50 years of liberation: Is Goa losing its sheen?
By Rajdeep Sardesai (Editor-in-chief, IBN 18 Network)

We Indians are very good at celebrating the ritual of anniversaries. Perhaps, 
we believe that an annual ceremonial occasion entitles us to have selective 
amnesia the rest of the year. So, on the 10th anniversary of Parliament 
attacks, pious homages were paid to the dead, so what if it took one of the 
widows six years to get a petrol pump allotted? Now, the nation prepares for 
another anniversary. This weekend marks 50 years since Goa was 'liberated' from 
the Portuguese, the culmination of a long and at times bloody struggle which 
has never quite received its due in our nationalist historiography.

Like all grand anniversaries, this one too will be marked by pomp and 
spectacle. Goa's quaint capital Panjim will be brightly lit. Sonia Gandhi will 
address a public meeting. Music concerts and art exhibitions will be held. 
There will be fireworks along the beaches. Every effort will be made to hide 
the darker side of arguably India's most beautiful state.

That darker side has meant that a state which was once caricatured as a 
happy-go-lucky land of fish, feni and football is now targeted as home to drug, 
land and mining mafias. Remember one of this year's box office hits, Singham, 
was set in Goa, where Ajay Devgan plays the tough cop who aims to rid an entire 
system of baddies? Bollywood often takes its cue from real life. >From Premnath 
playing the happily drunk fisherman Braganza in Bobby to Devgan as Bajirao 
Singham, the wheel has come full circle: the once idyllic Goa is now seen as 
paradise lost.

When did it all change? For most tourists, Goa is still the country's premier 
holiday destination. The hippies of the Beatles era have given way to a large 
domestic and low cost foreign tourist industry. Brand Goa for the tourist is 
defined by plenty of Sun, many beaches, all night bars, loud music and the 
occasional rave party: basically, a chance to rid oneself of the inhibitions of 
middle class India without the neighbour complaining. The more affluent have 
even bought themselves flats and houses, preferably with a view of the sea.

Brand Goa for the locals, on the other hand, has been defined by a certain 
social conservatism, strong family ties, village temples and churches, 
environmental consciousness and a fierce attachment to property. A clash 
between the two Goas was inevitable and lies at the heart of the state's 
travails.

The battle has been primarily fought over a tiny state's most precious 
commodity: land. From Mumbai and Delhi's real estate entrepreneurs to even the 
Russian mafia, Goa became fair game for those seeking a quick return on 
investment. In 2006, then chief minister Pratapsinh Rane, in a written reply in 
the Goa Assembly, stated that in the previous three years, as many as 482 
properties had been sold to foreign nationals, including Russians.

In 2007, it was the sustained pressure from local activists that forced the Goa 
government to abandon its much-publicised regional plan, a scheme designed to 
ensure the parceling of the state's land, unmindful of the environmental 
consequences. Despite this, the most frequent sight in the Goan countryside 
even today is of rapid construction activity as farmlands give way to holiday 
homes.

Negotiating these land 'deals' are the state's politicians. Their clout within 
the village Panchayat system means that no sale is complete without the 
intervention of the local don turned neta. In a small state, the influence of 
the local MLA is much greater than in the big states where the chief minister 
wields a more dominant presence. No one exemplifies this better than the 
colourful Atanasio 'Babush' Monserrate, Goa's education minister, whose rather 
chequered CV includes a dozen criminal charges, including once attacking a 
police station. A three-time MLA, he has switched parties four times in a 
decade and has been part of both BJP and Congress governments. In a 40 member 
state Assembly, where every MLA has a price tag, Monserrate has become symbolic 
of a decaying political culture.

Linked to land conflicts is the growing controversy over mining rights. Mining 
has been central to Goa's economy, a colonial legacy started by the Portuguese 
who awarded mining leases in perpetuity to some Goans. If the Goa assembly's 
Public Accounts Committee is to be believed, 15 million metric tones of ore 
were extracted illegally in the last three years, allegedly at a Rs 4,000 crore 
loss to the exchequer. The figures may be disputed, but what is generally 
accepted is that, like in neighbouring Karnataka, windfall profits have spurred 
illegal mining.

The answer is not, as is being suggested by some, a ban on illegal mining. Goa 
accounts for 60 per cent of the country's iron ore exports, and a ban on mining 
would cripple the state's economy. What the state needs is a mining regulator 
who can ensure a certain transparency in the functioning of a largely 
unregulated industry. Modern Goa needs speedier industrialisation in the same 
manner as it needs strong environmental protection laws.

In a sense, the polarised public debate on mining reflects the central dilemma 
of one of India's youngest states. To see Goa as an unchanging rural idyll 
would be to do disservice to an increasingly aspirational society. Goa cannot 
be confined to a picture perfect postcard where 'susegado' (or relaxed, 
timeless fun in Konkani) remains its calling card. But nor must it lose its 
unique status as a truly multi-cultural haven with a fragile eco-system that 
offers the best of the east and the west.

Post-script: One of the greatest contemporary Goans, the iconic cartoonist 
Mario Miranda, died this week. Mario represented an older Goa, gentle and 
aesthetic. It's a Goa which must never die. Give me a Mario over a Monserrate 
any day!

http://ibnlive.in.com/blogs/rajdeepsardesai/1/62999/50-years-of-liberation-is-goa-losing-its-sheen.html

 
Regards,
Anzil Fernandes 

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