Santo Domingo.– It's the talk of the town before May 16 elections: the Caribbean's first subway system. Supporters call the soon-to-open metro a sign of progress and national pride, while critics call it an extravagance for a poor country, reports the Sun Sentinel, a newspaper with headquarters in Florida, United States.
President Leonel Fernandez, a lawyer raised in New York City and seeking his third term, champions the subway as the centerpiece of his modernization push for a nation of 9.2 million people, highlights the report.
He calls the metro vital to ease congestion in the often chaotic capital, already 2 million people and growing, it reads. "Step Up to Progress," proclaims a metro ad on radio, which ends with a Hallelujah-style chorus.
Jhonathan de los Santos, who sells pineapple and other
fruits on a downtown street, can hardly wait for a full-scale launch. The
20-year-old now spends up to three hours on several crowded buses to get from
work to his Villa Mella neighborhood on the edge of the capital. With the new
subway and connecting buses, the weekday trip should shrink to just one hour.
"And it will cost me about the same," said de los
Santos, who rushed to ride the subway at a recent public preview. "I'm
voting for Leonel (Fernandez) because of the metro."
According to the Sun Sentinel, Fernandez is expected to
handily win re-election, citing his administration's investment in the subway,
roads and computers in schools, plus its luring of record levels of foreign
investment to hotels, golf courses, farms and factories. The Dominican economy
is humming, growing nearly 10 percent a year since he took office in 2004 after
a four-year absence.
His campaign, the paper says, benefits too from the dismal
performance of the main opposition party in office between Fernandez's terms.
He inherited a country reeling from a banking crisis, deeply in debt, and its
currency worth only about half of today's value.
"After the last government practically destroyed the
country, how can this one justify spending so much money on a project that will
benefit relatively few in one section of the capital?," asked mechanic
Alejandro de Jesus, 34, who drives to work in downtown Santo Domingo from a
nearby city off the metro route. "As far as I'm concerned, they're all a
bunch of thieves in government."
Many critics wonder why Fernandez did not seek cheaper
alternatives, such as overpasses on roads, or business-linked options, like
private concessions for bus routes. They worry the government won't properly
maintain the metro, which needs air-conditioning year-round to keep out the
tropical heat and features its own electric plant. The country has suffered
serious electricity shortages for decades.
Moreover, they expect massive subsidies will be needed to
keep fares low –less than the equivalent of 70 cents a ride, the paper
mentions.
Lucia Gonzalez, who sells paintings and amber jewelry at a
crafts market, calls the hefty outlays a sign of misplaced priorities. "We
need to attend to other pressing needs first," said Gonzalez, 33,
recalling a recent visit to the southwestern town of Azua still recovering from
the ravages of Tropical Storm Noel last year. "This is a whim of the
president."
The Fernandez administration has been aiming to open the first nine-mile, 16-station segment of the subway system before May 16 elections. It is giving away free rides for two weeks to those attending the Santo Domingo Book Fair, a top cultural event.

hahahahaha !!, good one about Josean, and you said what I would have say for sure, , we should kidnap the man somehow from where ever he is, and make him ride the Metro until he runs again into another dementia state, along with his adored candidate.
http://wcbstv.com/topstories/NYC.Subway.Derailment.2.715814.html
http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=D90F4I1G0&show_article=1
Is the Santo Domingo Fire Department perpared for a derailment or worse?
The can not respond adequately to an above ground electrical fire imagine God forbide underground!
Read on :
http://www3.diariolibre.com/noticias_det.php?id=14989
http://www.listin.com.do/app/article.aspx?id=57671
Read on:
http://www.listin.com.do/app/article.aspx?id=57631
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Like i said before, PRD supporters are normally marching on foot, while PLD supporters are normally 2 or 3 in a SUV, while talking on a FLOTA Celly.
"My God are all these people in the picture on the waiting line to get on the METRO?"
Probablly...after all, it is free ! Dominicans would stand in line to receive a whipping if it was free....