches and you rarely saw another tourist." According to Hodel, this probably won't last very long. Several hoteliers with properties in Costa Rica have already set up shop in Nicaragua and more are on the drawing board. For anybody contemplating traveling to or investing in Nicaragua, Hodel has this advice. "If you want are looking for an authentic experience right in your own backyard, then the time to visit Nicargua is now." Rob Hodel's Nicaragua Resource List Tico Travel -for surfing, fishing and tours of Colonial Granada (www.ticotravel.com) CentralAmerica.com- for Nicaragua hotels, tours, and car rentals Hotels Morgan's Rock (www.morgansrock.com) Pelican Eyes (www.piedrasyolas.com) Hotel Colonial (http://www.centralamerica.com/nicara...s/colonial.htm) El Gran Francia (http://www.centralamerica.com/nicara...ls/francia.htm) Tour Operators Tico Travel (www.ticotravel.com) Solentiname Tours (www.solentinametours.com) Mombo Tours (www.mombotour.com) Grayline Tours (www.graylinenicaragua.com Real Estate Sandy Perkoff of Perkoff Realty e-mail protected from spam bots Nicalandia Realty-Larry Hustler www.Nicalandia.com ========================================= FEATURE ARTICLE ========================================= *Costa Rican Band Big Hit in Colorado! Latin American musicians become regulars in Summit BY KIMBERLY NICOLETTI November 7, 2004 BRECKENRIDGE - After the smashing success of Costa Rican band Pimienta Negra's three shows last month, Cecilia's has decided to bring more Latin American bands to Breckenridge. Cecilia's will offer salsa and merengue night every Wednesday, with dance lessons at approximately 8 p.m. and music around 10 p.m. While other bars have done the same throughout the years, they haven't gone so far as to fly musicians from Costa Rica and other Latin American countries to Summit to play. But that's exactly what Cecilia's intends to do. The idea began as a happy accident when Keystone resident Diego Piedra, who's originally from Costa Rica, found out one of his favorite bands, Pimienta Negra, was touring in the States. He booked it for a three-night stint - one at Cecilia's and two at the Goat, and both bars had better-than-expected turnout. About 160 people - 100 of which were Latin Americans that drove from as far as Boulder and Vail - heated up Cecilia's for the first show. About 110 showed up the next night at the Goat in Keystone and requested the band a second night, where 145 people showed, Piedra said. So when Piedra offered to bring up more bands from Costa Rica, Cecilia's owner Jeff Cox agreed to host them. Piedra hopes to start a production company that promotes bands from Latin America in the United States. He also wants to bring local and regional bluegrass and rock bands down to Costa Rica to perform. "The way people get excited about Latin American music up here is the same way people from Costa Rica would react if we bring them down there," Piedra said. So far, Piedra has seven Costa Rican bands in mind. He says his connection with travel agents will help defray flight costs, and as far as booking bands, Costa Rican bands will play for about $1,500, which is what many bar owners pay for Denver bands, Piedra said. "Seeing the turnout from the last live shows (convinced me)," Cox said. "Right now, no one's really playing world music, and a lot of people here from Latin America don't have a venue to go to. I saw a lot of faces we haven't seen here before - they were a little bit older, and there was more couple-dancing." Though Barkley's hosts a salsa and merengue night on Thursdays, Piedra claims the music caters to Mexican-American tastes. "The Mexican community is bigger than the Latin American community up here, and they have different tastes when it comes to music," Piedra said. "Most people from Latin America go to Denver because you can't find Latin American music here. The instruments they use in Mexican music are a lot noisier; it's drums and tuba and chorus oriented. Latin American music is easier to dance to. You hear piano, bass and one lead singer." Cox hopes to bring in a live band every other week at Cecilia's salsa and merengue nights. When he doesn't have a band, a DJ will spin Latin American music. Kencuba, a 12-piece Latin American band based in Denver, will kick off the programming Wednesday. Three of the singers are from Colombia, and four of the musicians are from the Dominican Republic. Then Piedra will begin bringing bands residing in Costa Rica, beginning with the return of Pimienta Negra in December. "We're going to try to bring all of the bands from down there up here," Piedra said. Though the bands drew a large Latin American population, Piedra said most of the good feedback he heard came from Americans. And he plans to keep pleasing both populations -every Wednesday. Kimberly Nicoletti can be reached at (970) 668-3998, ext. 245, or at . ========================================= WHAT'S NEW AT THE COSTA RICA PAGE! ========================================= Our real estate section has just been totally updated with lots of new listings, mostly in the residential real estate section, but also we have a new rental on the rental page and some new additions to the land for sale section. http://www.destiny-worldwide.net/costa-rica/real.htm We are adding new things every day, and when our merger comes with COSTARICACENTER.COM, we will have a fully operational Mercado Central for you to buy Costa Rican products over the internet from local merchants [if you have a reputable business here, and want to sell through the Mercado, just let us know. We can help you to accept credit cards and all the major e-currencies on the net! We break through the Great Barrier that many Costa Rican merchants face getting their products on the net!]. Hotels and tourist businesses will be able to add their own links, and you will be able to place your own online classifieds and MUCH MUCH MORE! Watch this newsletter for our official launch, coming soon! ========================================= DISCUSSION ========================================= Please send your discussion topics to ========================================= SPONSOR'S MESSAGE ========================================= If you want to be successful in the years to come, with the new technology of the internet, you need to break free of the limitations that bind the majority of people. ONe of the worst problems individuals and businesses face today are high taxes, unfair litigation, lack of privacy in financial matters, etc. You cannot be truly successful and free unless you use all the tools at your disposal, which includes being financially free, and learning the ingredients to true success. These secrets used to not be available to the ordinary person. They were the guarded secrets of the elite. Destiny Worldwide is unique in that we not only give you the education you need to succeed, but we also give you access to cutting edge tools in many different aspects. From e-commerce to success in your career, regular business, and handling your finances secure from the many risks out there today, our constellation of services gives you the advantages you need to succeed. Go to these websites to begin running down the road to your successful future today! http://www.destiny-worldwide.net http://www.offshorearnings.com You'll be glad you did! ========================================= NEWS DIGEST ========================================= *Rights Group Closes Costa Rica Base By Associated Press November 5, 2004, 7:52 PM EST SAN JOSE, Costa Rica -- A U.S.-based children's rights organization said Friday it will close its Costa Rica office in the wake of a sex scandal involving its local director. Bruce Harris, the Central America director of Casa Alianza, a branch of Covenant House, was fired in September after the group said he admitted to paying for sex with a 19-year-old Honduran who had once been a resident at one of the group's shelters. The organization said in a news released that it decided to close the office as of Nov. 15, and use funds that went into it to help children in crisis shelters throughout Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua. Covenant House's Casa Alianza branch has operations throughout the region. Employees in Central American and Mexico will deal directly with offices in New York from now on, the release said. The organization's mission is to help street children and denounce cases of sexual abuse against minors. The Costa Rica office opened in 1993. *Calderón Back In Court Today Following his brief stay in hospital and return to his jail cell, former president Rafael Angel Calderón, will return to court this morning to pick up where his hearing left off on Thursday following his ill health. At 8:30 this morning, the former president will again be in the Goicochea courthouse where he is appealing the order to be kept in preventive detention in La Reforma, wanting his detention changed to house arrest. At the hearing, he is expected to face his co-conspirators at the Caja Costarricense de Seguro Social (CCSS) who have pointed the finger at Calderón being the key person in the Fischel-CCSS scandal that has seen several public functionaries and businessmen in preventive detention or house arrest. Principally, Eliseo Vargas, former president of the CCSS, Walter Reiche Fischel, president of the Fischel Corporation, Gerardo Bolaños (Calderón's law firm partner), and Juan Carlos Sánchez are expected to give their testimony. Preventive detention is applied to those accused of crimes so that they cannot evade justice by fleeing the country or hiding out and/or so as not to impede the judicial investigation. In normal circumstances, the accused can be held in a penal institution for up to 18 months, with period reviews by the court, after which time, the prosecutor has to present formal charges, followed by a trial or let the accused free. Former president Calderón has been in preventive detention since October 22, accused of conspiracy and illegal enrichment and is being held at the La Reforma prison, Costa Rica's largest prison, for his own security. Meanwhile, another former president, Miguel Angel Rodríguez, sits only some metres away from Calderón in another jail cell on similar charges in the ICE-Alcatel scandal. The two former presidents cannot communicate with each other and have their 'outside' varied so as to avoid any possible contact. The former president's visitor schedule is also different and separate from the other inmates, prison officials saying it is for their own protection and not to cause any disturbances with other inmates in the prison. *Prison Scares Daddy By Douglas Montero and Jeane MacIntosh New York Post The young son of a convicted New York con man who's on the lam in Costa Rica said his father will never surrender to authorities because he can't handle the stiff jail sentence. "He said it would be a long time in jail," Edward Lurie, 14 - son of fugitive fraudster Brett Lurie, 44 - told The Post of his dad's refusal to turn himself in. Edward spoke from the Costa Rican beachside home where he and his brother, Jesse, 13, live virtually alone - abandoned by their ex-hooker stepmother and in the care of an erstwhile nanny - while their dad dodges capture. Brett Lurie was convicted of scamming a Queens co-op in 1994. After convincing a sentencing judge in 2001 that he needed more time to sort out matters with his sons, the feckless father, who'd raised the boys after splitting with their mother years before, spirited them out of the country. U.S. officials have an extradition warrant and are determined to "bring in" the scammer, who's set up a swank new life, replete with stunning, $1 million-plus beachfront and mountain hideaways guarded by dogs. Meanwhile, his two boys live an "independent" life, full of uncertainty as to when they'll see their dad again, Edward said. Their lives hinge on his daily phone calls, which Lurie always ends with the words "Behave yourself - I love you," Edward said. "Living this way helps us become more independent," reasons the articulate, mature teen. Nevertheless, the U.S. Embassy, which has "legal responsibility" for the boys' safety, just launched a "welfare and whereabouts" probe into their plight, said spokeswoman Elaine Samson. "They are American citizens and minors," she said. "Our concern is whether they are being adequately taken care of, and who is the legal guardian of these children." The embassy also alerted Costa Rica's national child-welfare agency, which has legal jurisdiction over the kids' well-being, Samson said. The embassy's involvement was triggered by a Post investigation of Lurie's whereabouts, during which a reporter discovered the boys were fending for themselves - taking a taxi to school and eating meals alone in restaurants - as their dad ducks the law and their stepmother left for another country *Time To Pay The Marchamo Monday November 15 at 8:00am, the Instituto Nacional de Seguros (INS), will begin it's annual collection the payment of the "marchamo" for the country's registered 808.360 vehicles. This year the marchamo or the right to circulate a vehicle on public roads for 2005 will not increase very much from last year. The insurance portion of the cost of the marchamo will stay the same, as most of the other costs that include, payment to the Consejo de Seguridad Vial, PANI and a municipal tax. Also, this is the time when the government is able to collect any unpaid traffic fines imposed against the vehicle, including parking fines. Traffic fines against the driver are collected on license renewal if the driver has not paid. The marchamo can be paid at any bank or insurance office authorized to collect the payment and is due not later than December 31, 2004. After that date, there will be a grace period for payment, though interest will be charged. After the grace period, drivers will face a ¢20.000 colones fine for driving without the marchamo and the possible impounding of the vehicle. To renew your marchamo, you will be required to present the vehicle's registration and the Riteve vehicular inspection certificate and the appropriate payment. If paid early, the whole process is done in minutes. Come the last week in December, the traditional period for most, the lines can be long and can take as much as an hour or more to pay. An example of the costs for this year's marchamo a - 1989 Jeep Cherokee - ¢39.621 (us$87.65) - 1992 Nissan - ¢34.341 (us$75.91) - 2004 Nissan - ¢234.861 (us$519.60) - 1999 Adly Scooter - ¢39.155 (us$86.62) If you want to know how you are to pay on your vehicle(s), you can call the the INS at 800MARCHAM (800 627 6426) or go online at http://portal.ins-cr.com/csoa/. *Only 67.000 Cellular Lines Left Instituto Costarricense de Electricidad (ICE) announced that it has only 67.000 cellular telephone lines available and once those are gone, it will be one to two years before it can offer new cellular lines. ICE says it has about 50.000 TDMA and 17.000 GSM lines available to subscribers. The GSM lines are part of lines that have been returned to ICE for non payment by customers and will be available on the marked the first week in December. Orlando Cascante Moraga, an ICE director for mobile communications, says that the institution expects a high demand for service in December. The last time ICE offered GSM lines for sale, all 15.000 lines were bought up in only one week. In the case of TDMA lines, 17.000 lines were taken in the last six weeks. The difference between the two systems is speed of transmitting data. GSM is better for sending images, fotos and surfing the internet, though these services are not available as yet on the current GSM service ICE offers. TDMA on the other hand is great for cellular customer who just want to talk and send and receive text messages. ICE has available 990.000 cellular telephone lines - 590.000 TDMA and 400.000 GSM, which were installed by the French telecommunications firm Alcatel. Alcatel has been implicated in offering "pay offs" to public functionaries, which has resulted in the preventive detention of former president Miguel Angel Rodríguez and Edgar Valverde, former president of Alcatel in Costa Rica. Several other public functionaries are being investigated and are under house arrest. And former José María Figueres Olsen had to leave his post at the World Economic Forum last week when it was discovered that he had been paid a us$900.000 consulting fee from Alcatel. ICE had planned on installing 600.000 new GSM cellular lines this December in a contract with the Ericsson company, worth us$130 million dollars and overturned in September by the Contraloría General de la Republica (Comptroller's office), that would have been available for sale no later than March of 2005. ICE was forced to cancel it's contract with Ericsson. The Contraloría said no to the deal after it was revealed that several high ranking ICE officials had met privately in Prague, Czech Republic, with the president of Ericsson and questions were raised over expenses incurred by ICE managers, including their hotel stay, was paid by Ericsson. The cancellation of the contract by ICE is currently before the Constitutional Court, Sala IV, after an appeal was made by Ericsson, which is putting the process of tendering a new contract on hold, which according to ICE, will take 18 months. Once the current cellular lines are used up and until a new contract is awarded and installed, customers have to wait until a line becomes available, usually for non payment or in the case a customer voluntarily cancels their service. *Season Change Underway The change from the "rainy season" to the "dry season" has begun. And with that comes lots of rain, strong winds and cold temperatures. According to the weatherman, the Instituto Meteorológico Nacional (IMN), the change has begun. The cold front will literally start in the Caribbean side, move inwards to the Central valley and to the Pacific Coast. During the change, the rains will be more intense and for longer periods and temperatures will drop drastically. Last night it rained throughout the entire night in most of the Central Valley. The changeover can last from two to three weeks and the IMN is warning those living in high flood and mud slide areas to take the necessary precautions during the period. *Coco Gets Land For New School By Zoraida Diaz , The Beach Times It's taken four years, dozens of meetings and countless more appeals, letters and reports, but this week with a couple of signatures on a single sheet of paper in a cramped office in Filadelfia, Playas del Coco got its first high school. At a little after ten o'clock Wednesday morning, Mayor José María Guevara Navarrete signed a contract, which hands over three hectares of town land upon which the school will be built. "This merits celebration and applause," the Mayor said, as he waved his pen with a flourish. And with that signature, the first of two installments totaling 54 million colones, or about $120,000, will be released by the Ministry of Education to build Liceo Diurno de Playas del Coco, which will house 150 students from years seven to 11. "This is the culmination of four years struggle," said a clearly delighted Javier Campos Chaves, President of the Asociacion de Desarrollo Integral de Playas del Coco. "The community is going to be very happy at this news, and within a month we expect the Ministry of Education will give us the first installment of 27 million colones to start building," Mr Campos said after the signing ceremony. The Municipality of Carrillo's agreement to provide the land, just off the main road into Playas del Coco, was the Ministry of Education's main criterion for funding. In July this year the Municipality voted unanimously to provide the three hectares, but it was the signed agreement that will release State funds. That agreement cedes the land to the Association for 20 years with the proviso it can only be used to build the school on a portion of the property, and sport and recreation projects on the rest. In fact, only one hectare will be used for the school buildings. The remaining land will one day have a children's park, a soccer field and a basketball court. The Municipality will remain responsible for property taxes, while the Association will pay all electricity, water and maintenance charges. The first phase, which the Association hopes will be finished in time for the new school year, will be a single wing of five classrooms and some administration offices. A further two wings in phase two will add another ten classrooms. Playas del Coco has never had a high school. In the past local students -- about 130 of them -- had to travel to Sardinal and Liberia for secondary education. In February of this year Playas del Coco got a headmistress from San José for the non-existent school, and students were moved temporarily into the old Super Luperon building off the main square. Flushed with the success of this week's meeting, the Association is already working on obtaining a second lot for a community center. *Pacheco to attend Plan Puebla session President Abel Pacheco will travel to Chiapas State, México, for a meeting Thursday and Friday of the heads of state of countries involved in the Plan Puebla Panamá. The controversial plan, one of regional integration, was proposed by Vincente Fox, Mexico's president, Nov. 30, 2000. The plan envisions linking the southern Mexico states with all of Central America by merging electrical, pipeline and highway networks, among other facilities. The plan is a package of 26 giant projects that are designed to attract outside financing. Initial investment is about $10 billion. The plan has been declared dead a number of times, but the concept continues to inch forward, being overshadowed in the news by the Central American free trade agreement. The plan gets its name from the city in México, Puebla, and the southernmost country involved in the project, Panamá. ========================================= COSTA RICA DIGEST DISPLAY AD RATES ========================================= This publication is designed to have one display add between each article or section. Thus, the more articles or sections we have per day, the more room we have for advertisements. Advertisements are filled on a first come first served basis, and prices vary depending on placement and frequency. You must order a minimum of 5 insertions with your order. If there are no advertising positions available right away, you will be placed on a waiting list and notified when a spot becomes available. Please email us at for more details. One final note, if you want to do a solo mailing to the list, that is available on a limited basis if we decide that your product or service has merit. Email us at the above address for more details. ========================================= COSTA RICA CLASSIFIEDS ========================================= If you have a worthwhile, honest offering, please email us. New subscribers get a free five line ad for a month. If you have used up your free ad, or would like to place another one, the low price is only $1.00 per line per issue. we have a min. ad of three lines and you must insert in at least three issues. to submit your ad, please email your ad to We accept Visa, Mastercard, Diners, Discover, e-checks, e-gold, evocash, netpay, pecunix, e-bullion, Picpay, Moneybookers, and Offshorearnings. We make e-commerce EASY! ========================================= We give you hard hitting, timely, common sense articles and news that the mainstream, or corporate media, either will not or cannot give you. Several times a week we bring you an up to date digest on what is going on in the world around you. At The Costa Rica Digest, we don't give you hype or BS or "common knowledge" solutions, but we aim to give you the cutting edge information you need. If you wish to become a writer for us, submit your article[s] for approval to . We cannot pay for articles, but, instead, you may include a resource box at the end of your article promoting your website or product. We welcome submissions of all kinds to make this a great publication for all to read! ========================================= Find out about our OTHER Exciting E-mail groups on a broad range of important topics. 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