http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/goa/Goa-on-hit-list-with-Julio-Ribeiro/articleshow/46648813.cms

If anyone knows what it feels like to be on a "hit list" it is India's
longtime "top cop", Goa's own Julio Ribeiro. The Padma Bhushan award
winner was repeatedly targeted for assassination by Sikh militants
during his tenure as director general of Punjab police during the
bloody insurgency years of the 1980s. Both he and his wife Melba were
injured in one attack by the Khalistan commando force in Jalandhar.
Later, Sikh militants wounded him again in Bucharest in 1991, where he
was serving as India's ambassador to Romania.

Ribeiro galvanized worldwide attention earlier this week when he
reported that he felt "back on the hit list". In a shocking, powerful
newspaper column, the 85-year-old wrote "the same category of citizens
who had put their trust in me to rescue them from a force they could
not comprehend have now come out of the woodwork to condemn me for
practicing a religion that is different from theirs. I am not an
Indian anymore, at least in the eyes of the proponents of the Hindu
rashtra".

This most-distinguished officer earned the highest ranks of the Indian
police service (IPS)—commissioner of the Mumbai police, director
general police of Gujarat (the Punjab stint came later), director
general of the central reserve police force—but now says, "Today, in
my 86th year, I feel threatened, not wanted, reduced to a stranger in
my own country"... pointing to the unchecked barrage of attacks and
slurs targeting the Christian communities of India, leading to what he
calls "a sense of siege".

That feeling is undoubtedly less distinct in Goa—where BJP dominance
was won with considerable minority support, and the party leadership
remains relatively sensitive to its Catholic voters and MLAs who
produced the state's extraordinary electoral wave (thus presaging
blinding nationwide triumph by Modi in 2014). CM Laxmikant Parsekar
has been quick to condemn the latest assault (including the rape of a
septuagenarian nun) in Kolkata, while pointing to the archbishop of
Goa's recent praise of his administration for efficient management of
last year's Exposition of the Sacred Relics of St Francis Xavier.

But as Julio Ribeiro notes, these positive statements now seem to
inevitably followed by further provocation from "extremists" who are
"emboldened beyond permissible limits by an atmosphere of hate and
distrust". He writes, "I was somewhat relieved when our prime minister
finally spoke up at a Christian function in Delhi a few days ago. But
the outburst of Mohan Bhagwat against Mother Teresa, an acknowledged
saint—acknowledged by all communities and peoples—has put me back on
the hit list. Even more so because BJP leaders like Meenakshi Lekhi
chose to justify their chief's remarks."

This back-and-forth pattern of palliative rhetoric followed by
injuries and attacks on Christians in India is a grave strategic
miscalculation by the extremist fringe that supports the BJP. Their
party—and Narendra Modi himself—did not sweep the country because of
ideological bent, but for the promise of better governance, on the
heels of comprehensive implosion by the Congress party. The stunning
whitewash by the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) in last month's Delhi elections
is a timely reminder that 21st century voters have no patience for
sectarian mischief.

Similar disenchantment is evident in Goa, where even the masterful
political gamesmanship of Manohar Parrikar is showing its limits.
While the administration continues to benefit from non-existent
opposition, there is tremendous discontent building over craven
U-turns on issues that matter most to the electorate—especially its
strong minority base—deeply unpopular casinos, the emotive topic of
special status. Regressive policy ideas meanwhile keep on surfacing:
an outrageous attempt to censor tiatr, the proposed lifting of
restrictions on the hateful Pramod Muthalik, the "accidental"
delisting of Gandhi Jayanti as a state holiday.

Each one of these blatant, damaging proposals by the Goa government
has been promptly (and embarrassingly) retracted after public outcry.
But they just keep on coming, as though the small fringe element in
the state believes that peace-loving, famously-tolerant Goans will
eventually let their guard down. That's wishful thinking, because it
will never happen.

Instead of meddling with the state's hard-won harmony, this
administration's supporters should note just two years remain to keep
the promises that won the electorate's trust. If the status quo
persists, Goa's reckoning at the polls is likely to be just as
devastating as what unfolded in Delhi last month. India's smallest
state foreshadowed the BJP's rise to power at the Centre, and it could
trigger its decline as well. Lose Ribeiro, lose his Goa, and you will
surely lose India too.

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