Yeah, it is the only one on that port. The worst part is that the connection 
attempt doesn´t even
generates a log entry !! I looked into the log also !!

netstat -an  | grep LIST
tcp4       0      0  *.5007                 *.*                    LISTEN
tcp4       0      0  *.199                  *.*                    LISTEN
tcp4       0      0  *.443                  *.*                    LISTEN
tcp4       0      0  *.80                   *.*                    LISTEN
tcp4       0      0  127.0.0.1.25           *.*                    LISTEN
tcp4       0      0  *.22                   *.*                    LISTEN

here is my.cnf

[mysqld]
datadir=/bd/mysql/data
socket=/home/xxxxxxx/mysql/mysql.sock
port=5004
set-variable = max_connections=2000

[mysql.server]
user=xxxxxxx
basedir=/bd/

[safe_mysqld]
err-log=/home/xxxxxxx/mysql/mysqld.log
pid-file=/home/xxxxxxx/mysql/mysqld.pid

>
> I know this might sound rather obvious but have you checked whether mysql is
> actually listening on that port? Perhaps that port is  being used by another
> daemon or process and mysql cannot bind to it while starting.
> use netstat to check this. Also try and look at the error log file for the
> mysql daemon. Usually this is located in the /var/db/mysql directory.
>

--
   //|  //||
  // | // ||
-//--//---|| ARIO LOBO
//  //    ||
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