Cinta Costera referendum is dead Electoral Tribunal
The localized referendum on the future of the Cinta Costera proposed by President Ricardo Martinelli got the thumbs down from the country’s Electoral Tribunal (TE) on Wednesday, July 6.
Opponents of the extension had criticized the referendum because it involved only San Felipe, Santa Ana and El Chorrilo. An orchestrated campaign involving the payment of $6 a head for “demonstrators” wearing orange of shirts and bandanas, to march from Chorillo into Casco Viejo was seen as a sign that the referendum might have been weighted against those who so not want the CInta Costera to encircle the old city.
They pointed out too that the either-or choice omitted the tunnel that Martinelli had first espoused, and that it did not include alternatives put forward by opponents.
"It's a pity," Martinelli said after receiving the decision of the TE … "I wanted to do in good faith”
With the referendum, he had hoped that the inhabitants of the three districts would approve the third phase either encircling Casco Viejo or running a roadway across the Bay of Paname. Lawyers had warned that the consultation in specific areaswould violate the basic principles of participatory democracy and theConstitution.
Jurists Emerald Troitiño and Miguel Antonio Bernal stated that Casco Viejo is a World Heritage Site, so the choice could not be limited to three areas. The Electoral Tribunal agreed. One round to opponents, but Martinelli’s drive to get it done, dubbed, “My way the Highway” is unlikely to falter.