[image: A Queda de Goa]
The Fall of Goa: Causes and consequences – a synthesis
Authors
Mário Matos e Lemos
University of Coimbra, CEIS20
DOI: https://doi.org/10.14195/978-989-26-2693-2
Synopsis

The author summarizes what happened to Goa and in Goa in the last almost
fourteen years of its life under the Portuguese flag, that is, from the
time Britain granted independence to its Asian colony in August 1947 until
the invasion of the Portuguese State of India in December 1961.
In order to do this, as well as drawing on much published material, which
is abundantly quoted, unpublished documents are used, such as the telegrams
that the Portuguese Embassy in Karachi sent to Lisbon with the information
given by foreign journalists who arrived in the Pakistani capital from Goa
after Christmas, and which were the first reliable information received.
Until then, the government knew nothing concrete, as the Indian Union only
authorized telegrams to be sent by a journalist from the Reuter news agency.
Also unpublished, among others, is the report of the visit of a Brazilian
diplomat to the Portuguese prisoners in Goa, the final report of General
Vassalo e Silva, the considerations of that report, the appeals to the
courts of some of the military punished, the Memoirs of the diplomat
Bonifácio de Miranda and two pieces of information from another diplomat,
Luís Gaspar da Silva, who was stationed in Pakistan and claims to have been
contacted by the Moroccan Ambassador in Karachi who, at the request of his
Chinese colleague, informed him that China was prepared to put military
pressure on the Indian Union in exchange for recognizing the regime. Also
according to the same diplomat, the head of the Pakistani secret services
had told him, weeks before, the exact date on which the Indian Union would
attack Goa.
Author Biography
Mário Matos e Lemos, University of Coimbra, CEIS20

Mário Matos e Lemos has a degree in History from the Faculty of Letters of
the Classical University of Lisbon and is a researcher-collaborator at
CEIS-XX, at the University of Coimbra. He was a journalist for various
media (Agência Noticiosa ANI (1957-1971), Diário de Notícias (1964-1971)
and Diário do Norte (1971-1972). In 1972, he was hired by the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs as Press Counsellor, a position he held successively in
Rome (1972-1975), Moscow (1976-1979) and Madrid (1979-1985). In 1985 he was
posted to the Portuguese Embassy in Guinea-Bissau (1985-1998) to run the
Portuguese Cultural Center. He founded and directed the magazines “Jornal
de Cultura” (1959-1960) and “Ópera” (1969-1971) and produced and presented
the program “Falando de Ópera” (1972-1974) on Portuguese Radio Television.


https://monographs.uc.pt/iuc/catalog/book/496

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