[GOANET] Deaths' news

2003-01-30 Thread Frederick Noronha
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J. F. Noronha passed away 29th, Jan 2003 Hatfield, Herts(North of london) 
ENGLAND (ex- Nairobi)(ex- G.I Nairobi) (originally Cuncolim,Salcete) 
father of Derek,(Yolanda, Michelle), Keith (Barbara/ Tanya) and Brian. 
Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

D.  Noronha

---





[GOANET] Email tips...

2003-01-25 Thread Frederick Noronha
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URL :  http://www.planetfriendly.net/emailtips.html

   (1) Avoid sending attachments or HTML e-mail
   
   What's wrong with sending attachments?
   
   Many people ignore attachments - simply because of the extra time and
   effort involved in saving and opening them. Many lists and e-groups
   strip off the attachment or bounce the message entirely. In addition,
   attachments are slower to download, waste disk space, and overload
   e-mail accounts - causing current and future messages to be rejected.
   They are notorious for carrying computer viruses (whether or not you
   have virus protection software). Also, they exclude anyone who does
   not have the required (corporate) software, and the knowledge of how
   to save files and find them in different folders on their hard disk.
   By sending attachments you are supporting the very corporatization/
   monopolization that you may be trying to resist in your other efforts.
   
   More reasons not to send Microsoft Word attachments:
   [17]www.gnu.org/philosophy/no-word-attachments.html
   Reasons not to send attachments in general:
   [18]http://bcn.boulder.co.us/~neal/attachments.html
   Fourteen reasons not to send HTML e-mail
   [19]www.betips.net/etc/evilmail.html
   More on attachments: [20]www.planetfriendly.net/attachments.html ...
   
   (2) Send Plain Text e-mail
   
   The preferred approach is to send plain text, also known as
   unformatted or ASCII text. No attachments; no HTML; no rich
   text; no MIME. Plain text is fast, effective, accessible to anyone
   who has an e-mail account, and can even look quite good, if done
   correctly.
   
   How to write plain text e-mail using Word, Wordpad, or Notepad
   [21]http://cybered.umassd.edu/public/cyberedhelp/tutorial/e-mail/plain
   txt.html
   more related tips: [22]http://bcn.boulder.co.us/~neal/attachments.html
   
   How to set your e-mail software to send only plain text
   [23]http://helpdesk.rootsweb.com/listadmins/plaintext.html
   [24]www.expita.com/nomime.html
   
   How to disable HTML in a few popular e-mail programs
   [25]www.betips.net/etc/evilmail.html
   
   How to convert an existing Word document to plain text
   (including how to copy and paste)
   [26]www.planetfriendly.net/emailtips2.html
   
   How to change the font of incoming mail in Outlook 97/98/2000
   [27]www.slipstick.com/mail1/changefont.htm (this must be done by the
   recipient of the message; the sender has no control over the font
   because plain text is by definition unformatted)




[GOANET] JAN 22: Goa in the outstation media...

2003-01-21 Thread Frederick Noronha
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Witnessing turning hostile is nothing new in India. Pick any
high profile case and a pattern emerges...

The Jessica Lall murder case in April 1999 is suffering the
same fate. The police have ti that Manu Sharma, son of 
former Union minister Vinod Sharma, shot model Jessica Lall
at the Tamarind Court restaurant in Delhi after she refused
to serve him drinks. Manu was accompanied by his friend
Vikas Yadav, son of Uttar Pradesh politician D P Yadav. 
Malini Ramani, who ran the restaurant, as well as her
mother Bina, were witness to the incident. So were a lot
of people, some of them who knew Jessica personally.

Several witnesses, including model Shyan Munshi and fashion
disigner Rouble Dunglay, turned hostile but Malini
and Bina stood firm. The fact that Malini was running a
bar in the restaurant without a proper license might have
been the reason why they had to take the side of the police.
While Malini testified that it was indeed Manu who had
walked up to Jessica and demanded a drink, Bina identified
him in court. The case is still on but Malini had to shift
base to Goa to avoid being hounded. (The Week, Jan 26, 2003)

VACATION PACKAGE FOR THE UNATTACHED (Hindu, Jan 21, 2003, Bangalore edn)
If you are relatively young and unattached, or single, here's a vacation
package all for you. Strictly for those in the 30 to 45 age group!

Obviously, the Taj group of hotels, arranging the vacation, doesn't
consider unattached 20-somethings single; they still have time to be
un-single on their own.

The singles' vacation will be at the Fort Aguada Beach Resort in Goa, a
magnificient holiday spot by all counts.

It will be from January 31 to February 2, an extended weekend with enough
opportunities for the interested single to find a prospective partner. For
life or otherwise!

The Taj people tell us that most of those taking the Rs 10,000-plus
vacation will be established professionals or businesspersons and include
senior managers and quite a few young and eligible corporate CEOs.

Of both sexes, i.e. 

A senior member of the hotel will be present to help things along,
especially at the introductory stage.

There will be enough props and atmosphere to let the ice break, right from
the beginning, we are assured.

The vacation programme includes cocktails overlooking the waves of the
Arabian Sea, adventure activities such as water skiing or Reiki sessions,
authentic Goan lunch cooked by Chef Rego, some time to shop and be with
themselves, a cruise and dinner on a Chinese boat.

The Fort Aguada property is large enough to accomodate its own beaches,
coves and secluded nooks around the ramparts of a 16th Century Portuguese
fort.

We suppose that the singles will be accomodated in rooms overlooking the
sun, surf and sea.

There are shaded swimming pools surrounded by palms waving with the sea
breeze and the weather will be balmy enough for those coming from the
Northern Winter's cold. Swimsuits are obligatory.

The Calangute Beach is much soughth after by tourists from overseas.

The resort has an authentic Italian resort and bars where you can find the
most exotic cocktails.

There is also the patio restuarant where the fresh catch from the ocean is
barbecued before your eyes. 

Whether you find that ideal partner or not is up to you. What you are
guaranteed is a great vacation. For more details, log onto
www.tajsingles.com -- By K Satyamurthy.




[GOANET] NEWS: There was no diaspora divide at Pravasi meet -- Singhvi

2003-01-21 Thread Frederick Noronha
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There was no diaspora divide at Pravasi meet: Singhvi

From Indo-Asian News Service

New Delhi, Jan 22 (IANS) There was no discrimination between non-resident
Indians (NRIs) and persons of Indian origin (PIOs) in the diaspora meet held
here this month, L.M. Singhvi, who chaired a high-level government committee
on the diaspora, has said.

Looking back at the Pravasi Bharatiya Divas meet, the biggest ever
get-together of the global Indian family held here January 9-11, Singhvi
dismissed suggestions of a divide within the diaspora as a media invention
taken up by a handful of PIOs.

There was no question of discrimination. This notion was disowned at
several meetings and derided by what you describe as the less affluent
diaspora, Singhvi told IANS in an interview.

He said the conference was the first step in a journey of a thousand miles -
which gave Indians a sense of history, a sense of purpose and a sense of
direction.

The January 9-11 meet was marred by undercurrents of discontent from a
section of PIOs whose families were sent by British, French and Dutch
colonial rulers as indentured labour to the Pacific and Indian Ocean
islands.

Many of these PIOs from Fiji, Reunion Islands, Martinique or Suriname
complained that New Delhi was busy courting the moneyed NRIs from the U.S.,
Canada and Europe with sops, with an eye on economic benefits to India.

Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee's announcement of dual citizenship for
Indians residing in half a dozen of such countries fuelled anger among this
section.

But Singhvi said: This is largely a media invention which may have been
picked up by a handful of PIOs. Our panels bear eloquent testimony to a
remarkable equilibrium. So do the items in the entertainment programme.

The former Indian envoy to Britain, who headed the High Level Committee on
Indian Diaspora appointed by the government, explained that dual citizenship
is being allowed for select countries based on demand.

Dual citizenship was confined to countries from which there was a strong
demand and was subject to reciprocity, he said. Countries which have
excluded India or which do not allow dual citizenship or from where there
was no substantial demand could not obviously be included in the list.

On the question as to why NRIs in the Gulf were not given dual citizenship,
Singhvi clarified that as most of these NRIs there were citizens of India
they could not be given dual citizenship.

He admitted that some delegates had gone back disappointed, but termed them
isolated exceptions.

The final turnout exceeded all our expectations. I am told there were
around 2,000 from abroad and about 1,000 from India.

Singhvi's figure is much higher than 1,500 delegates estimated by the
organisers during the event. But he said: I personally shook hands with
nearly 1,000 to 1,500 people.

Speaking of the 10 eminent people who were given awards, he said
civilisational  contribution and contribution to the cause of India
overseas were the guiding factors.

The list of awardees has been widely welcomed as objective, meritorious and
regionally balanced.

He rejected as misconceived and motivated canard accusations that the
ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) monopolised the event and all
interactions with delegates.

(Congress president) Sonia Gandhi and K. Natwar Singh attended the
reception and Congress chief ministers, ministers, former and sitting MPs
came in a fair number.

But then the main conference was a conference of the diaspora.  Many
overseas Indians actively associated with the Congress party also attended
from abroad. There was no partisan divide among those who attended.

--Indo-Asian News Service




[GOANET] NEWS: Diaspora conference: doubtful decisions and dual loyalties

2003-01-19 Thread FREDERICK NORONHA
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Editors: Following is the weekly column written for IANS by J.N.
 Dixit, a former Indian foreign secretary.

India-Diaspora-PIOs (1,270 words)

Diaspora conference: doubtful decisions and dual loyalties

By J.N. Dixit

The much-publicised Pravasi Bharatiya Divas, or Indian Diaspora Day,
 was celebrated this month with the government playing host to
 hundreds of overseas Indians.

The objective of the conference was to affirm that the Indian people
 and government now acknowledge that the Indian diaspora has become
 a significant factor in the country's external relations as well as
 domestic politics.

The diaspora is being perceived as a possible source of influence
 and inputs, both abroad and in India, serving Indian interests.

A number of policy decisions were announced, indicating the
 government's appreciation of the incremental role being played by
 Indians abroad. One of the most important decisions was granting of
 dual citizenship to certain categories of Indians living abroad who
 have acquired foreign citizenship.

The government had earlier decided to issue persons of Indian origin
 (PIO) cards to overseas Indians. During the last four years, the
 government had also extended privileges and facilities with regard
 to grant of visas and education in technical and professional
 institutions for children of non-resident Indians (NRIs) and so on.

The decision to grant dual citizenship has been opposed on various
 grounds, which are rooted in some fundamental questions.

The first question is how granting Indian citizenship to PIOs who
 have acquired foreign nationality would serve India's substantive
 interests. What are the motivations of Indians abroad for demanding
 dual citizenship and of the Indian government for granting it?

The presumption or anticipation is that giving dual citizenship to
 Indians will give them a greater sense of identity with India.
 Secondly, privileges such as travel, acquisition of property and
 extension of educational facilities would result in their becoming
 more obligated and involved in the developmental and economic
 progress of India. Thirdly, grant of such citizenship will increase
 their commitment to India in the countries where they reside.

This raises the question why such decisions should be on a quid pro
 quo basis. Is citizenship an issue to be settled on the basis of a
 bargain?

The objectives behind the decision can be met without the grant of
 dual citizenship if the government is sufficiently flexible in
 providing facilities to PIOs and the latter are sufficiently
 emotionally committed to their linkages with India and India's
 causes.

The fact that the Indian community abroad insists on dual
 citizenship implies that they predicate their involvement with
 India on New Delhi granting them privileges of citizenship despite
 their having acquired foreign citizenship voluntarily. This does
 not show much of a commitment or involvement with India.

The other reason why this is an avoidable gesture is because it is
 being granted on a selective basis. It is not being extended to all
 Indians who are foreign nationals living in all parts of the world.
 Out of 20 million Indians living in different parts of the world,
 dual citizenship is likely to be granted to 4.5 to 5 million
 Indians living in Western Europe, the U.S., Canada and other
 prosperous countries like Japan and Australia.

PIOs in other parts of the world will not be eligible for this
 facility. Then, again, the grant of dual citizenship is a
 conferment of facilities and privileges without obligations on the
 part of Indian beneficiaries abroad.

They will not be part of political processes of India. There will be
 no obligation on their part to serve the Indian government if it
 becomes necessary. They can detach themselves from obligations
 towards India by claiming their basic national identity with a
 foreign country.

Leaving aside some marginal economic and social benefits, the grant
 of dual citizenship results in the phenomenon of ambiguous loyalty
 amongst those who get it.

The resentment and angst the large numbers of PIOs in other parts of
 the world would feel about this selective grant of dual citizenship
 can create tensions in Indian communities abroad as well as
 problems for India's foreign policy. This is apart from the fact
 that a fair segment of Indian public opinion does not see any
 justification for the grant of dual citizenship.

Out of 184 countries that are members of the U.N., only about 40
 countries allow dual citizenship to their communities living
 abroad. Apart from aberrations resulting from dual loyalties,
 travel and property facilities resulting from the grant of dual
 citizenship can create problems of security and 

[GOANET] NEWS: Designer's 'pact' misunderstood, makes headlines

2003-01-19 Thread Frederick Noronha
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DESIGNER'S 'PACT', MISUNDERSTOOD, MAKES IT TO HEADLINES NATIONWIDE

PANJIM: It made it to the headlines across the country, but prominent
Goa-based fashion designer Wendell Rodricks is thankful that the Goa press
showed restraint while reporting over this contentious event.

Rodricks, who formalised his gay relationship with with French national
Jerome Marrel on December 26, said some journalists had reported on the
event without talking to him and had even called it a marriage or
speculated about a honeymoon.

Under the French legal system, the law allows for two persons staying
together to enter into a 'pact of solidarity' (PACS, as it is called under
its Francophone acronym).

This can be entered by any two people who opt to live together. It could be
an elderly lady and a young man who may not prefer to marry or adopt. It
applies to heterosexuals or homosexuals, said Rodricks (42).

There is no exchange of rings, or now vows. I have a big bone to pick with
the 'Indian Express' for its cover story, said Rodricks, when asked about
this during a news conference held on the weekend, over his design-related
research.

The PACS says the two partners agree to live together and share everything,
or their property and financial assets in case of the death of either. This
is not legal in India. Neither is it illegal in India, said Rodricks. It's
like an affadivit signed between two people, but can't be contested in
France.

This event has been widely reported on in the outstation media.

Writer Shobhaa De commented: They (Wendell and Jerome) love each other. And
have for 20 long years. A love that endures two decades and allows the
couple to flower is a love worth celebrating.

In a world full of hypocrites, they've shown what moral courage really
means. The fashion industry in particular, is full of gay men and women, who
pretend to be straight (what on earth for, I wonder), De commented in an
article published in Mumbai.

365gay.com, an international website, has also reported that the first gay
civil union ceremony in India has been held under a glare of media
attention.

365gay.com said that while the Indian government officials refused comment,
the public act and the publicity that accompanied it puts increased
pressure on the government to strike down the anti-gay laws which date back
to the days of the British Empire. 

Some commentators however saw it as part of trend which counters traditional
values. (ENDS)






[GOANET] Re: 1137 members- how many take active debate with Goan Issues??

2003-01-19 Thread FREDERICK NORONHA
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From: luis godinho [EMAIL PROTECTED] Date: Sun Jan 19, 2003 2:59 am 
Subject: [GOANET] 1137 members- how many take active debate with 
Goan Issues??

  ALL:  It's  nice to know that we have 1137 members  
  within the various Goacom members.
   
  How many take active part with Goa issues??
   
  Guess there is something wrong somewhere!!!
   
  Lui

Hi Lui, On any cyberforum (specially one that depends on 
participation, like a mailing-list), one could expect 10% of all 
members to participate. That too, not on a day-to-day basis.

We have tried all possible tricks in the book to enhance 
participation, but undeniably have a long way to go on this front. 
Once some interesting posts come in, it triggers more posts.

We still can't claim that Goanet *really* have something interesting 
worth reading everyday, but there are quite a number of people 
trying behind the scenes to get closer to that. In particular, 
however, my feeling is that we need to make special efforts to 
encourage new members and women (isn't Goa offline too a rather 
patriarchal society anyway... okay, this is a self-acknowledged 
flame-bait, but it is true too) to speak out

Your point that we need to enhance participation is valid; but then 
we can do with less bitter infighting and more enlightened debate. 
Quality of the inputs and decorum is also vital. Of course, so is 
free speech. Likewise, we could do with less HTML messages (these 
really clutter the messages, specially the digest versions, and add 
to the pressure on the network) and long repeat-quotes of messages 
already posted. Agree?

But then, success or lack of it depends on each one of us. How about 
you giving the lead? And, my good friend, what about the Christmas 
present I asked you for -- by way of additional members to widen the 
network? The card you sent will not be treated as something in lieu 
of our blatant demand ;-) 

(If you have already sent it in, please ignore my demanding 
nature... but then you gave us great photographs two decades ago in 
the Herald, so we keep on expecting you to deliver in your usual 
superb form!) FN

PS: There is some confusion over the identity above. Goanet is a 
separate entity and is hosted by GoaCom.

PPS: For anyone not following the second-last para, just check out 
the archives of the Herald dating back to 1983-84. You'll see what a 
great photographer ex-East Africa Lui Godinho was in Goa at that 
time. We lost him to the UK, and are still grieving here... 




[GOANET] NEWS: President to open Jesuits' global meet amid RSS protest

2003-01-19 Thread FREDERICK NORONHA
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President to open Jesuits' global meet amid RSS protest

From Indo-Asian News Service

Kolkata, Jan 19 (IANS) President A.P.J. Abdul Kalam will inaugurate
 here Tuesday a global meet of the alumni of Jesuit institutions.

The meet, to be held between January 21 and 24 at the St. Xavier's
 College, will see around 100 former students of Jesuit-run
 institutions from 14 countries with 500 Indian delegates.

The conference will see delegates from Australia, Belgium, France,
 Ireland, Germany, Italy, Mexico, Peru, China, Cambodia, Nigeria
 Bhutan, Nepal besides India.

According to the former Indian Army chief, General Shankar
 Roychowdhury, a moving force behind the sixth such global meet, the
 four-day conclave will be a platform for the alumni to network for
 a greater social cause.

The summit aims at finding a way of improving life. The
 participants will deliberate on vital issues like education,
 business initiative, women's empowerment and environment, said
 Roychowdhury, an alumnus of St. Xavier's College.

The Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh (RSS) is protesting Kalam's plans to
inaugurate the meet.

The organisation described the president's decision to involve with
 Jesuits who decimate all those who do not follow the Roman
 Catholic religion as unfortunate.

RSS chief K.S. Sudarshan's remarks had been widely condemned as the
undiluted animosity of the organisation (RSS) against minorities.

His (Sudarshan's) provocative statements have brought the office of
 the president into the controversy, said a statement of the
 All-India Christian Council.

Roychowdhury said that the Jesuit alumni summit was a secular
 meet.

President Kalam is himself part of the Jesuit fraternity, having
 received part of his education at the St. Joseph's College in
 Tiruchirapalli.

--Indo-Asian News Service




[GOANET] Aldonet...

2003-01-19 Thread FREDERICK NORONHA
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Miguel, It's very easy to set up a village-based mailing list. And 
you would possibly get (some) participation from overseas Aldonkars, 
if you manage to get your message out to them.

You could set up the list on a friendly server, or opt for 
yahoogroups.com (they place ads below each message). Besides 
Saligao's 135-member-strong Net, Calangutenet is also in operation 
(though this is still rather small). Sancoale-Cortalim-StJacinto Net 
is also working. We tried to set up something for Sanguem, with the 
involvement of Niraj Naik. But that is yet to get activated. 

Even publications (like MapusaPlus) could set up a list that could 
keep readers informed, inexpensively and informally, in between 
issues. Was discussing this with Ilidio and Roque; lists are set up 
and waiting to be activated.

The village-list idea is a good one. It could help to re-build old 
networks, share useful information, throw up positive ideas, and 
build links near and far in a way that something positive flows out 
for the villages concerned. We've had quite a few positive 
experiences on SaligaoNet. But that is another story.

(Membership of Saligaonet is kept widely open -- anyone who is or 
was connected with the village in any way, even if as a student in 
the local schools... all are welcome, but some link with the village 
is essential). I would not hesitate to recommend that anyone 
interested set up lists covering specific geographical areas, or 
niche-interests (your Botanical Society list has really come to 
life!) FN

--

From: Miguel Braganza [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [GOANET] Welcome new members!
Date: Sat, 18 Jan 2003 23:07:07 +0530
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

... cheque or cash...once in a lifetime. I do know that the people 
of Saligao have saligaonet.I was wondering whether there would be 
enough Aldonkars worldwide interested in interacting on the 
net.Cecil Pinto,Ashwin Fernandes,Savio Figueiredo,Merwyn Fernandes 
are some of the natural choices.There will be others like myself 
,who are not Aldonkars by birth but associated with the 



[GOANET] NEWS: Design'ers 'pact' misunderstood... makes headlines

2003-01-18 Thread Frederick Noronha
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DESIGNER'S 'PACT', MISUNDERSTOOD, MAKES IT TO HEADLINES NATIONWIDE

PANJIM: It made it to the headlines across the country, but prominent
Goa-based fashion designer Wendell Rodricks is thankful that the Goa press
showed restraint while reporting over this contentious event.

Rodricks, who formalised his gay relationship with with French national
Jerome Marrel on December 26, said some journalists had reported on the
event without talking to him and had even called it a marriage or
speculated about a honeymoon.

Under the French legal system, the law allows for two persons staying
together to enter into a 'pact of solidarity' (PACS, as it is called under
its Francophone acronym).

This can be entered by any two people who opt to live together. It could be
an elderly lady and a young man who may not prefer to marry or adopt. It
applies to heterosexuals or homosexuals, said Rodricks (42).

There is no exchange of rings, or now vows. I have a big bone to pick with
the 'Indian Express' for its cover story, said Rodricks, when asked about
this during a news conference held on the weekend, over his design-related
research.

The PACS says the two partners agree to live together and share everything,
or their property and financial assets in case of the death of either. This
is not legal in India. Neither is it illegal in India, said Rodricks. It's
like an affadivit signed between two people, but can't be contested in
France.

This event has been widely reported on in the outstation media.

Writer Shobhaa De commented: They (Wendell and Jerome) love each other. And
have for 20 long years. A love that endures two decades and allows the
couple to flower is a love worth celebrating.

In a world full of hypocrites, they've shown what moral courage really
means. The fashion industry in particular, is full of gay men and women, who
pretend to be straight (what on earth for, I wonder), De commented in an
article published in Mumbai.

365gay.com, an international website, has also reported that the first gay
civil union ceremony in India has been held under a glare of media
attention.

365gay.com said that while the Indian government officials refused comment,
the public act and the publicity that accompanied it puts increased
pressure on the government to strike down the anti-gay laws which date back
to the days of the British Empire. 

Some commentators however saw it as part of trend which counters traditional
values. 

This unsual story involved one of Goa's most prominent fashion designer --
-- Wendell Rodricks a returned Goan from Mumbai, who has made this state his
home in recent years. Like many Goans settled outside, Rodricks' family has
been outside Goa for decades.

Rodricks earlier said he was not eager about communicating to any press.
But he commented that whatever had been write has been hearsay. This news,
he suggested, had been met with an overwhelming positive reaction, though
he was a wee bit concerned about some retaliation.

Goa, inspite of its image as being a somewhat hedonistic fun centre, is
actually a society based on fairly conservative mores. Its Westernised style
of celebrating however leads some outsiders, specially the average domestic
tourist from India, to re-enkindle their Bollywood-fuelled images of this
state as a place for hedonism. 

Rodricks has been high-profile in the media, and part of his concern is
believed to stem from his eagerness to be known to the public as a designer,
rather than some gay flag carrier.

His work has been widely displayed in Goa and across the globe, and his fans
extend far beyond the bold and the beautiful. 

In the past, the Goa government headed by Congress chief minister Pratapsing
Rane engaged Rodricks to re-fashion the Goa police's uniforms from staid
khaki to chic blue-and-white.

But, on ascending to power, BJP's coalition chief minister Manohar Parrikar
rescinded that decision and got the khaki uniforms back, except for the
tourist police. But that did not stop the BJP from using Rodricks' somewhat
pro-BJP pre-elections utterances as a part of their campaign for the May
2002 elections.

365gay.com said that while the Indian government officials refused comment,
the public act and the publicity that accompanied it puts increased
pressure on the government to strike down the anti-gay laws which date back
to the days of the British Empire. (ENDS) 




[GOANET] NEWS-INDIA: Roma, the lost Indians, face starvation in Europe

2003-01-17 Thread Frederick Noronha
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Roma, the lost Indians, face starvation in Europe

By Sanjay Suri, Indo-Asian News Service

London, Jan 17 (IANS) The Roma tribe, which migrated from present-day
northern India and Pakistan to Europe centuries ago, faces conditions there
as bad as those in sub-Saharan Africa, says a new report.

The report released by the United Nations Development Programme has covered
about 4 to 5 million Roma -- of the estimated eight million in Europe -- in
the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria.

The report says one out of every two Roma goes hungry at least a few days
every year. One out of six is constantly starving. Many among them live in
conditions closer to those of sub-Saharan Africa than to Europe.

Health in Roma communities sharply deteriorated in the last decade, the
report says. Infant mortality was found to be three times higher than the
national average in the five countries. Life expectancy was on an average
seven years less.

Unemployment among the Roma is as high as 64 percent in Slovakia. Their
gross domestic product (GDP) in the five countries is estimated to be a
third of the national average.

The majority of Roma still speak languages that arose from the India of
yore. That makes them weak in modern European languages.

A third of Roma failed to complete primary education, and more than
two-thirds in a survey of over 5,000 were found not to have completed
secondary education. Many go to Roma schools where they are taught in
languages that arose from the India of the days of the Maurya and Gupta
dynasties.

Eight out of 10 Roma think respect for human rights means finding a job and
living free from hunger.

The survey shows that 61 percent of Roma voted in the last general
elections, but that 86 percent think their interests are not well
represented at the national level, and 76 percent think they are not well
represented at the local community level.

The survey shows that 79 percent of the Roma are not aware of any Roma aid
programmes, and 91 percent cannot name an NGO they can trust.

The report says at present 70 percent of Roma live on money provided by the
state. This makes them active regarding benefits, limited regarding
contributions, the report says.

This asymmetry can further promote exclusion and ethnic intolerance.

--Indo-Asian News Service




[GOANET] BRIEfnCOUNTERS: Bardez's wings... Goan birdlife

2003-01-16 Thread Frederick Noronha
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-- 
BRIEfnCOUNTERS: BARDEZ'S WINGS... GOA'S BIRDLIFE GOES MOSTLY UNAPPRECIATED
-- 

HARVEY D'SOUZA was a journalist... till he grew wild. The newspaper's desk
is probably too boring a zoo for any kind of animal to inhabit for too long.
But Harvey's latent love was wildlife. (You get a hint of that from his
email address, which is [EMAIL PROTECTED] .)

He has been working hard to make his alternate wildlife tours, primarily
targeted at the tourist, a viable operation. Of late, this has borne fruit. 
Harvey and his partner cum co-villager from Nerul cum friend Neil Alvares
have their work widely appreciated by a younger generation here who have
taken part in their adventure trips across hidden spots in the state.
They're both widely seen as concerned wildlife and nature enthusiasts, not
businessmen out to make a fast buck.

They run a Wild Goa Club which does give us plenty satisfaction. More and
more concerned nature lovers now come on their wildgoa trips. And, as Harvey
puts it, we have an interesting job, exploring nature along with others.
 
Harvey spoke out in a recent interview, as yet another green spot -- the
Saligao spring at Salmona -- also comes under the axe of 'development'. He
is interviewed by FREDERICK NORONHA fred at bytesforall dot org

-- 
FN: How does the Saligao spring (locally called the 'fountain') rate among
your favourite bird-watching spots? Why?
--

The Saligao spring is one of the best birding spots in Bardez for various
reasons: the forest is moist-deciduous, the spring runs right through the
year, a fact which has not escaped the avian species. Also, some birds
spotted here are hard to find elsewhere.

Indeed birders flock to Saligao to spot the Brown Wood Owl, which roosts in
the trees by the spring for more than six years now. (We have located
another roosting site for Brown Wood Owl -- but we are not telling!) 

You can also reliably locate small numbers of Grey-Headed Bulbul (now
classified as threatened), or even the all-white male Paradise Flycatcher
here. Other examples also exist, which distinguish Saligao as a unique
birding spot as compared to other verdant patches.

--
FN: What are the kinds of birds you've actually seen there?
--

Many, we have a complete checklist, but let's look at the rare and notable
sightings.

One sighting of a Malabar Pied Hornbill sighted on November 4, 2000. Also
sighted by Gordon Frost on different dates. (Then there was the) Malabar
whistling thrush, crimson-backed sunbird (endemic to Western ghats)

Red-winged crested cuckoo (sighted by WildGoa Club on Dec 1, 2002). We know
of no other sighting in Goa. Pair of Brown Wood Owls, Jungle Owlets, Western
Crowned Leaf Warbler, raptors like Booted Eagle, Crested Serpent Eagle,
Short-Toed Eagle, Oriental Honey Buzzard, Black Eagle, Black-Shouldered
Kite, the Plain Flowerpecker, Thickbilled Flowerpecker, Rufous Woodpecker.

--
FN: How uncommon are these?
--

None of the birds stated above are found only at Saligao. However some
birds, such as the Grey Headed Bulbul, are listed as threatened. The Brown
Wood Owl site certainly needs protection. In Scotland, they had a round the
clock team just to protect the nesting site of a pair of osprey! 

What makes it unique is the wide variety of species seen here. Adjacent
forests like even the Calangute spring or Nerul or Betim hill cannot boast
of such a wide variety of birds. How many?  Ours is in no way a
comprehensive list -- but i would say a number of 120 species would be a
workable and realistic number. Worth protecting!
  
--
FN: What are the change you've been noticing at the Saligao spring in recent
years?
--

The litter at the spring does tarnish the pristine beauty. From time to
time, we have observed trees cut down. The last incident -- a whole patch
being cleared (sometime in late 2002) -- was something we could not let
go...

One change we would rather NOT see is development. Let no tourism department
convert Saligao zor ('spring' in Konkani) into another Pomburpa bathroom

[GOANET] More about A.L.Dias, ex-Governor of Bengal

2003-01-16 Thread Frederick Noronha
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Thanks to a Goanetter who filled me in with the following details:

- A. L . Dias was a Poona product, of the same St.
Vincents school that has produced so many prominent
Goans.

- He was the only brother of the famous Dr. Aloysious
(Aloo) Dias, whose clinic was a landmark on Main
Street and who treated generation after generation of
Poona children.

- He was (as far as I can tell) only the second Goan
to enter the ICS, that most prestigious Raj
institution, and remained a senior administrator under
Nehru and particularly Indira Gandhi. Under the
latter, he was Food Minister (at the time one of
India's most prestigious appointments).

- Appropriately, he married the famously attractive
Joan Vaz who was the daughter of the only previous
Goan ICS officer. ICS Vaz and his daughter have
Saligao roots -- their family left Donvaddo sometime in
the mid 1800's.

- Dias had four daughters. The oldest is married to
Peter (Lynn) Sinai, another Goan who starred in the
civil service exams -- he stood first in the IFS exams
and was a Rhodes scholar and then was Indian
ambassador in a number of countries. Another married
into Tara Ali Baig's family. Yet another married a
grandson of the famous Goan artist (the Indian
Rembrandt) Antonio Xavier Trindade. 

- One of Dias's nieces (via a sister) is Victor
Menezes's mother and the wife of the late Manuel Menezes.




[GOANET] Jorge is right, two crucial words missing...

2003-01-16 Thread Frederick Noronha
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You're right Jorge. It should have read:

... coastal talukas of Pernem, Bardez, Tiswadi and Mormugao AND Bicholim
and Ponda...eastern hinterland areas of Sattari and Sanguem AND Quepem and
Canacona...

Sorry for missing out on those two crucial ANDs at the wrong places.

Trying to complete so many pending writing assignments has its own
hazards.

FN

 --__--__--
 
 Message: 1
 From: Jorge/Livia de Abreu Noronha [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: [GOANET] GOA-FEATURE: Ring, ring... telephone tales
 Date: Wed, 15 Jan 2003 19:29:14 +0100
 Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 
 From: Frederick Noronha [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Monday, January 13, 2003 5:48 AM
 
 
  From the map of Goa showing phone exchanges, it becomes clear that most
  of the exchanges are in the coastal talukas of Pernem, Bardez, Tiswadi,
  Mormugao, Salcete, Bicholim and Ponda. There are only a fewer exchanges,
  spread over wider areas, in the less populated eastern hinterland areas
  of Sattari Sanguem, Quepem and Canacona.
 
 
 Fred: Since when are Bicholim and Ponda coastal talukas? And ... is
 Canacona an eastern hinterland area? What about Cabo de Rama and the
 Agonda and Palolem beaches - all these in Canacona taluka: are they not
 coastal localities?
 
 Jorge




[GOANET] NEWS-CHENNAI: Regional passport office provides tele-registration

2003-01-15 Thread Frederick Noronha
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Regional passport office provides tele-registration

By Papri Sri Raman, Indo-Asian News Service

Chennai, Jan 15 (IANS) No more long queues or wandering from counter to
counter like a lost soul -- the regional passport office here is introducing
a tele-registration facility from Wednesday.

Tele-registration for passport seekers will include telephone number
facilities that will provide voice responses, giving the time and date for
submitting applications.

It is part of the modernisation process that has been undertaken by the
regional passport office, says chief regional passport officer G.
Mathivanan.

Last year the regional passport office (RPO) in Chennai was provided the
Tatkal passport issuing facility, a revamped sitting facility and additional
counters to handle large crowds.

The centre caters to the four southern states of Kerala, Karnataka, Andhra
Pradesh and Tamil Nadu.

From now on people wanting passports can call 28213563 or 28213575, with
state and international codes pre-fixed for outstation calls, to fix up
appointments with the public relations official.

They can also find out details of counter numbers and the time when they
have to be present at the RPO to submit the application.

This will cut down issuing time by half, say RPO officials. Now passports
are issued within 35 days of submitting forms. A reissue is done in 18 days
and the Tatkal passport is issued in three days.

An electronic scanning facility was introduced at the Chennai office in
September 2000 and so far over 35,000 passports with improved security
features have been issued by the RPO, Mathivanan said.

Records available with the RPO since 1995 are being digitally stored. Nearly
one million documents and 400,000 police verifications have been scanned so
far and electronically stored.

Information on applications will soon be made available through the SMS
mobile telephone network, the official said.

--Indo-Asian News Service




[GOANET] NEWS: Pravasi Bharatiya Divas did not live up to expectations

2003-01-15 Thread Frederick Noronha
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(Attn Editors: Following is a first person account of the Pravasi Bharatiya
Divas by Fakir Hassen, a South African Indian correspondent for Indo-Asian
News Service)


India-Diaspora-Meet* (1,154 words)

Pravasi Bharatiya Divas did not live up to expectations

By Fakir Hassen

As a third generation South African of Indian origin, with my first
grandchild on the way to make it a fifth since my grandfather landed in
South Africa exactly a 100 years ago from Gujarat, I had perhaps unwarranted
huge expectations of the first Pravasi Bharatiya Divas held in New Delhi
last week.

The hype around the event was huge, creating expectations of serious
attempts by the Indian government to find ways of helping assure the
survival of Indian culture in the diaspora through various means.

But in the end it seemed to be just one big get together aimed at securing
investment in India from NRIs and PIOs, as well as a platform for some local
and diaspora politicians to make statements.

Insufficient time for many panellists who had obviously gone to great
lengths to prepare papers resulted in some not even bring able to speak
because of poor control by chairmen of these panels, and many speakers who
were first on the schedules engaging in something akin to an ego trip.

Mostly, the first speakers were dignitaries and others based in India
itself.

Exacerbating the issue was the fact that there was just one session of
parallel discussions. Many people who had incurred huge costs to get here
wanted multiple sessions on issues like education, culture and media, but
this was not possible.

So what was the actual benefit of having spent perhaps more than 20,000
rands to be at the Pravasi Bharatiya Divas for a South African Indian?

While North American, European and Australian delegates were excited at the
announcement that dual citizenship will be permitted, it meant nothing to
me, as I may not even be able to take advantage of this because of South
African laws.

As I reviewed the announcement during my insomniac hours in the wee hours of
the next morning, I wondered what were the practical benefits of the
decision?

A person granted dual citizenship would not be able to cast a vote in India,
thereby making an impact, albeit small, on India's politics and a statement
on the ethnic conflict -- that was almost totally ignored and indeed even
shouted down by some Indian delegates when some prominent NRIs raised it in
sessions.

Having paid my own way to the event, I was perhaps in a more fortunate
position than those delegates who would have been sent by their
organisations or institutions with a mandate to achieve something besides
just networking, which obviously happens at any conference. What would they
be taking back to South Africa to tell their institutions that it had been
money well spent?

As a journalist, questions I raised of the organisers, L.M. Singhvi and J.C.
Sharma, at a press conference, were either fobbed off or ignored.

What, I asked, was their response to a letter written to the committee by
Ela Gandhi, the South African granddaughter of Mahatma Gandhi, who had
refused to participate in the Pravasi Bharati Divas because it might
increase tensions between South African Indians and Africans and might be
perceived as yet another exclusionist attempt by Indians in the country?

The question was ignored and generated more interest from the scribes in the
room afterwards as they descended on me more than on committee members.

What did the committee think about the comments by South African Fatima
Meer, one of 10 recipients of the Pravasi Bharatiya Samman Awards, that she
abhorred the word diaspora? Singhvi failed to answer the question, going
instead into a detailed explanation of the derivation of the word diaspora
from Jewish times.

Why was there only one woman recipient among the 10, I wanted to know. They
could not talk on behalf of the jury, replied Singhvi, with those jury
members nowhere to be found during the conference to answer the question.

At a personal level of interaction, though, I discovered that South African
Indians are not unique in their quest to find ways of ensuring that some
vestiges of Indian culture remain with their future generations.

On the positive side, the cultural programmes and cuisine of the various
states of India arranged by the organisers were fascinating, to say the
least. The 'jugalbandi' (duet) by Ravi Shankar and Bismillah Khan was a
unique experience.

I suppose the worldwide diaspora interest in Bollywood justified the show at
which Shah Rukh Khan, Aishwarya Rai and others thrilled the delegates, many
of whom were from countries where, because of economics, they would probably
never get to see a show like this.

I was a little more fortunate.


[GOANET] NEWS-KERALA: Pension scheme for non-resident Keralites launched

2003-01-14 Thread Frederick Noronha
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Pension scheme for non-resident Keralites launched

By Sanu George, India Abroad News Service

Thiruvananthapuram, Jan 14 (IANS) Some 1.6 million non-resident Keralites
(NRKs) would be able to subscribe to a pension scheme launched here Tuesday
by Kerala Chief Minister A.K. Antony.

The scheme, which will be jointly operated by the state government and the
Life Insurance Corporation of India (LIC), has been named Pravasi Swasraya
or a social security scheme for non-resident Keralites.

We hope to enrol close to 100,000 policy holders in the first three
months, Minister for NRKs M.M.Hassan said at the launch.

A variety of policies with terms ranging from a minimum of five years to a
maximum of 15 years would be offered. The earliest that annuity would be
paid out would be from age 41 or if the policyholder dies.

However, if the holder dies before the policy has run for five years, the
beneficiary named would get Rs. 100,000 in the case of natural death and Rs.
200,000 in case of accidental death.

Some one million expatriate Keralites who have returned home as also people
from the state who are settled in other parts of India would also be able to
subscribe to the pension scheme, Hassan said.

The scheme would be marketed by the newly launched ROOTS-NRK, a company
floated by the Kerala government. Talks have commenced with a leading
state-owned bank to circulate details about the scheme among all approved
NRK organisations in Middle East, said ROOTS-NRK chief executive Satish
Nampoodiripad.

Also on offer on payment of Rs. 30,000 will be a health insurance scheme
that will be applicable to four immediate relatives of the policyholder.

All the profit generated by ROOTS-NRK in the sale of policies would be
reinvested for more welfare schemes for NRK's, Hassan said.

The government of former chief minister E.K. Nayanar had mooted the scheme
but its launch had been delayed for a variety of reasons. Nayanar's
government was voted out in assembly elections in May 2001.

--Indo-Asian News Service




[GOANET] GOA-FEATURE: Ring, ring... telephone tales

2003-01-13 Thread Frederick Noronha
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RING, RING: CAN GOA GET ITS PHONE DIRECTORIES MORE SPEEDILY AND IN TIME?

From Frederick Noronha

PANJIM, Jan 13: It is one centimeter thicker than the last time round,
some  240 pages fatter, but many months too late. The Goa Telephone
directory of 2002 has recently been released, but is still to reach the
hands of the average subscriber in this small state of high teledensity.

In recent years, the Bharat Sanchar Nigam Ltd -- or Goa Telecom -- has
done a fairly good job in extending its telephone network. But, this has
meant frequent changes in numbers, and the task of publishing its phone
directory on time has long been an unfulfilled agenda.

Goa's last major directory was released in 1999, and that was corrected
upto January 1999. The current one has come out only in end-2002, and is
yet to be made available for circulation. In between a supplement of
additional phone numbers released was also put out.

But in this scattered state, where communication has long been a
hindrance, the need for easy-to-find phone numbers needn't be
over-emphasised. Like the list time, the directory has unfortunately
listed numbers separately for each exchange. This means if you don't know
where someone is located, it could be difficult to find out his or her
number.

During 2001-2002, 25000 new telephone connections were provided and
reliable transmission media like optical fibre cable, digital radio
systems (were) installed to ensure better services from the exchanges in
the Goa telecom district, comments N Chenchaiah, the Goa general
manager. 

Goa's capacity of the Internet and switches were also augmented.

Believe it or not, Goa has as many as 112 exchanges. This has extended 
connectivity to most areas of the state. But the quality of service is
not always even.

Krishna R. Agarvadekar of Agarvaddo exchange in Pernem taluka is the
first  invidual listed in the new exchange. Videsh Sanchar Nigam Limited
at Verna is the last, in the general section of the directory.

There are also the 'blue pages' -- which over some 23 pages cover the
phone numbers of Goa's overinflated bureaucracy. Yellow pages span some
128 pages of business contacts, with an increasing number of advertisers
this time round also including their email addresses and websites.

MARGAO CROSSES: State-capital and administrative HQ Panjim covers some 97 
pages in the new phone directory. Margao, arguably the business capital of 
Goa, covers some 118 pages, excluding the Margao industrial estate.

Rural exchanges like Agarwado (Pernem) and Agonda (Canacona) have, in 
contrast, a little more than two pages of phone numbers. 

By way of an unusual factoid: there are roughly 1300 Fernandes
phone-owners in Panjim.

Adverts prominently displayed give a hint of the priorities in this
state: screens to prevent malaria, academies to prepare for migration
abroad, and luxury hotels that crowd the state's coastline.

From the map of Goa showing phone exchanges, it becomes clear that most
of the exchanges are in the coastal talukas of Pernem, Bardez, Tiswadi, 
Mormugao, Salcete, Bicholim and Ponda. There are only a fewer exchanges, 
spread over wider areas, in the less populated eastern hinterland areas
of Sattari Sanguem, Quepem and Canacona.

Some of the old mistakes seem to have been corrected; but it will take
time to see whether any new ones have crept in. Ironically, even after
the directory was released, the Goa Telecom had to release some four
pages of 'changed numbers'.

This directory does not incorporate the change of all Goa phone numbers
from six digits to seven, by adding of an additional '2' before every
existing phone number in the state.

Goa is known to have India's second-highest tele-density (number of 
telephones per hundred or thousand people) after only the national
capital of Delhi. 

Send your feedback on the directory to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

ENDS




[GOANET] NEWS: Indian diaspora seeks parity in hotel tariff, airfares

2003-01-13 Thread Frederick Noronha
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Indian diaspora seeks parity in hotel tariff, airfares

From Indo-Asian News Service

New Delhi, Jan 13 (IANS) Parity in hotel tariffs and airfares with Indian
citizens would make visits of the diaspora more attractive.

At an interactive meeting organised here Monday by leading chamber body
Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India (ASSOCHAM), members of
the Global Organisation of People of Indian Origin (GOPIO) urged that visas
for visits to India should be dropped for them.

They suggested same air fares, hotel tariffs and taxes be charged from them
in India as applicable to the citizens in the country, according to
ASSOCHAM.

The different taxes charged from GOPIO members, besides the dollar dominated
payment for hotel and air tariff and visa charges make the journey to their
place of origin very costly and in some cases prohibitive, they contended.

The PIOs also suggested that provision be made in India to receive online
applications for visas, and that these be issued to them without delay or
inconvenience, said Subhash Goyal, chairman of Assocham expert committee on
tourism and aviation.

Criticising the treatment meted out to them in Indian high commissions and
embassies, the GOPIO urged initiating training programmes for immigration,
customs and other officials connected with tourism and aviation when dealing
with them.

The members also sough reduction in the PIO (People of Indian Origin) card
fees from $1,000 to $300, and extending the coverage to their family members
and children.

Charging each member of a family would not be sustainable as all Indians
settled abroad were not well-off to pay such prohibitive rates.

To Goyal's to promote pilgrim tourism of the country, the GOPIO urged better
infrastructure and provisions to ensure better treatment at the airports and
tourism destinations.

--Indo-Asian News Service




[GOANET] NEWS: Congress accuses BJP of hijacking diaspora meet

2003-01-13 Thread Frederick Noronha
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Congress accuses BJP of hijacking diaspora meet

From Indo-Asian News Service

New Delhi, Jan 13 (IANS) The main opposition Congress party Monday charged
the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) with hijacking the Indian diaspora
meet here last week for narrow political ends and basking in policies
formulated by past Congress governments.

Congress spokesman S. Jaipal Reddy criticised the government for allowing
little scope for interaction between the diaspora and key political parties
and letting the BJP to hijack the whole show.

He accused the BJP of trying to reap benefits of past Congress government
policies that had spawned a generation of successful non-resident Indians
(NRIs).

The entire diaspora in the world has benefited from the high technology
education policy that (India's first prime minister) Jawaharlal Nehru
introduced, he said.

Reddy pointed out that the world was all praise for graduates of Indian
Institutes of Technology who had carved a place for themselves in their
adopted countries.
The IITs were possible due to the farsighted vision of Nehru, he said.

The Congress leader dismissed criticism that the party, which ruled India
for over four decades, had no policy to engage the diaspora, estimated at
over 20 million spread over 110 countries.

They (diaspora) are the flesh of our flesh and blood of our blood. Of
course we have very definite ideas for global Indians, Reddy claimed.

He said the Congress welcomed the dual citizenship for NRIs and persons of
Indian origin (PIOs) in select countries announced by Prime Minister Atal
Bihari Vajpayee on the inaugural day of the convention. It was waiting for
the finer details of its implementation.

The party made its resentment clear during the three-day Pravasi Bharatiya
Divas meet that concluded Saturday, when Congress president Sonia Gandhi
declined an invitation to address a special interactive session on the last
day.

However, after much cajoling, Gandhi consented to attend a reception hosted
for the delegates - nearly 1,400 from 60 countries - the previous day.

The Congress leader, who is also Leader of Opposition in the Lok Sabha, had
been tipped to close the conference.

Party leaders accused the government of not seeking Gandhi's formal assent
before printing the schedule announcing her interaction with delegates.

It is common courtesy that before printing someone's name you at least take
their permission, a Congress functionary told IANS. You cannot just go
ahead and assume we will do your bidding.

The party maintained that the entire affair was reduced to a BJP show. It
was only the overseas BJP that was all over the convention.

The embarrassed organisers enlisted the help of top government leaders to
coax Gandhi to participate on the closing day, but to no avail.

Finally, they got her to attend Friday's reception to NRIs and PIOs, many of
whom had expressed keen desire to meet her.

Said a Congress leader: She went because she was invited properly this
time.

--Indo-Asian News Service




[GOANET] Invite to Colva, Longuinhos...

2003-01-11 Thread Frederick Noronha
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One of GoaNet's admin team members, Vivian Coelho and her husband Aristo,
are currently down in Goa. They send out an invite (in the typically
large-hearted Italiana style) to any GoaNetter in the area... do drop in
for lunch between 11 am and 3 pm on Sunday, January 12, 2003 at
Longuinhos-Colva. You can confirm with Vivian at 2750731. FN
PS: Sorry about the short notice; we only spoke earlier this evening...




[GOANET] NEWS-DELHI: Nostalgia, bouquets and brickbats mark diaspora meet

2003-01-11 Thread Frederick Noronha
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Nostalgia, bouquets and brickbats mark diaspora meet (LEADS)

By P. Jayaram, Indo-Asian News Service

New Delhi, Jan 11 (IANS) The curtain fell on the first-ever convention here
of the global Indian diaspora Saturday on a heart-swell of nostalgia,
bouquets and brickbats from some 1,400 participants from 60 countries.

The government made some important announcements aimed at building bridges
between India and the 20 million-strong diaspora, but many delegates to the
three-day meet felt the sops were largely aimed at the well-heeled sections
of overseas Indians with an eye on their dollars.

Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee's statement that India was not
interested in your riches, only your rich experience, did not impress
many.

The government's decision to grant dual citizenship to persons of Indian
origin (PIOs) only in the U.S, Canada, Britain and some other European Union
countries, besides those from Australia, Singapore and New Zealand drew
mixed reactions.

Many like Ujjal Dosanjh, former premier of Canada's British Columbia
province and one of 10 eminent overseas Indians honoured for their
achievements with the Pravasi Bharatiya Samman Awards at the convention,
praised the decision.

It will boost ties and bring in more investment into India, Dosanjh said.

But PIOs from Mauritius, Suriname, Trinidad and other smaller islands with
considerable ethnic Indian populations felt a little left out of the
diaspora celebration.

They accused New Delhi of courting overseas Indians, particularly in the
U.S. and Britain, for their dollars.

A key announcement that came from Finance Minister Jaswant Singh was the
government's decision to allow individuals to invest in companies abroad and
double investment limits for mutual funds to $1 billion.

There is an emphasis here on NRIs (non-resident Indians). You do not want
us, the people of the south. You only want those earning dollars in the
north, said Dhundev Bauhdoor, chairman of the Global Organisation of PIOs,
Mauritius.

He also alleged that the PIOs, whose forefathers had left India as
indentured labour over a century ago and were generally from lower Hindu
castes, were particularly discriminated against.

My caste left me in my adopted country but does not seem to leave me when I
come to India - even when I have done well for myself, he said.

Of nearly 1,400 PIOs and NRIs attending the event, many undertook the
journey to the land of their forefathers for the first time.

Complaints were inevitable in a family reunion of such a scale, but it did
not take away from the overwhelming nostalgia and belongingness that the
diaspora felt in their country of origin.

There were Indians from the French islands of Reunion, Martinique and
Guadeloupe who were full of nostalgia on their first visit to India since
their ancestors left the country's shores as indentured labour over a
century ago.

The Pravasi Bharatiya Divas began on January 9 marking the day in 1915 that
Mahatma Gandhi returned to India after spending nearly two decades in South
Africa.

Symbolising the importance of preserving cultural ties between India and its
children abroad, the convention kicked off with an inspired double act by
two of India's greatest musicians - sitar maestro Pandit Ravi Shankar and
Shehnai wizard Ustad Bismillah Khan.

Glittering evenings with Hindi film stars such as Shah Rukh Khan and
Aishwarya Rai, apart from other celebrities, generated further warmth as the
NRIs and PIOs experienced the bitter cold that enveloped the capital this
week.

Business was conducted as briskly with delegates hearing luminaries such as
Nobel laureates Amartya Sen and V.S. Naipaul, Mauritius Prime Minister
Anerood Jugnauth and former Commonwealth secretary-general Shridath Ramphal
of Guyana or business and corporate achievers like Rajat Gupta, CEO of
McKinsey, and Hari Harilela (Hongkong) and Manu Chandaria (Kenya).

The panel debates covered a wide range of subjects, although these were too
many speakers, with too little interaction.

Indian politicians used the occasion fully to hog the limelight that left
little time for others to speak. They are only interested in listening to
their own voices. They seem least bit interested in knowing about us, a
delegate muttered.

Nevertheless, delegates finally had their say as they forced Deputy Prime
Minister L.K. Advani to answer uncomfortable questions about the Gujarat
communal carnage on the second day of the conference.

When Advani asserted that India would always remain a secular nation, Nadira
Naipaul, wife of the great novelist, asked in an obvious reference to the
February-May sectarian violence whether Muslims, Christians and other
minorities were as Indian as PIOs and NRIs.

I don't blame you. The image that has been created is 

[GOANET] FEATURE: Goa's kashti leaves a trail over time...

2003-01-11 Thread Frederick Noronha
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GOA'S 'KASHTI' LEAVES A TRAIL OVER TIME, RESEARCH ON GARMENTS FIND

By Frederick Noronha

PANJIM, Jan 11: The humble 'kashti' (loin-cloth), that survived drastic
saratorial changes in Goa till much into the twentieth century, could be the
single most-lasting thread that links generations of inhabitants of this
small region over the ages.

But across the ages, this region has seen widely differing trends in
clothing -- right from jewel-studded attire of the religious hierarchy, to
elaborate silverware that decorated ceremonial elephants, and the quaint mix
of east-west influences as reflected in garments like the women's garment
called the Pano Bajo -- according to fashion designer Wendell Rodricks.

Rodricks is currently finalising a project he started two years ago, on the
history of Goan clothes across the generation. It started after being asked
to write an article for a book edited by journalist Mario Cabral e Sa.

One of India's prominent fashion designers who earned name and fame, says he
has earned the money too, and would like to put back something into society.

Soon, a coffeetable book on the subject is expected to be out, possibly by
the end of 2003. If Rodricks (42), one of the big names among Indian fashion
designers could have his way, he plans to set up a museum of Goan clothes
across the generations.

In this, he has been inspired by Museu Nactional do Traje (Lisbon) director
Dr Madalena Braz Teixeira. She heads the Lusitanian national costume museum,
which has an amazing range of garments bequeathed down over time.

Says he: I found it so interesting (after writing the initial article on
Goan clothes). Everyone said Goa (did not have costumes) of its own. But
this is not true. We must research this and leave behind some (knowledge
about our) clothing legacy.

Rodricks says he tried to move out of simplistic divisions like dividing Goa
into categories like pre-Portuguese, Portuguese and post-1961. We started
with the caves of Sattari, and the drawings there, going across the periods
of the Buddhists, Shaivites, Vaishnavites and deities like Betal (till
recent times), says he.

He also looked at temple sculpture, and etchings by foreign travellers who
came to India, so as to get clues about clothing worn over different periods
of time. By now, the documentation is quite thick, totalling about four to
five volumes, says Rodricks.

For his work, Rodricks tapped the Porvorim-based Xavier Centre of Historical
Research, the Goa Central Library, the Goa Archives -- one of the oldest in
Asia, which has documents going back to the sixteenth century, notes
Wendell.

I had to read the life of Vasco da Gama just to understand what they found
when they arrived, says Rodricks, who grew up outside Goa and worked in the
Gulf, before studying fashion and re-settlign back home. Three research
assistants helped with looking at Islamic influences, the Hindu deities and
shoes or jewellery worn.

Study-visits to Portugal and the US (Costume Institute of the Fashion
Institute of Technology at New York) helped trace civil and military
costumes.

Rodricks next dream is setting up a museum of Goan clothes. Some sites have
been visited, during the ten-day programme of Dr Braz Teixeira, who head's
Lisbon national costume museum.

One site was visited at Margao; but it was too close to the road, and prone
to pollution. Rodrick's dream is to convert the old GMC complex -- which
could end up even as a mini brewery, according to some versions -- into a
museum of Goan clothing and also a top-level fashion school for churning out
specialists.

Money won't be a problem, he says, suggesting that some major firms with a
major stake in the clothing and suiting industry have offered their support.

Of course, age-old clothes need to be protected from light, insects, dust
and even gravity -- laid flat like babies, says Rodricks. He describes
some amazing sarees of Indian siks at the Mohandas Naik collection in
Margao. 

Owners can loan us the garments and see how we maintain them. If they are
satisfied, they could donate the same to the museum. Cultural value has
nothing to do with monetary value. Their contribution would be widely
recognised, he suggests.
 
In Goa, the Portuguese curator went to the Viscount of Pernem (MLA
Deshprabhu's) home to see swords in gold, crowns and ceremonial drapes of
elephants. They are due to visit the Rane armoury collection at Sanquelim.

They saw beautiful banners at the Museum of Christian Art. Of course, the
Goa of the past is not the Goa as we know it today. Its boundaries kept
changing, says Rodricks. The Konkan coast has been invaded and visited
from the Greek and Mesopotamian times.

Rodricks says rulers like the Kadambas probably brought in their motifs that, 
in time, got

[GOANET] The Jews of India...

2003-01-11 Thread Frederick Noronha
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Some interesting insights. Didn't know much of this myself. Is this fairly
accurate? Of course, Gen Jacob is no longer in Goa as Governor. Don't
miss the other Goa connection in the update below. FN

http://groups.google.com/groups?q=Goa+%2B+newsgrouphl=enlr=ie=UTF-8scoring=dselm=faq.7_1041793622%40shelob.pacificnet.netrnum=3

Subject: Question 13.9: Who Are The Jews of India, And What Are Their
 Origins?

  Answer:
   
   India has a legacy of four distinct Jewish groups: the Bene Israel,
   the Cochin Jews, the Sephardic Jews from Europe, and the Baghdadis
   from Iraq. Each group practiced important elements of Judaism and had
   active synagogues. The Sephardic rites predominate among Indian Jews.
   
   One of the most important Jewish peoples of India are the Bene Israel
   (Sons of Israel), whose main population centers were Bombay,
   Calcutta, Old Delhi, and Ahmadabad. The native language of the Bene
   Israel was Marathi, while the Cochin Jews of southern India spoke
   Malayalam.
   
   The Bene Israel claim to be descended from Jews who escaped
   persecution in Galilee in the 2nd century BCE. The Bene Israel
   resemble the non-Jewish Maratha people in appearance and customs,
   which indicates intermarriage between Jews and Indians. However, the
   Bene Israel maintained the practices of Jewish dietary laws,
   circumcision, and observation of Sabbath as a day of rest.
   
   The Bene Israel say their ancestors were oil pressers in the Galil and
   they are descended from survivors of a shipwreck. In the 18th Century
   they were discovered by traders from Baghdad. At that time the Bnei
   Israel were practicing just a few outward forms of Judaism (which is
   how they were recognised) but had no scholars of their own. Teachers
   from Baghdad and Cochin taught them mainstream Judaism in the 18th and
   19th centuries.
   
   Jewish merchants from Europe travelled to India in the medieval period
   for purposes of trade, but it is not clear whether they formed
   permanent settlements in south Asia. Our first reliable evidence of
   Jews living in India comes from the early 11th century. It is certain
   that the first Jewish settlements were centered along the western
   coast. Abraham ibn Daud's 12th century reference to Jews of India is
   unfortunately vague, and we do not have further references to Indian
   Jews until several centuries later.
   
   The first Jews in Cochin (southern India) were the so-called Black
   Jews, who spoke the Malayalam tongue. The Sephardic Jews settled
   later, coming to India from western European nations such as Holland
   and Spain. A notable settlement of Spanish and Portuguese Jews
   starting in the 15th century was Goa, but this settlement eventually
   disappeared. In the 17th and 18th centuries, Cochin had an influx of
   Jewish settlers from the Middle East, North Africa, and Spain.
   
   The Jews of Cochin say that they came to Cranganore (south-west coast
   of India) after the destruction of the Temple in 70ce. They had, in
   effect, their own principality for many centuries until a chieftanship
   dispute broke out between two brothers in the 15th century. The
   dispute led neighbouring princes to dispossess them. In 1524, the
   Moors, backed by the ruler of Calicut (today called Kozhikode)
   attacked the Jews of Cranganore on the pretext that they were
   tampering with the pepper trade. Most Jews fled to Cochin and went
   under the protection of the Hindu Raja there. He granted them a site
   for their own town which later acquired the name Jew Town (by which
   it is still known).
   
   Unfortunately for the Jews of Cochin, the Portuguese occupied Cochin
   in this same period and indulged in persecution of the Jews until the
   Dutch displaced them in 1660. The Dutch protestants were tolerant and
   the Jews prospered. In 1795 Cochin passed into the British sphere of
   influence. In the 19th century, Cochin Jews lived in the towns of
   Cochin, Ernakulam, and Parur. Today most of Cochin's Jews have
   emigrated (principally to Israel).
   
   16th and 17th century migrations created important settlements of Jews
   from Persia, Afghanistan, and Khorasan (Central Asia) in northern
   India and Kashmir. By the late 18th century, Bombay became the largest
   Jewish community in India. In Bombay were Bene Israel Jews as well as
   Iraqi and Persian Jews.
   
   Near the end of the 18th century, a third group of Indian Jews
   appears. They are the middle-eastern Jews who came to India through
   trade. They established a trading network stretching from Aleppo to
   Baghdad to Basra to Surat/Bombay to Calcutta to Rangoon to Singapore
   to Hong Kong and eventually as far as Kobe in Japan. 

[GOANET] NEWS: Keralites ignored by diaspora meet -- Antony

2003-01-11 Thread Frederick Noronha
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So were Goans... but was there anyone to speak up for them? FN

Keralites ignored by diaspora meet: Antony

By Sanu George, Indo-Asian News Service

Thiruvananthapuram, Jan 10 (IANS) Kerala Chief Minister A.K. Antony is upset
that non-resident Keralites have been ignored by the Indian diaspora meet
under way in New Delhi.

I fully appreciate the initiative taken by the government to celebrate
Pravasi Bharatiya Divas (Indian Diaspora Day), but all of us would have been
extremely happy if they had also looked into the issues of those settled in
the Middle East, the majority of whom are from Kerala, Antony told
reporters here.

He hastened to add he was making the statement in his individual capacity
and that it did not reflect the views of his cabinet.

What I am emphasising is not just that of granting dual citizenship but
other aspects as well, said Antony.

Inaugurating the three-day meet Thursday, Prime Minister Atal Bihari
Vajpayee announced that NRIs and people of Indian origin (PIO) in select
countries would be granted dual citizenship. They would, however, not get
voting rights. NRIs in the Middle East would not get this benefit.

A long-standing demand by successive governments in Kerala has been the
granting of voting rights to NRIs.

Kerala has said the names of all NRIs from the state be included in the
electoral list and that they be allowed to vote in case they were in the
state on polling day.

According to Kerala Minister for Non-Resident Keralites M.M. Hassan, who is
attending the New Delhi meet, the prime minister has not addressed the needs
of Malayalis in the Gulf.

Dual citizenship is welcome but it might not have any impact in Kerala,
said Hassan in a statement released here.

Some 1.6 million Keralites are estimated to be living abroad, a majority of
them in the Middle East, and are a major revenue earner for the country.

According to the latest state-level banker's committee report, deposits by
non-resident Keralites touched an all time high of Rs.257.91 billion in
2002. Over the years, these deposits have soared from Rs.187.24 billion in
2000 to Rs. 214.31 billion in 2001. The total deposits in Kerala banks as on
June 30, 2002, was Rs. 528.22 billion.

Another pending demand of Keralites in the Gulf is a reduction by Air-India
in airfares, especially to the Middle East.

This is a grave issue. Today, while fares from other cities in the country
to the Middle East is almost the same, a one-way ticket from Kochi to Dubai
on Air-India costs Rs. 10,600 while it is just Rs. 6,500 on Emirates, said
K.V. Muraleedharan, president of the Kerala Association of Travel Agents.

Precious foreign exchange is flowing out of the country on account of wrong
policies. These are issues which ought to have been addressed at the meeting
in Delhi, he said.

Still Antony is not disheartened.

We have given several memorandums and representations to the prime
minister. We will continue to do this and we are hopeful the needs of
Keralites settled abroad would be taken care of, the chief minister said.

--Indo-Asian News Service




[GOANET] NEWS-NEW DELHI: India proposes slew of sops for diaspora

2003-01-10 Thread Frederick Noronha
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Indian finance minister proposes slew of sops for diaspora

From Indo-Asian News Service

New Delhi, Jan 10 (IANS) Finance Minister Jaswant Singh Friday unveiled a
slew of proposals to ease the regulations on investment into India by people
of Indian origin (PIO) scattered in different parts of the world.

The government proposes to remove the existing limit of $20,000 for
remittances under the employees stock option programme, Singh told a
high-profile three-day event for overseas Indians that started here
Thursday.

Nearly 1,400 non-resident Indians (NRIs) and PIO from 60 countries are
attending the three-day Pravasi Bharatiya Divas or Indian Diaspora Day.
Many of them have journeyed to the land of their forefathers for the first
time.

Besides, 600 delegates from India are also participating in the convention.

The conference, being jointly organised by the Indian external affairs
ministry in collaboration with the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce
and Industry (FICCI), is part of a move by the government to form closer
ties with the Indian diaspora.

The event has brought together government leaders, diplomats, politicians,
businessmen, journalists, community leaders and other achievers in a unique
gathering.

We also propose to allow corporates, who have set up their branches and
offices abroad, to acquire immovable property overseas for their business or
staff residential purposes, Singh said, amid loud applause by the Indian
diaspora.

The mutual funds in India will also be allowed to invest abroad in companies
that are listed on overseas stock exchanges and that have at least 10
percent shareholding in a company listed on a recognised stock exchange in
India on January 1 of the year of investment.

Apart from companies, individuals are also being permitted to invest abroad
in companies that are listed on overseas stock exchanges, and that have at
least 10 percent shareholding in a company listed on a recognised stock
exchange in India on January 1 of the year of investment, the minister
said.

With regard to transfer of assets in India, remittance of proceeds up to $1
million is being permitted, he added.

This is not the end. This is just the beginning. We will progressively make
more such announcements.

--Indo-Asian News Service




[GOANET] NEWS: India needs policy to tap NRI investment

2003-01-09 Thread Frederick Noronha
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India needs policy to tap NRI investment

By Mohammed Shafeeq, Indo-Asian News Service

Hyderabad, Jan 9 (IANS) With a combined wealth of $300 billion, roughly
equal to India's gross domestic product, the vast Indian diaspora across the
world could help turn their native country into an economic force to be
reckoned with.

But this huge potential has not been tapped. And it is not because of an
absence of interest among the diaspora in investing in India but because of
the lack of appropriate policy, says a Confederation of Indian Industry
(CII) study.

Presented at the CII's Partnership Summit which concluded here Wednesday,
the study calls for strong, consistent and attractive investment policies as
well as a smooth implementation process that would prompt ethnic Indians and
non-resident Indians (NRIs) to invest in their native land.

Titled The role of India Diaspora in accelerating industrial development in
India, the study suggests a 10-point action plan for the government to
increase investment by NRIs or persons of Indian origin (PIOs).

It wants the external affairs ministry to maintain a comprehensive database
of NRIs and PIOs, keep them updated on new economic policies and business
opportunities available in India, create awareness and understanding of the
investment rules, make Indian missions abroad responsible for introducing
the latest policies and foreign direct investment (FDI) targets and
recognise one NRI/PIO association per country.

It recommends that the industry ministry offer consultancy services to NRIs
and PIOs interested in investing in India, reduce procedural delays, set up
state-level bodies to attract investment from the diaspora, bring in labour
reforms and treat NRIs and PIOs purely as financial investors with no
limiting factor of equity cap.

The study -- based on the views of NRIs and PIOs in the U.S., Britain,
Canada, Singapore and 12 other countries -- found that while the diaspora
appreciated the process of liberalisation adopted by the Indian government,
there was a general lack of understanding of most rules.

It says NRIs and PIOs are interested in new technology areas of computer
software, media and telecom, quality control and training. They are also
keen to invest in power, other infrastructure areas and agriculture.

Addressing a session at the Partnership Summit on NRI participation,
prominent expatriates said India needed to do much more to encourage FDI
inflow through NRI investors.

Murali K. Prahlad, director of business development for Sequenom Inc. of the
U.S., called for bridging the credibility gap between what India asks of
NRIs and what it offers in return.

He said India should understand the concerns of second-generation immigrants
and set up institutions to foster emotional, cultural and intellectual links
with them.

CII also made a comparative study of the Indian and Chinese diaspora,
revealing that while China maintained its links with its natives abroad both
culturally and economically, India's focus has been more on maintaining the
cultural link.

According to the report, there are about 18-20 million NRIs and PIOs spread
over 60 countries. Eleven countries have more than half a million NRIs and
PIOs each, 11 about 100,000 each and the rest less than 100,000.

While the government approved proposals envisaging NRI investments of $2.02
billion from 1991 to 2002, NRI inflows were just $1.58 billion. NRI inflows
also came down from an impressive 24 percent in 1996-97 to a low of 1.9
percent of the total FDI inflows in 1999-2000.

In contrast, non-resident Chinese from Hong Kong, Taiwan and the rest of
Asia were the largest contributors to the total FDI inflows into their
native country.

Stating that India had many lessons to learn from China, the CII study
points out that Beijing, through a decree passed in 1990, provided for
special rules and regulations to encourage investment by overseas Chinese.

--Indo-Asian News Service




[GOANET] NEWS-EXPATS: 'We don't want your riches alone', Vajpayee tells NRIs

2003-01-09 Thread Frederick Noronha
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'We don't want your riches alone': Vajpayee tells overseas Indians

From Indo-Asian News Service

New Delhi, Jan 9 (IANS) Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee Thursday sought
to dispel any notion that the first-ever gathering of the Indian diaspora
here had been convened with an eye only on investments.

We do not want your riches, we want the richness of your experience. We can
gain from the breadth of vision that your global exposure has given you,
Vajpayee said in his inaugural address to the three-day meet, being attended
by some 2,000 delegates from 60 countries across the globe.

We do not want only your investment, we also want your ideas, he added.

When you left this country, you carried with you the primary colours of the
Indian ethos. A cross-fertilization of cultures over time has added new
shades to those vibrant hues. Today we invite you to brush in some of these
new colours into the ever-evolving canvas of India's development, the poet
prime minister said.

He said the Indian diaspora could help project the country to the world in a
credible and effective manner to correct the misleading and negative
pictures that are put out due to bias, ignorance or design.

You could project a positive image of India - not as propaganda, but as a
true reflection of the reality on the ground, he said and noted India
continues to have one of the fastest growing economies when most developed
economies have slowed down.

Similarly, India's exports grew by 19 percent and the country, which till
recently needed to import food grains to feed its population, exported
grains worth over Rs. 60 billion to 25 countries last year.

He also noted that about a decade ago India had to mortgage its gold to tide
over a difficult balance of payments crisis. Today we have record foreign
exchange reserves of nearly $70 billion.

How often have we seen such facts quoted outside the country? It is far
more that mindless political gossip or isolated acts of crime and violence
would dominate the headlines around the world, he said.

--Indo-Asian News Service




[GOANET] *** NEWS-PRIORITY: Dual nationality for Indians based in somecountries

2003-01-09 Thread Frederick Noronha
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India fetes its diaspora with dual citizenship (LEADS)

By P. Jayaram, Indo-Asian News Service

New Delhi, Jan 9 (IANS) India feted its 20-million strong global diaspora
Thursday, with Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee announcing the
government's decision to grant dual citizenship to people of Indian origin
(PIOs) in selected countries and reservation of seats in educational
institutions for children of Indians in the Gulf countries.

The prime minister's announcement, in his inaugural address to a historic
first-ever gathering of overseas Indians here, drew loud applause from the
3,000-strong audience at a specially erected conference hall at the
sprawling Pragati Maidan fairgrounds here.

Nearly 1,400 PIOs from 60 countries are attending the three-day Pravasi
Bharatiya Divas (Indian Diaspora Day), many of them undertaking the journey
to the land of their forefathers for the first time.

It was on this day in 1915 that Mahatma Gandhi returned to India after
spending nearly two decades in South Africa and, in the words of External
Affairs Minister Yashwant Sinha, changed the course of Indian history.

Perhaps underlining the importance of music in preserving the bond of
cultural heritage between India and the diaspora, the convention started
with an inspired joint performance by two of India's greatest musicians -
sitar maestro Pandit Ravi Shankar and Shehnai wizard Ustad Bismillah Khan.

Khan, 86, and Shankar, 82, had never performed together. But on Thursday
their heavenly music, as Yashwant Sinha described it, received a standing
ovation, Prime Minister Vajpayee and Deputy Prime Minister L.K. Advani
leading the way.

Vajpayee honoured 10 eminent PIOs, including Mauritius Prime Minister
Anerood Jugnauth, who delivered a special address at the inaugural ceremony,
by presenting them with Pravasi Bharatiya Samman Awards.

Vajpayee also announced a compulsory insurance scheme for non-resident
Indians (NRIs) in the Gulf countries and said the government was already
considering a bill to establish a welfare fund for overseas Indian workers.

He said the decision to grant dual citizenship for POIs of certain countries
was in line with the recommendation of a high-level committee headed by
former envoy to Britain, L.M. Singhvi.

We are now working on the administrative regulations and procedures
governing dual citizenship, he said and added the government would
introduce the relevant legislation in the next session of Parliament in
February.

The welfare of NRIs (non-resident Indians) in the Gulf region is of utmost
concern to us, he said referring to the three million Indians working in
the region.  To meet the educational needs of children in the Gulf, we plan
to reserve a certain proportion of seats in our academic institutions for
the children of the Gulf NRIs, he said.

The odyssey of our people to the four corners of the globe has been a saga
of courage enterprise and character, he said and referred to how Indians
went over a century and a half ago as indentured labour to work in sugar,
tea and rubber plantations in lands as far apart as Fiji and Mauritius,
Suriname and Sri Lanka, Trinidad and Burma, Guyana and Malaysia.

This, he said, was followed by the next wave of emigration by entrepreneurs
and traders and by young professionals in the seventies to the corporate
boardrooms, research laboratories, engineering workshops and university
faculties.

Today the success of every category of these emigrants all over the world
testifies to the indomitable spirit, which they carried from Indian soil,
he said.

Not many people today remember the painful Kamagata Maru episode of the
early 20th century, when a boatload of Sikhs from India were most brutally
left to fend for themselves on the high seas off the coast of Canada, he
said, and noted that Sikhs from India are among the most prosperous
Canadians and were increasingly influential in Canadian politics.

He said unlike the British, the French, the Dutch and the Germans, India was
never a maritime power. All the same, Indians ventured forth across the
seas to set up new homes in new lands. They went in peace, often with
nothing more than faith in their destiny.

No country can claim that Indians entered its territory in the spirit of
colonialism, he said amid applause.

--Indo-Asian News Service




[GOANET] NEWS: Vajpayee likely to announce dual citizenship

2003-01-08 Thread Frederick Noronha
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Vajpayee likely to announce dual citizenship

From Indo-Asian News Service

New Delhi, Jan 8 (IANS) Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee is expected to
announce the government's decision to grant dual citizenship to people of
Indian origin (PIOs) at their first-ever gathering here Thursday.

Dual citizenship has long been sought, particularly by PIOs in Britain and
the U.S, but there have been serious reservations within the government and
political parties over the issue due to its legal and security implications.

There are an estimated 20 million PIOs spread across the world.

The government has, however, said dual citizenship would be restricted to
countries that grant this on a reciprocal basis and even then it would not
be automatic. PIOs in South Asian countries would not be entitled to dual
citizenship.

It has also clarified that those granted dual citizenship would not be
entitled to take part in Indian elections.

Nearly 1,400 PIOs from 60 countries have confirmed their participation in
the conference and many of them have already arrived, said the organisers -
the external affairs ministry and the Federation of Indian Chambers of
Commerce and Industry (FICCI).

While Vajpayee will inaugurate the conference, his Mauritius counterpart
Anerood Jugnauth, currently on a weeklong state visit to India, will deliver
a special address at the inaugural session.

The conference has been organised for the people and authorities to
understand the sentiments of the Indian diaspora and its expectations from
India and evolve a policy framework for sustained interaction.

Culture Minister Jagmohan inaugurated three exhibitions on the eve of the
conference to give the participants a feeling of the common heritage.

The exhibitions are titled: Our science and technology heritage,
Pictorial transformations, that detail developments in Indian art since
the 1850s, and Eternal images of Indian art, which includes a 500-year-old
sculpture of Mother Goddess from Harappa, 1st century sculptures of the
Buddha and bronzes of the Chola period.

Officials said the government had waived entry fees for the three
exhibitions for delegates to the conference.

--Indo-Asian News Service




[GOANET] SITEWATCH: Link to official Goa websites...

2003-01-08 Thread Frederick Noronha
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Thanks to Archana [EMAIL PROTECTED] for pointing me in this
direction. Below are links to a number of Goa-related official
websites. Including ruralbazaar, citizens' charters and the (often
crowded in the real world) Passport Office. FN

URL :  http://www.goa.nic.in

   
   National Informatics Centre
   
   Goa State Unit
   
 Dedicated to reach the benefits of   I T  to Rural Masses
   
   
  [1]About Us
  [2]Services
 [3]Projects 
[4]Inaugurations 
 [5]Training
   [6]Infrastructure
 [7]Manpower
 [8]Feedback
   [9]Email Directory
 
 
   [nicgoa.jpg]
   
   Websites:
   [10]State Legal Services Authority[11] [new.gif] 
   [12]Institute of Hotel Management   
   [13]Goa Government
   [14]Citizen Charters
   Govt. Polytechnic
  [15]Panaji  [16]Bicholim [17]
   HSSC/SSC Results
   [18]Ruralbazargoa   [19]
   Goa Museum
   [20]SISI Goa
   [21]National Institute of Water sports
   [22]Passport Office
   [23]Goa Tourism
   [24]ICAR RC for GOA
   [25]ETDC
   
Best viewed in IE 4 and above
  with 800X600 Resolution
   
National Informatics Centre
   Goa State Unit
Panaji Residency (Tourist Hostel), 6th Floor
Panaji - Goa., India
 Phone.No: +91-832-2225702,2420150
 Email : [26][EMAIL PROTECTED]
 You are Visitor No:  [nicgsu]
(from 01/01/2002)
   
   
   Copyright © 2002-2003 National Informatics Centre ([27]NIC), Goa State
  Unit, Panaji, Goa, India
   Disclaimer: The contents  of different websites hosted on this server
   are owned by the respective Departments/organisations and they may be
contacted for any further information or suggestion.

References

   Visible links
   1. http://www.goa.nic.in/about.htm
   2. http://www.goa.nic.in/serv.htm
   3. http://www.goa.nic.in/proj.htm
   4. http://www.goa.nic.in/inagurations/index.htm
   5. http://www.goa.nic.in/trai.htm
   6. http://www.goa.nic.in/infr.htm
   7. http://www.goa.nic.in/manp.htm
   8. http://www.goa.nic.in/feedbac.htm
   9. http://www.goa.nic.in/emailadd.htm
  10. http://slsagoa.nic.in/
  11. http://www.gpp.nic.in/
  12. http://ihmgoa.nic.in/
  13. http://goagovt.nic.in/
  14. http://citizenchartersofgoa.nic.in/
  15. http://gpp.nic.in/
  16. http://gpb.nic.in/
  17. http://goaresults.nic.in/
  18. http://ruralbazargoa.nic.in/
  19. http://goamuseum.nic.in/
  20. http://sisigoa.nic.in/
  21. http://niws.nic.in/
  22. http://passport.goa.nic.in/
  23. http://goatourism.nic.in/
  24. http://icarrc.goa.nic.in/
  25. http://etdc.goa.nic.in/
  26. mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
  27. http://www.nic.in/

   Hidden links:
  28. http://www.goa.nic.in/about.htm
  29. http://www.gpp.nic.in/





[GOANET] NEWS: BJP charms Goa's fourth estate...

2003-01-08 Thread Frederick Noronha
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BJP CHARMS GOA'S FOURTH ESTATE, SENDING DISSENT ON HOLIDAY

From Frederick Noronha

PANJIM: Congress gained a whole lot of friends and 'admirers' in Goa's
Fourth Estate during its long decade-and-half tenure in power here. But the
BJP, heading an hotch-potch coalition since late 2000 has already taken the
art of influencing the media to a new high in this small state.

Goa CM Manohar Parrikar has charmed former pro-Maoist student activists who
are now mediapersons, thrown sops to the journalistic community, accomodated
editors on various official bodies, and in a word placed a lid on the key
quarters capable of fuelling dissent or raise critical questions.

This has seriously impacted the boundaries of discussion on public life here.

More so because the slothful and corruption-prone Congress finds itself
unable to play the role of an Opposition party, its leaders stand attacked
by cases selectively filed -- though probably well justified -- by the
government, and some of its top leaders also face allegations of snuggling
up to the saffron party in power.

In his first year in office, the chief minister unveiled a state-funded
'pension scheme' for private-sector employed journos. But it later became
apparent that after the fanfare, the government lacked the finances or the
political will, or both, to adequately continue funding this scheme.

GUJ, the local journalists body, was also given a spacious premises in the
government-build building in Pato, the extension of state-capital Panjim
which once comprised paddy fields, and now is pretentiously claims to be
Goa's 'Nariman Point'.

But beyond the collective perks, individuals have also sought to be
pandered. One deal for an IT-related project was handed over to the kin of a
journalist, leaving the bewildered Opposition to ask whether any tendering
process had been followed.

Journalists seen as friendly to the government are seen as being accomodated
on official committees, including the recently-reconstituted Right to
Information committee. 

(Goa has an interesting RtI Act, which has been systematically subverted by
reluctant officials and politicians. After a fiery campaign, journalists
have themselves seldom utilised the potentially-utilised law to ferret out
information which could have ensured transparency.)

Editor Chandrakant Keni of the little-read Marathi daily Rashtramath has
been appointed to head the Goa NRI Facilitation Centre, though his link with
the subject remains unexplained. Some other editors have also been similarly
accomodated on official panels.

Prior to Goa's critical May 31 elections last year, a well-timed advert
called for voters to back stability...at a time when (the) sovereignty of
our nation is being threatened by enemies. It didn't name any party, but
was clearly aimed at boosting the BJP chances. 

This ad, calling on voters to think twice before casting your vote also
blasted tainted elements and those defecting (read Congressmen) and was
signed by three Goa editors -- Sharad Karkanis of Gomantak, Pramod
Khandeparkar of Gomantak Times and Keni of Rashtramath. 

Former Herald chief reporter Julio D'Silva was among the early journos to
side with the BJP, and contested twice the Chandor seat in Catholic-majority
Salcete taluka for the party. 

Another former scribe, Rajesh Singh, has been appointed to head the
long-politicised Department of Information; an appointment which was dragged
to the courts. Singh was press liaison officer to Goa chief minister
Parrikar before being made the information director.

Some scribes perceive this as just a different style of functioning by the
party in power; at least one senior union office bearer termed it a total
degeneration.  In news conferences, the alliances show up when mediapersons
deflect any attempts at raising critical questions by either 'adjourning'
the session arbitrarily or shifting gears to some other inocuous subject.

Interestingly, the press' capitulation has worsened the lack of an effective
Opposition in the state. Congress' ex-CM Luizinho Faleiro is seen by some
partymen as siding BJP CM Manohar Parrikar for his own political ends.

Former Speaker and long term Congress chief minister Pratapsing Rane's
stance -- and his go-slow in deciding on defection cases, while being
allowed to continue in Speakership by the BJP -- also left its impact.
Currently Rane is Opposition leader. 

Meanwhile, another local satrap, once vehemently critical of the BJP, ex-CM
Dr Wilfred de Souza, has been accomodated by the saffron party as the head
of the state planning board. It could be just a coincidence that this timed
with a sharp decline in his angry outbursts against the government headed by
the RSS-member turned IIT-engineer and politician Parrikar.

Commented a Mumbai

[GOANET] NEWS-GULF: Oman to give visa on arrival to Indians

2003-01-07 Thread Frederick Noronha
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Oman to give visa on arrival to Indians

From Indo-Asian News Service

Dubai, Jan 7 (IANS) Indian tourists will receive a three-week visa on
arrival in Oman as part of a move to attract visitors to the Muscat Festival
2003.

The Gulf News daily quoted a Muscat Municipality official as saying that
citizens of 65 countries will be given visas on arrival and India is
included in the list. The festival will feature Indian entertainers like
Shah Rukh Khan.

Khalil bin Abdullah Al Balushi, deputy director of information at Muscat
Municipality, said the move coincides with the festival, which opens
Wednesday.

The report said that no formal announcement has been made, but the Tourism
Department has already issued a circular to leading travel agencies in Oman.

The fee for a two-week visit visa is seven Omani riyals and it can be
extended for another week. This visa will be given at Oman's international
airports and the country's land border with the United Arab Emirates (UAE),
the report said.

According to the Times of Oman newspaper, depending on the success of the
issuance of visa on arrival to Indian passport-holders during the Muscat
Festival, the system may become a regular feature.

The report said the Omani government's latest initiative would attract more
affluent Indians towards Oman, which would be beneficial to both countries.

We have alerted our partners in India about this matter, the official
said.

Meanwhile, Muscat is readying for the 35-day festival, which was first held
in 1998. It was called off last year to show solidarity with the
Palestinians.

--Indo-Asian News Service









[GOANET] Place names...

2003-01-06 Thread Frederick Noronha
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 From: Sunila Muzawar [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 pronounced name for our beautiful capital. And while we are at it, we could 
 also alter the horribly English sounding names given to all other Goan 
 places. E.g. Calangute should be Kolngutey and Mapusa should be Mhapshyanh 
 and Margao should be Madgaon, etc. What a relief that would be to finally 
 get rid of the pseudo westernisation of Goan names. While we are at it, 
 maybe we could change the spelling of our language name from Konkani to 
 Konknii. ;-)

Correction, Sunila. Not Kolngutey, Mhapshyanh and Madgaon but Congutti,
Mapshea and Modganv... and surely people like Jorge Abreu Noronha could
give us more phonetically-correct spellings. My own education was mostly
in the phonetically-far-from-accurate English language. (That too, in Goa,
which makes it phonetically even more inaccurate!) 

Devangari to Roman/Latin script renderings tend to be prone to error, 
specially if done without the symbols (these are not practical
perhaps to implement) of the good old colonial times or the International
Phonetic Alphabet and Daniel Jones' Pronouncing Dictionary. 

The other way round, from Roman/Latin to Devanagiri is less prone to
error, since the latter script is more precise as to the exact sound  each
alphabet signifies. Of course, an agrument could be made that Devanagari
too could do with a handful of extra characters to represent the peculiar
sounds of Konkani (or Konknni, if you prefer) speech. 

Incidentally, my earlier suggestion was kind of tongue-in-cheek (going
into the future via the past, etc). But Ivor and others have given it the
seriousness it did not perhaps deserves. All that one was saying was that
different linguistic speakers use their own names for the place. Probably
some are more way-off the mark than others going by what is one the mouth
of the average speaker (for example, both Panaji *and* the Portuguese
Pangim, both very similar... and of course, the English-influenced Panjim). 

To everyone taking part in this debate: Are we willing to take into
account that Goa means different things to different people? Maybe there
are five or six or eight different Goas out there, created according to
the image and likeness of what we have in our imagination. 

These could be defined by geography, gender, caste, religion, and our own
experiences with emigration and colonialism.

The problem is that the expat-imagine Goa is quite a different animal from
what is the current ruling ideology in Goa itself. Likewise, writers (all
of us) are guilty of creating our own realities... These are complexities
which perhaps need to be acknowledged before plunging into the debate.FN




[GOANET] LINK: Dr Jose Pereira... finalising a couple of books

2003-01-06 Thread Frederick Noronha
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Dr Jose Pereira [EMAIL PROTECTED] the painter, writer, musicologist,
and man of many other roles has retired from Fordham University in the US in
September 2001, and has since kept very busy with his writing and painting
projects. 

Says he: I am bringing out a second edition of The Sacred Architecture of
Islam (first edition: Islamic Sacred Architecture, New Delhi 1994). I
visited Russia and the Ukraine in April-May, so that I have by now covered
most of the Baroque world.

Dr Pereira spent October 2002 in Goa. His second volume: 'Song of Goa:Mandos
of Union and Lamentation' is due to be published soon. He informed us
recently that books on Goa are also being currently written by Victor Rangel
Ribeiro (now based in Porvorim, Goa till March 2003) and Aurora Couto (who
has been at Carona, Aldona for some time now).

You can see his work on Borda's S. Joaquim sacristy frescoes online at the
address below. There is only one picture, that of the vault, but I will
have more pictures put it soon, says he.

http://www.fordham.edu/theology/Faculty/PereiraFrescoes.html

This is one of the senior generation of Goans who's knowledge is vast, and
range of knowledge is really amazing! Sometime back, I wrote on his work and
his paintings, following a couple of interviews with him at Campal and
Borda. You could find them online with a search for Jose + Pereira + Goa on
www.google.com --FN





[GOANET] NEWS-DELHI: First Indian diaspora meet will reflect its diversity

2003-01-05 Thread Frederick Noronha
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First Indian diaspora meet will reflect its diversity

From Indo-Asian News Service

New Delhi, Jan 4 (IANS) The extraordinary diversity of the Indian diaspora
will be reflected in the three-day meet of persons of Indian origin (PIOs)
here next week, with ethnic Indians returning to their roots from as far
apart as South Pacific islands to the Caribbean.

We have got about 250 French-speaking people and 75-90 Dutch-speaking
people attending the conference who do not speak English or Hindi. So, we
have engaged a private company to provide the services of interpreters,
J.C. Sharma, secretary in the external affairs ministry, told reporters.

The three-day meeting from Thursday is being jointly organised by the
ministry and the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry
(FICCI).

Sharma said the extraordinary diversity of the Indian diaspora would be at
full play at the meeting, which will be inaugurated by Prime Minister Atal
Bihari Vajpayee.

The Chinese diaspora is larger than ours but they don't have this kind of
global reach and diversity, Sharma added.

Nearly 1,500 PIOs from some 60 countries have confirmed their participation
in the meeting and the figure was expected to go up.

You know 57 people are attending the meeting from the Reunion Island, an
official connected with the meeting told IANS about the French colony in the
Indian Ocean, which has an ethnic mix of Africans, Indians, Chinese and
Malays.

They (Indians) speak none of the Indian languages, but still the pull of
the roots has drawn them to the meeting, the official said.

PIOs from obscure French colonies like the Caribbean islands of Martinique
and Guadeloupe and South Pacific island nation of Vanuatu are also attending
the meeting.

L.M. Singhvi, who headed a high-level panel to study the 20-million strong
diaspora spread across the world and recommend steps to forge constructive
ties between India, and PIOs, described them as pioneer achievers.

The Indians, who were taken from their homes as indentured labour by the
British colonialists to various parts of the world, had come up in those
countries through sheer dint of hard work, he said.

Indentured labour is only a euphemism for slavery and they had worked in
conditions of great hardship, he added.

He said the diaspora meeting is intended to be a starting point for a
serious dialogue in building a strong relationship between India and its
diaspora.

This is only a first step in a long journey. This is the first step towards
a comprehensive policy framework for persons of Indian origin everywhere,
he added.

--Indo-Asian News Service




[GOANET] NEWS-GULF: 40,000 Indians expect to use UAE amnesty

2003-01-03 Thread Frederick Noronha
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40,000 Indians expected to use UAE amnesty

From Indo-Asian News Service

Dubai, Jan 3 (IANS) Nearly 40,000 Indians are expected to avail themselves
of an amnesty for illegal immigrants in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) from
January 1, but the rush is yet to pick up.

Indian officials told IANS their embassy was yet to see a rush of Indian
workers seeking emergency certificates (ECs), as this is a holiday period
locally, and the mass migration is expected to begin next week.

About 35,000 to 40,000 Indians residing illegally in the UAE are expected to
exit the country during the four-month amnesty period. A similar amnesty in
1996 saw an exodus of 50,000 Indians.

The UAE has announced the long-awaited amnesty for illegal immigrants, which
will allow them to leave the country without facing punishment or fine. The
amnesty began on January 1 and will conclude on April 30.

The Indian consulate in Dubai has extended its working hours to expedite the
process of issuing ECs and travel permits, facilitating the exodus.

Indian Consul General George Joseph said the consulate had received over
3,000 applications for ECs -- a one-time, one-way passport for people who
have no valid documents to authenticate their identity as Indians -- and
travel permits.

He said as it takes time to process applications, it was in the best
interest of Indians who have no valid proof of their identity to apply as
fast as possible.

The consulate has teamed up with Indian welfare associations throughout the
emirates to set up mini-missions or centres from where EC and travel permit
applications can be forwarded to the consulate.

The consulate as well as the Indian embassy will issue standard
computer-generated ECs, cutting down on the time-consuming and cumbersome
procedures that were involved earlier.

Indian Airlines and Air-India have also set up their counters within the
premises of the Indian consulate in Dubai to offer concessional airfares to
those seeking amnesty.

At least 300,000 illegal immigrants are expected to leave the UAE under the
second amnesty to have been officially declared since 1996. In 1996, about
200,000 illegal immigrants left under the amnesty, which continued for six
months.

The amnesty seekers belong to three categories -- those who have overstayed,
those absconding from sponsors and those who have entered the country
illegally.

The UAE will out phasing out a total of 240,000 private sector workers, who
do not have proper educational qualifications, by focusing on labour and
recruitment policies, reports said.

Illiterate and under-qualified workers form 13.9 percent of the current
expatriate workforce.

Arab Gulf Cooperation Council (AGCC) states are working hard to cut their
dependence on expatriates through jobs-for-nationals programmes but will
have to continue relying on foreign workers for the next one or two decades.

The AGCC states now have a combined population of around 27 million, of
which expatriates account for 35 percent, with a high of around 75 percent
in the UAE and Qatar.

Bahrain has about 30 percent expatriates, while they account for 56 percent
in Kuwait and 27 percent each in Oman and Saudi Arabia.

--Indo-Asian News Service

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[GOANET] NEWS: Christian separatist group in Tripura target tribal Hindus

2003-01-03 Thread Frederick Noronha
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Christian separatist group in Tripura target tribal Hindus

By Syed Zarir Hussain, Indo-Asian News Service

Guwahati, Dec 31 (IANS) Tribal Hindu villagers in India's northeastern state
of Tripura Tuesday vowed to fight back alleged extortion demands by a
Christian separatist group, community leaders said.

Militants of the outlawed National Liberation Front of Tripura (NLFT) have
served extortion notices to hundreds of Hindu tribal villagers and
threatened to kill them if they don't pay up soon.

The notes were served only to Hindu villagers with warnings of capital
punishment to those who violated the diktat, Aswathama Jamatia, head priest
of Jamatia Hoda, an influential tribal Hindu group, told IANS by telephone.

The NLFT, fighting for an independent tribal homeland, is a predominantly
Christian group.

Police have confirmed the extortion demands to Hindu villagers in Tripura.

We have received some complaints in this regard, said a police official in
Tripura's state capital Agartala.

Community leaders say the NLFT was demanding three percent of the annual
earnings of all government employees as tax, besides charging between Rs.
2,000 and Rs 5,000 from farmers and other businessmen.

Villagers in remote areas have formed vigilante groups to foil the NLFT's
extortion drive.

People armed with sticks and other crude weapons, including bows and
arrows, patrol vulnerable villages to scare militants who come for extorting
money, said Rampada Jamatia, secretary of Jamatia Hoda. At no cost are we
going to pay the militants.

Tribal Hindus account for 22 percent of Tripura's 3.2 million people.
Christians are just about eight percent of the state's total population.

Tribal Hindu groups say the NLFT has been converting people to Christianity
at gunpoint.

We believe up to 5,000 tribal villagers were coerced into converting to
Christianity by the NLFT during the past couple of years, the head priest
said.

Community chiefs and religious heads of 19 tribes, who met recently, formed
a platform called the Tribal Culture Protection Committee to counter the
perceived militant threat.

The Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) ruled government in Tripura has
accused the church of boosting secessionist campaigns in the state.

Police in Tripura in 2002 arrested 10 church leaders on charges of colluding
with separatists in the killing of some CPI-M members.

Tripura Chief Minister Manik Sarkar, however, said his government does not
have hard evidence of the Christian missionaries' nexus with rebel groups.

The fact remains that militant groups have been targeting government
schools and non-Christian people, while institutions run by missionaries are
never touched, he said.

We want the Christian missionaries to make their stand clear and help us
fight militancy for the greater interest of the state.

Church leaders have denied the allegations.

In fact, a number of our priests and missionaries have been the target of
attacks by unidentified miscreants over the past couple of years, said Jong
Bahadur Debbarma, a church leader.

Instead of just accusing the church of having nexus with militants, the
Indian government should initiate a probe and punish the guilty.

The genesis of insurgency in Tripura can be traced back to the massive
influx of Bengali-speaking refugees when East Pakistan, now Bangladesh, was
created during India's partition in 1947.

The indigenous tribal people, who accounted for 95 percent of the Tripura
population in the 1931 census, are now just 30 percent.

More than 10,000 people have lost their lives to insurgency in Tripura
during the past two decades.

--Indo-Asian News Service


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[GOANET] Condolences: Aloysius and Deepika

2003-01-03 Thread Frederick Noronha
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Our sincere condolences to our Aloysius and Deepika, our regular posters
on GoaNet, on the loss of Hazel, Aloysius's wife and Deepika's mum. We
never met Hazel, but seeing the care and concern in this father-daughter
duo it's more than obvious that she was a great wife and mother.

Burma-returned Aloysius has been active on GoaNet, SaligaoNet and a number
of other Goa-related fora. Deepika, for the few who might not know them,
is a Mumbai-based social activist who has taken up a wide range of
concerns dealing with the environment, the law and the rights of the
marginalised. She represents the younger generation of Goan women, who
fought in a patriarchial society to get their voices heard and contribute
in equal measure as (and often, in greater measure than) their menfolk.

May both of these fine people have the courage to bear the loss of their
dear one, knowing that their work is not going unappreciated! FN

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[GOANET] NEWS: Goa may get India's first Skybus network

2003-01-02 Thread Frederick Noronha
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Goa may get India's first Skybus network

From Indo-Asian News Service

Mumbai, Jan 2 (IANS) India's first Skybus project, involving buses on rails
hanging above the ground, may go on stream in one of India's hottest tourist
destinations, Goa.

This was announced Thursday by the Konkan Railway Corporation Ltd (KRCL)
which is promoting the over Rs.3.5 billion project.

The project will be funded by the central government. Prime Minister Atal
Bihari Vajpayee gave it the nod during his vacation in Goa this week, KPCL
said in a statement.

The first phase of the project would see state capital Panaji connected with
the commercial town of Mapusa, 12 km away. In the next phase, Panaji would
be connected with the posh Dona Paula neighbourhood, a distance of seven
kilometres.

The concept, developed by the Konkan Railway Corporation, is an interesting
and innovative approach to deal with the challenges of urban mass
transportation, Vajpayee said in a statement released by KRCL.

This concept should be implemented on a pilot basis on a small scale, said a
statement issued by the Prime Minister's Office and quoted by KRCL.

I endorse this view, Vajpayee said, adding: The state government wishes
that Goa be considered for the experimental project.

The Skybus is installed hanging on rails, which are placed nearly two meters
from the ground. The infrastructure for the Skybus would be installed over
road dividers on existing roads, as a result of which no land acquisition is
required.

Supporters of the project say traffic on these roads would not be disturbed.
The coaches would be air-conditioned and would have automatic sliding doors.
The stations would be located eight metres above the ground and can be
accessed by stairs and elevators.

According to sources, the distance between stations would be small to
increase accessibility. There would be buses every two minutes and the
operations would be handled from a control room.

The Skybus would travel at an average speed of 45 km an hour. Each bus would
carry around 125 passengers. An average fare of 15 paise per km has been
calculated at present rates.

Freight transport has been proposed at night when passengers are fewer.

According to KRCL officials, the central government has cleared the Skybus
proposal for implementation in Mumbai, Delhi, Kolkata, Chennai, Bangalore,
Pune, Ahmedabad and Hyderabad.

But governments in states like Maharashtra are keen on having an underground
railway system for big cities like Mumbai along the lines of the Delhi
Metro, which was inaugurated last month.

--Indo-Asian News Service

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[GOANET] NEWS: 2300 images of a deity to mark the New Year

2003-01-01 Thread Frederick Noronha
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2003 images of a deity to mark the New Year

From Frederick Noronha

PANJIM, Jan 1:  Thousands entered the New Year in the tourist-destination
of Goa by bursting colourful midnight fireworks. But Raviraj Naik spent
hours prior to the event piecing together an unusual work of art to the
deity he adores.

This 21-year-old electronics student from the North Goa town of Mapusa,
eight kms from here, put together a computer-art painting with some 2003
images of Ganesh, the god of good enterprise and one of the most popular
deities of western India.

Using the computer and tricks of digital art, the Goan student welded
together 2003 images of the deity using software like Photoshop and
PaintShop Pro, he told IANS here.

It took me 10 hours and 10 minutes to do this, says he.

In actual size, the image is 40 inches x 40 inches.

Naik is a devotee of Ganesh, and has been in the news earlier for unusual
artistic work related to his favourite deity. He is an avid devotee of
Ganesh, and has used media such as canvas, oil paint, plain paper, digital
tools, insense sticks, stone, and clay for portraying his favourite subject.

Recently, he displayed how even junked CDs (compact discs) could be used to
carve out images of Lord Ganesh. Some time back he put 65 small and
scattered images of Ganapati tightly fitting into each other, to create a
larger one. 

Now, with the new year 2003, he hopes his new achievement would take him to
the record books.

Lord Ganesh, or Ganesha, is also the god of practical wisdom, the remover of
obstacles and the god of scribes invoked at the beginning of books. Some
will place offerings near his statue before setting off on a journey,
opening a new business or undertaking wedding negotiations. 

Some of his work is visible at www.jaishreeganesh.org.  (GoaNet)

CopyLeft FN 2003. May be reproduced provided entire text is kept intact.

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[GOANET] EXPATS-KERALA: Expat issues to be taken up with Delhi

2003-01-01 Thread Frederick Noronha
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Kerala to take up expatriate issues with New Delhi

By Sanu George, Indo-Asian News Service

Thiruvananthapuram, Jan 1 (IANS) Kerala is taking up issues related to its
non-residents in right earnest, alarmed at reports that a large number of
expatriates will return from the Middle East this year.

Chief Minister A.K. Antony said this here Wednesday after the cabinet
decided to appoint a five-member ministerial committee to start talks with
New Delhi and the Middle East where most of Kerala's expatriate population
is settled.

Reports that nearly 25,000 Keralites are likely to return from the United
Arab Emirates (UAE) before April this year have alarmed the government.

The urgent attention is due to news reports that there will be a mass
exodus from the UAE soon. Close to 25,000 Keralites are likely to return to
the state, following an amnesty that is being extended to all people
residing there without proper documents, said Antony.

The five-member ministerial delegation will soon start talks with all
concerned within India and outside. The state Minister for Non-Resident
Affairs M.M. Hassan will head the team.

Reports indicate that the government is also mulling having a panel of
leading lawyers with experience in international labour laws in case
Keralits who have to leave the Middle East have a problem in realising wage
arrears.

Among other issues that will be taken up by the committee with the federal
government is a probable reduction of airline fares for those who cannot
afford air tickets up to Mumbai from the Gulf on their way to Kerala.

The committee is also expected to have discussions with the railway ministry
to make arrangements for returnees from Mumbai to Kerala on special trains.

Separate cells are also expected at the three international airports in
Kozhikode, Kochi and this capital city with more counters to handle the
sudden rush.

Every year the state receives close to Rs.35 million from the nearly 1.6
million non-resident Keralites, mostly settled in the Middle East.

The number of Keralites in the UAE is estimated to be around 500,000.

Antony also plans to take up recommendations of the Kelkar Committee on the
imposition of tax on non-resident Indians (NRIs).

This is like killing the duck that lays the golden egg. At no cost are we
going to allow this because then the entire state economy would crumble,
said Antony.

But that does not mean that we are going to oppose all the recommendations
of the Kelkar Committee.  All those which are detrimental to the interests
of the state like the tax on NRIs will be strongly opposed.

--Indo-Asian News Service

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[GOANET] NEWS-DUBAI: NRI slams Indian panel's tax reform suggestion on NORstatus

2003-01-01 Thread Frederick Noronha
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NRI slams Indian panel's tax reform suggestion on NOR status

From Indo-Asian News Service

Dubai, Jan 2 (IANS) A prominent expatriate in the United Arab Emirates (UAE)
has warned that remittances from non-resident Indians (NRIs) may be hit if
the suggestions of a panel to impose tax on Non-Ordinary Resident (NOR)
Indians is accepted.

Bharatbhai Shah, a businessman and social worker, says the suggestions of an
Indian government-appointed panel to do away with NOR status for NRIs will
discourage remittances and investment back home.

The committee, which submitted its report on December 27, has suggested a
slew of radical measures including lowering of corporate and personal tax
with an aim to rationalise the tax structure and boost government revenue.

The recommendations of the panel, headed by Vijay Kelkar, an adviser to the
finance ministry, was set up six months ago to prepare a roadmap for
initiating sweeping reforms in the complex Indian taxation structure.

According to Shah, NOR status has been beneficial to both NRIs and India as
it encourages returning expatriates to bring all their savings back.

The NOR status has been a positive policy initiative that has always
encouraged NRI investors to participate in the development of India,
something seen by the unexpected success of the Resurgent India Bond and the
Millennium Deposit Fund to which NRIs contributed over $12 billion, Shah
told IANS.

The removal of NOR status will be detrimental to the interest of NRIs who
may, due to some unforeseen circumstances, become resident (by staying more
than 183 days a year in India), if the Kelkar committee recommendations are
implemented, he pointed out.

Shah said many NRIs would be forced to keep their funds outside India, while
some would not even declare their funds in India.

It would also deter NRIs from making further investments in industry and
business in the country and may lead to the withdrawal of technically
qualified and competent NRI professionals from assignments in India.

Shah says some of the inconveniences NRIs would have to face if NOR status
was removed include losing the right to be exempted from income tax in
respect of their non-resident external rupee account and foreign currency
non-resident account deposits.

Such deposits would have to be converted to Indian rupees under the existing
rules of the Reserve Bank of India.

He added that the move would also have an impact on the Overseas Corporate
Body (OCB) owned and controlled by NRIs as members would be treated at par
with companies resident in India.

The NRIs would also lose the benefits they derive from holding, owning,
possessing or transferring foreign exchange, foreign security or immovable
property situated outside India, Shah said.

There would be also a setback to investments that NRIs and OCBs do on a
repatriable basis. The benefits of remittance of income on non-repatriable
investments, which NRI and OCBs are entitled to, would also not be available
to them, he added.

But prominent non-resident Indians in the UAE have welcomed the Kelkar panel
report for its bold approach to taxation reforms.

B.R. Shetty, vice chairman and managing director of New Medical Centre
Group, said the recommendation to bring the agricultural income of
non-agriculturists under the tax bracket would certainly reduce frivolous
agriculturists.

He said another welcome recommendation was the identification of issues on
taxation of non-residents.

--Indo-Asian News Service

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[GOANET] NEWS: Vajpayee's presence keeps Gujarati new year revellers off Goa

2002-12-31 Thread Frederick Noronha
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Vajpayee's presence keeps Gujarati New Year revellers off Goa

By Sukrat Desai, Indo-Asian News Service

Ahmedabad, Dec 31 (IANS) The tight security in balmy Goa, where Prime
Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee is ringing in the New Year, has prompted many
Gujaratis to cancel their customary yearend celebrations in the tiny coastal
state.

Hundreds of affluent Gujaratis as well as their relatives and friends in
Mumbai go to Goa every year for joint New Year celebrations, but the heavy
security on account of the prime minister's presence there has forced many
to change their plans this time.

Destinations in Gujarat and the adjoining coastal territories of Daman and
Diu have emerged as the favourite alternatives.

For instance, Mumbai resident Anosh Joshi is exploring the wild in Gujarat
this year on the invitation of his friend Jayesh Shah.

Though Goa is usually our destination for New Year celebrations, this time,
considering the tight security, we had a change of mind, Shah said.

Added Joshi: Jayesh invited me to spend New Year's eve with flamingos in
the Little Rann of Kutch. Being an avid bird watcher, this idea appealed to
me so much that I decided to stay away from alcohol and wild partying and
preferred the serene company of birds.

Suketu Thakkar, another Mumbai resident, will be welcoming the New Year in
picturesque Diu, a federally administered territory off the Saurashtra
coast, along with his Gujarati friend.

My friend Himanshu Vyas invited me to Gujarat. He was concerned about the
tight security measures on the prime minister's visit to Goa and told me
that it might play spoilsport, Thakkar told IANS.

Said Vyas: I told Thakkar that Goa would be an expensive affair. As it is
it gets costlier on New Year's eve. I suggested Diu because it is cheaper as
far as accommodation, food and alcohol are concerned.

Thakkar jumped at the suggestion. I was excited about Diu as I heard it was
like Goa, with sprawling beaches and cheap alcohol.

Some also headed for Daman, another tiny federally administered territory
bordering south Gujarat.

Mumbai resident Dinesh Lakhtaria will be in Daman on the invitation of his
business partner Sameer Nayak.

Alcohol is cheap and the beaches are also on the lines of Goa in Daman. So
why waste money when there are chances of the prime minister's visit playing
spoilsport in Goa? said Lakhtaria.

Vajpayee and his family are spending their yearend vacation on a pristine
beach in south Goa. Other top personalities like Deputy Prime Minister L.K.
Advani are also ringing in the New Year in Goa, sending the local security
apparatus into a tizzy.

Ahead of the yearend holidays, Israel had warned that its citizens
vacationing in Goa for the New Year might become the targets of a terrorist
attacks.

According to reports, the presence of VIPs and the threat perception has
meant constant patrolling of Goa's golden beaches by security personnel and
armed cops and frequent frisking of vacationers, somewhat dampening the
holiday mood.

--Indo-Asian News Service

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[GOANET] NEWS: Hindutva is secularism, says Vajpayee in his musings

2002-12-31 Thread Frederick Noronha
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Hindutva is secularism, says Vajpayee in his musings

From Indo-Asian News Service

Panaji, Dec 31 (IANS) Indian Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee Tuesday
defended and broadened the political concept of Hindutva, saying it was
not antithetical to secularism.

In his annual musings, issued from idyllic Goa where he is holidaying to
mark the advent of 2003, Vajpayee also asserted that Pakistan's efforts at
breaking Jammu and Kashmir from India were doomed to failure.

But his 2,200-word statement sought to emphasize the organic link between
Hindutva - which critics say is synonymous with Hindu supremacy - and
secularism, a constitutional part and parcel of India.

Secularism is pitted against Hindutva, under the belief that the two are
antithetical to one another, he said. This is incorrect and untenable.

Secularism is a concept of the state, enjoining upon it the duty to show
respect for all faiths and to practise no discrimination among citizens on
the basis of their beliefs, he pointed out.

In this sense, India has been secular since the beginning of her known
history. We chose to remain wedded to secularism even when Pakistan was
carved out on the basis of the spurious and communal two-nation theory. This
could not have been possible if the majority of Indians were not secular.

On the other hand, he said, Hindutva, which presents a 'viraat darshan'
(broad, all-encompassing view) of human life, is being projected by some
people in a narrow, rigid and extremist manner - an unfortunate and
unacceptable interpretation that runs totally contrary to its true spirit.

Hindutva is an integral understanding of the entire Creation, showing the
way both to the Here and the Hereafter. It emphasizes the inseparable
relationship between the individual and society, as well as between man's
material and spiritual needs. Hindutva is liberal, liberating and brooks no
ill will, hatred or violence among different communities on any ground.

Critics of Hindu groups such as the Rashtraiya Swayamsewak Sangh (RSS), the
ideological mentor of Vajpayee's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), say Hindutva
is a rightwing concept that underlines the supremacy of the Hindu religion
over all others in multi-religious India.

Vajpayee challenged such a definition.

We need to affirm and promote that true understanding of Hindutva which is
forward-looking, not one that seeks to take us back; that which makes us
capable of meeting the challenges of the modern world, not one that is stuck
in the grooves of the past; that which is reform-minded, and not one that
protects obscurantism and injustice, against which all the reformers of the
past have fought.

If understood and practised in this enlightened sense, which is how Swami
Vivekananda (the early 20th philosopher-saint) and other great patriots
propounded it, the current controversy over Hindutva will be seen as wholly
unnecessary.

There is no difference between such Hindutva and
'Bharateeyata'(Indianness), since both are expressions of the same 'chintan'
(thought). Both affirm that India belongs to all, and all belong to India.

It means that all Indians have equal rights and equal responsibilities. It
entails recognition of our common national culture, which is enriched by all
the diverse religious and non-religious traditions in India.

Vajpayee utilized the opportunity to hit out at Pakistan for targeting
India with terrorism, inspired by religious extremism.

Innocent children, women and men are being routinely killed, temples are
stormed, our symbols of democracy are attacked, and our security forces are
challenged - all in the name of a 'holy religious war' and 'freedom
struggle'.  This campaign of jehadi terrorism, too, is doomed to fail.

He added: I am convinced that some day - hopefully soon - the people and
rulers of Pakistan will realize the futile and counter-productive nature of
its Kashmir policy.

Vajpayee called upon Pakistan to stop cross-border terrorism and abandon
its insistence on the 'centrality' of the Kashmir issue. Let our two
countries agree to promote mutually beneficial trade and economic ties,
strengthen cultural relations, and encourage greater people-to-people
contacts.

Once our two peoples experience the fruits of a tension-free and
cooperative environment, we will be able to see the Kashmir issue in its
proper dimension and arrive at an amicable and lasting solution.

The prime minister also dwelt on the achievements and plans for the future
of his multi-party coalition government that took power in 1998 and stormed
back to power the next year again.

He said his government was engaged in a Connectivity Revolution, which
covered rail and air transport, the telecom sector, Internet and IT, the
country's numerous rivers.

I would, however, place a 

[GOANET] NEWS: Goan to the Gulf -- there's no easy road either way

2002-12-31 Thread Frederick Noronha
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GOAN TO THE GULF: THERE'S NO EASY ROAD EITHER WAY

By Frederick Noronha

PANJIM, Dec 31: From the time they leave home, to getting education for
their children, and catching a flights home (and even in times of the
occasional case of shipping a dead body back) Goa's Gulf-based expats have
to put up with a number of difficulties.

(We have taken up these issues repeatedly in recent years) but not much
could be achieved due to the frequent changes in the Government of Goa over
the last several years, said Alex Wilson Coelho and Rabindra Pimenta, two
Gulf-based expats who highlighted the emigrant community's woes here.

Their appeal came during the recently-held Overseas' Goan Convention. A
detailed listing of the Gulf Goans' grievances was put up by them on behalf
of the Goan Welfare Society in Kuwait (www.goa-world.net/gws/)

Some issues raised include:

PROFESSIONAL SEATS: Access to seats for NRI Goans in professional colleges
has long been sought. Domicile rules -- meant to protect the interest of
locals -- seem to be cutting into the interest of those who migrate from
Goa, a state with a high level of out-migration.

Expats say they are willing to pay the higher fees for the same. In any
case, they point out, some expat parents are paying high amounts for seats
in nearby Karnataka, and would not mind coping with the more reasonable
fees-structure for non-aided professional colleges in India itself.

Ironically, engineering education in Goa has expanded vastly in recent
years; and there are now three degree engineering colleges as against the
earlier one. 

(Educators fear they would run short of students, even as an industrial
group is planning to open another 600-seat engineering college -- admission
on an all-India basis, with some 10% promised to Goans. But it is not clear
whether there are domicile, and other roadblocks, which stop NRI Goan
students from taking up such seats.)

But the seats should be open to students passing out of the CBSE Board, they
Gulf-based expats say. In addition, they point out that degrees of the Goa
University are not being recognised by educational institutions in Kuwait
and other Gulf countries.

FLYING BACK: Expats also want that the Gulf-Goa route be thrown open to
other airlines, apart from Indian-Airlines or Air-India, which have only a
limited number of flights each week and are seen by them as charging
passengers on this route exorbitant fees.

Said the Goa Welfare Society memorandum, a copy of was made available here:
A time has come when other airlines, such as Kuwait Airways, Gulf Air,
Emirates Airlines, Oman Air, Qatar Airways, Saudi Arabian Airlines Airlines,
etc, should be given the option to operate their flights directly to Goa.

Expats voiced concern over the location of a new airport at Mopa, in an
extreme corner of remote northern Goa's Pernem taluka. This, they said, was
unfortunate as a majority of Goans in the Gulf hail from the south of Goa
and quite a large hail from the central part of Goa, leaving those of the
extreme north to a very small number.

They argued that out of over 150,000 Goans living in the entire Gulf region
-- Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, UAE, Qatar, Oman, Iraq and Iran -- some
ninety percent come from south and central Goa. 

Needless to say, a huge number of Goans will be subjected to undue
suffering if the present airport is shifted to Mopa. Dabolim airport has
been servicing the needs of the entire population for several decades, and
hence there is absolutely no need to shift the same to any other place,
argues the petition.

On the issue of transporting bodies of those who die abroad, the Goan
Welfare Society pressed for the Goa government to provide free
transportation of human remains through Air India and Indian Airlines. 

This should be done, they contended, in consideration of the economic
growth of the state of Goa through the foreign remittances of savings of the
Gulf Goans.

FACILITIES SOUGHT: The Gulf-based expats asked the Goa government for an
allocation of suitable land to build their own NRI City with full-fledged
infrastructure without any hindrance to the Government of Goa.

They sought a social security fund for those returning, a group
life-insurance for NRI Goans, and better attempts to maintain detailed
records of countrywide expat Goans scattered across the globe. This could be
done through Indian missions abroad, they suggested.

Also mooted was an NRI Goans Forum -- to deal with the needs of the tens of
thousands settled abroad from this region that has been emigration-prone for
many decades, if not centuries. For this purpose, a special cell needs be
opened with some NRIs as its members, it was mooted.

IMMIGRATION: Current immigration laws require 'immigration clearance' from
all Indians who

[GOANET] Foreign exchange... Central grants...

2002-12-31 Thread Frederick Noronha
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Without getting caught into the debate below, I'd like to point to some
inconsistencies in arguments put forward:

* Foreign exchange earnings are a notional concept. If Goa earns foreign
  which goes to New Delhi, it does not necessarily mean that Goa is/was
  being bled by the latter. After all, foreign exchange only allows one
  to decide priorities on what such (once-scarce) foreign-currency 
  resources should be used for, internationally. It is not 
  the equivalent of actual earnings.

  Take the case of mining -- it brought in a lot of 'foreign exchange' for
  Goa, which then went to Delhi's common kitty. This does not mean that
  the money itself was taken away -- it stayed in the pockets of
  private mine-owners in Goa. Only that, the Yen, D-Mark, Dollars or
  whatever went to Delhi, and the private mineowners got rupees instead.
  (The environment got nothing..., but that is another matter completely
  being overlooked by this emotive debate. Whether mining-workers gained
  or lost, and whether local communities paid the price by way of 
  increased TB, etc is an issue that neither side of the 1961-gap
  seems to be focussing on... From a Goa perspective, these are critical
  issues.)

  Same is the case with tourism or expat remittances (while the
  positive benefits of this is clear, there are arguable also some
  negative fallouts -- the dependency syndrome, inflation... probably
  one of the factors in making Goa one of the costliest states in India).

* There are other issues which need to be better understood.
  Understanding shrouded-in-mystery state finances are a complex
  affair. Just because the Centre repeatedly pointed to the
  grants it gave Goa, does not mean that it was actually subsidising
  the existance of post-1961 Goa. Colonial Portugal too made similar
  claims (that retaining Goa was costing them money), but fought
  tooth-and-nail to stay on.

  What about the fact that the decision to have an over-bloated
  bureaucracy seems to have got the political support from 
  governments both at Delhi and Goa? Or that political
  corruption has been tolerated for long years? Or the reality
  that even under colonial rule, Goa's per capita income (of course,
  a misleading figure in itself) was significantly higher than that
  of neighbouring states or of most other regions? Today, Goa is
  staying afloat economically with a hugh debt burden.  Liquor is also
  a major source of revenue for the government. A closer study of
  how-the-rupee-comes and how-the-rupee-goes from the state exchequer
  (assuming this reflects a realistic picture) would give a deeper
  insight.

Once we decide which side of the debate we are on, it's convenient perhaps
to find suitable arguments to back our stand. But these are not
necessarily an accurate reflection of reality. Terms like 'invasion' and
even 'Liberation' tend to have emotive overtones. Perhaps the question we
need to be asking is how Portuguese colonialism and post-1961 change have
affected Goa and her people (not just *us*, but all sections). It's
not as one-sided as made out to be. This is a complex,
yet-to-be-understood balance sheet that needs to be drawn up. This is a
difficult task; not simply because different segments got affected in
disparate ways, but they also *feel* and *believe* that they got affected
in diverse ways. 

Other viewpoints/corrections to the above welcome. FN 


 --__--__--
 
 Message: 5
 From: Nagesh Bhatcar [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Goa has certainly been one of the big contributors to India's Foreign
 Exchange, due to a lot of remittances from overseas. However, there are
 a lot of misconceptions about the revenue generation from Goa and its
 industries. In the 80s when Goa was on the verge of getting a statehood,
 the biggest problem for the Central Government was to see how Goa could
 survive by generating its own revenue. I had met the Dy. Director of
 Accounts just before Goa's statehood and he told me that of the entire
 Goan budget of 100 crores, 80 crores used to come from the Centre! 80%
 of the money had to come from Delhi, because Goa did not have the
 infrastructure to generate such revenues! This high percentage of
 funds allocation to Goa, was by virtue of its being a Union Territory!
 I know that at the time of granting the Statehood, some arrangement
 was worked out to provide Goa with the necessary cash.
 
 I do not know what the present arrangements are between the Centre and
 the Goa Government. But, it would be wrong to infer that Goa is being
 ripped off by the rest of India!

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[GOANET] NEWS: PM... in Goa

2002-12-30 Thread Frederick Noronha
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PM working on musings 

Agencies/Panaji 

As is his wont in the past, Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee, who is holidaying 
here, is also working on musings, similar to the ones he had penned at Kumarakom in 
Kerala in 2000.
 
The Prime Minister is not merely holidaying in Goa, he is also working on some 
musings, PMO sources said Monday.
 
The sources said his writings would be released Tuesday.
 
Vajpayee arrived here Sunday on a four-day holiday to Goa. 
 
http://www.dailypioneer.com/indexn12.asp?main_variable=FLASHfile_name=cap2%2Etxtcounter_img=2

--

PM at Parashuram’s beachhead 
FREDERICK NORONHA 
  
Vajpayee  
Panaji, Dec. 29: The Goa seafront Atal Bihari Vajpayee has chosen on his way down from 
vacation spots among the mountains was also the destination of an arrow shot by 
another Brahmin.

Benaulim, a former fishing village in southern Goa where the Prime Minister reached 
today for a four-day holiday, is supposed to be the place where the arrow of the fiery 
Parashuram — considered an incarnation of Vishnu — is supposed to have fallen, making 
the coast recede.

The name Benaulim is believed to have been derived from bana (bow) and halli (the 
Kannada-influenced word for village). The legend goes that Parashuram fought back the 
Kshatriyas along the west coast and invited Brahmin settlers.

The last time Vajpayee had taken a vacation near waters was in 2000 in Kerala’s 
backwater-ringed Kumarakom. He had then penned the famed Kumarakom Musings, through 
which he sought to re-establish his secular credential after a series of ambiguous 
statements.

Since then, he had picked Manali for his holidays. Vajpayee’s return to the south 
coincides with another — and more polarised — round of debate about secularism in the 
wake of the Gujarat poll results. It was not known whether the Prime Minister would 
use the four days to pen more musings, but officials were quick to underscore that 
there would not be “any official engagements” during the vacation.

The Prime Minister’s touchdown also marks the beginning of a steady flow of VIPs to 
Goa, despite an alert by Israeli intelligence of a possible terrorist strike during 
the Christmas-New Year season.

Vajpayee’s deputy, L.K. Advani, is expected to follow on January 2. Besides, 20 other 
Union ministers are also planning to visit Goa.

Vajpayee, who arrived at 1.20 pm, is scheduled to stay in the Taj Exotica hotel in 
South Goa, a newer entrant in the tourism sector compared to North Goa. While the 
north entered the global tourism arena in the sixties, the south started exploring its 
tourism potential only as late as the eighties.

Some of these areas, particularly around Salcete and Canacona, are still sylvan and 
palm-fringed. This contrasts starkly with the cluttered North Goa coast.

Delhi has projected the Prime Minister’s visit to Goa as a boon for tourism. However, 
residents are gearing up for New Year celebrations cramped by the heightened security 
because of the high-profile visits.

Two companies of a Central paramilitary force have been brought in to enhance security 
during Vajpayee’s four-day visit. Machine gun-toting policemen have been posted on 
some beaches, while Rapid Action Force personnel were deployed at some popular tourist 
locations.

The Goa government has said Vajpayee’s visit would send out the signal that things are 
“under control” in the state.

On his arrival at the INS Hansa airport at Dabolim, Goa’s only airport, the Prime 
Minister was greeted by the entire state Cabinet. He then took a helicopter to 
Benaulim, which lies 15 km further south. 
 
http://www.telegraphindia.com/1021230/asp/nation/story_1526616.asp

--
*
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[GOANET] NEWS-GOA: Goa: A success story in uniform civil code

2002-12-30 Thread Frederick Noronha
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[GOANET] NEWS-AP: India-Christmas

2002-12-30 Thread Frederick Noronha
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NEW DELHI, India (AP) -- Bittoo Kapoor, an accountant and devout
Hindu, never starts her day without lighting an incense stick and
offering prayers to her favorite Hindu deity.

But come December, Kapoor begins planning for Christmas -- buying
presents, baking cakes and planning parties.

It doesn't matter if I'm a Hindu. Christmas stands for love,
affection, sharing, renewing family bonds. It's a festival for
everyone, Kapoor said as she shopped for tree decorations at New
Delhi's upscale Ansal Plaza mall.

In predominantly Hindu India, a rise in militant Hindu nationalism has
been matched by a growing enthusiasm for celebrating Christmas with
all the trimmings.

Equally surprising, perhaps, is that Hindu militants, who in recent
years have taken to opposing Christian missionaries and the church,
don't seem to bothered by the growing popularity of Christmas.

Not surprisingly, however, are the many echoes of complaints heard in
the West about Christmas becoming commercialized.

The world over, the profound message of social justice symbolized by
the birth of Jesus Christ is being overtaken by consumerism. And that
is what you're getting to see here as well, Swami Agnivesh, a Hindu
theologian and social activist, said Friday.

As satellite television and free markets have opened India to outside
influences, the Christmas culture has rushed in.

With the approach of Bada Din, or big day as Christmas is called in
the Hindu language, shops fill with Christmas decorations, shiny
silver bells, stars and twinkling lights.

Shopworkers dress up in Santa costumes and beards, ringing bells to
draw in shoppers. Flower shops do brisk business with Christmas trees,
both real and fake, while perpetual Christmas favorites such as
Jingle Bells ring out in elevators and telephones.

Every year the demand for trees goes up. Earlier, I'd get real pine
trees from the Himalayan foothills. Now we get these real-looking
trees from China, said Suresh Gupta, pointing to the neat row of
collapsible plastic trees outside his shop.

Christmas, for me, is a festival like any Hindu festival. I do want
my son to get to know other traditions, said Kitty Tawakley, a New
Delhi resident, balancing armloads of Christmas gifts at the end of a
daylong shopping spree.

The popularity of Christmas does not extend to the religious themes
associated with the festival. It's only Christians who attend midnight
church services on Christmas Eve and nativity scenes can be seen only
in Christian institutions and churches.

Agnivesh, the theologian, doesn't think the rise of Christmas suggests
greater openness or tolerance. He ascribes it to the rise of the
Indian middle class.

These very people will be out on the street tomorrow, forcing the
slogan of Hindutva (Hindu-ness) on us, he said.

Christians account for only 2.4 percent of India's 1 billion
population. Christians are the majority only in Nagaland and Mizoram,
two small states in India's remote northeast. Christians are a third
of the population in the southern states of Kerala and Goa.

Most Hindus dismiss apprehensions about nationalism by pointing to
India's centuries-old diversity of religions and sects, and the fact
that India has been officially and constitutionally secular since
gaining independence from Britain in 1947.

Celebrating Christmas doesn't reduce my faith in Hinduism. If
anything, it makes us more generous, more loving to each other. That's
what I want my children to learn, Kapoor said.

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[GOANET] NEWS-DELHI: Over 1200 delegates to attend diaspora meet

2002-12-30 Thread Frederick Noronha
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Over 1,200 delegates to attend diaspora meet

From Indo-Asian News Service

New Delhi, Dec 30 (IANS) The prime minister of Mauritius, a former prime
minister of Fiji and a Malysian cabinet minister are among the 1,200 people
of Indian origin (PIOs) and non-resident Indians (NRIs) who will attend the
first-ever meeting of the Indian diaspora here January 9-11.

The external affairs ministry and the Federation of Indian Chambers of
Commerce and Industry (FICCI) -- organisers of Pravasi Bharatiya Divas, or
Diaspora Day -- said Monday that they expected the number of participants to
go up substantially before the meeting, described as the largest gathering
of the global Indian family.

The meeting coincides with the anniversary of the return of Mahatma Gandhi
to India on January 9, 1915, after almost two decades in South Africa and is
aimed at recognising the contribution of the Indian diaspora in the
political, social, academic and cultural fields.

Mauritius Prime Minister Anerood Jugnauth will deliver a special address at
the opening ceremony. Former Fijian prime minister Mahendra Pal Chaudhury,
Malyasian Works Minister S. Samy Vellu and a number of prominent NRIs and
PIOs will attend the meeting.

They include Nobel laureates Amartya Sen and V.S. Naipaul, Lord Bhikhu
Parekh of Britain and Deepak Jain, dean of the Kellogg School of Management.

From India, the participants in the meeting, to be inaugurated by Prime
Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee, will include politicians, businesspersons,
bureaucrats and leaders in various fields.

The inspiration behind Pravasi Bharatiya Divas is to foster the bond
between Indians worldwide, provide all people of Indian origin with the
opportunity to renew ties with their ancestral land and build up new
alliances and explore new avenues of cooperation, FICCI secretary general
Amit Mitra said.

It will further encourage and increase the share of foreign direct
investment of our diaspora, resulting in a beneficial and interactive impact
on the Indian economy as has happened in the case of China, he added.

The three-day meet will include discussions on topics of interests to the
diaspora and a cultural fiesta representing India's vibrant heritage of
music culture and cinematic extravaganza.

The inaugural session will be marked by an invocation by two greats of
Indian music, sitar maestro Ravi Shankar and shehnai exponent Bismillah
Khan.

The focus of the plenary session on the opening day will be: India and the
diaspora - forging a constructive relationship and  Science and
Technology.

On January 10, Deputy Prime Minister L.K. Advani will interact with the
delegates. The plenary session on that day will cover Culture, language,
literature, films and the diasporic identity, Voluntary sector and
development: Diaspora and the emerging challenge in India's social
development - Role of Pravasi Bharatiyas, and Science and technology-
networking for excellence.

On the final day, the meeting will discuss Indian states, leveraging the
diaspora and opportunities in defence and homeland security research and
development.

--Indo-Asian News Service

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[GOANET] NEWS-CONVENTION: Goans across the globe have diverse problems...

2002-12-29 Thread Frederick Noronha
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GOANS ACROSS THE GLOBE HAVE DIVERSE PROBLEMS, IN VARYING SHAPE

From Frederick Noronha

PANJIM, Dec 29: Like the blind men of Hindoostan, the authorities trying to
map out the problems and needs of Goa's expat communities are facing a tough
time in defining the problem. 

So, a voluntary group based in South Goa's Margao town, one of the focal
points of migration out of Goa, had some tips on what needs to be done.

From unscrupulous recruitment agents, to harrowing experiences at the local
Passport Office, the sense of insecurity, difficulties with their properties
back home, road-blocks in setting up their businesses... these are just some
of the many problems that expat Goans face.

The South Goa Public Interest Action Group's president Terrence Mazarello
and program co-ordinator Godfrey J.I.Gonsalves made a detailed listing of
these problems in a memorandum handed over at Sunday's Overseas Goans
Convention.

Non-resident Indians of Goan origin are settled mainly in Africa, Australia,
Brazil, Canada, France, the city of Karachi, New Zealand, Portugal, the UK,
USA, UAE and among sea-farers traversing the globe's oceans, they noted.

There is a Central law in place to regulate recruitment. Yet, unscrupulous
recruiting agents are successful in duping job seekers. The lengthy
litigation, often well beyond one's lifetime, (and) abetment of law
enforcing authorities, dissuade the hvictims from filing complaints, the
action group complained. 

This is particularly felt in the case of Gulf job seekers.

They pointed out that intending migrants face a 'harrowing experience' at
the Passport Office. Problems are caused due to requirements of multiple
documents, 'emigration-clearance required' status being erroneously stamped,
and insistence of employers' certificates even from private organisations.

CDC (shipping) applicants have to run to the Director General of Shhipping
at Mumbai, time and again. Medicals are done in Mumbai alone. These could be
done in Goa now that we are full-fledged state, said the action group.

Besides, visa requirements are considered only at the respective consulates
in Mumbai. Due to the lack of a Protector of Emigrants Office in Goa,
intending migrants hhave to make a bee-line to Mumbai.

Laws granting Goa employees a lien on their job -- in case they wish to
migrate -- are not implemented in letter and spirit. 

Immigration is being tightened by many countries, but Goa lacks the power to
absorb jobseekers. After struggling to earn and save, NRIs wish to build up
assets in Goa or set up businesses, but this proves to be a difficult job
too.

SGPIAG pointed to teh time-consuming running around that NRIs have to do
for the partition of their property, mutation, sanad conversion, approval of
plans, conveyance, numerous affidavits, and the grant of powers of attorney.

Falsified documents and unreliable title deeds, even after validation by
advocates, have resulted in several cases filed by NRIs in the consumer
forums against builders, for defective titles, the group reminded.

Advocates, notaries, civil engineers, realtors, architects, evaluators,
surveyors, talathis, politicians -- there is no difference. Each one demands
his point of flesh, knowing fully well that thhe NRI's visit is
short-lived, said the action group.

It also detailed problems in expats setting up enterprises; hassles in
getting birth and death certificates; difficulty in getting admission or
coping with languages like Devanagari Konkani or Hindi; and even the fact
that the elderly are becoming vulnerable to crime in Goa.

Dead bodies are disposed off abroad (in case expats die in harness). There
is no support service either from the Indian Embassy officials or
intervention to pursue compensation claims specially in cases of death under
mysterious circumstance, said theh action group. 

This action group pointed to problems faced in retrieving ancestral
property.

Eviction of persons encraching on lands of absentee NRIs is a
time-consuming ordeal. Inventory proceedings are long drawn in the absence
of judges. Archaic legal procedures have frustrated NRIs and compelled them
to abandon ancestral land and house property, or sell them to builders or
non-Goans for a song, said the SGPIAG.

Much of Goa's emigration took place in the pre-1961 era when Goa was under
Portuguese colonial rule, or after the 1974 oil embargo, they said. (ENDS)

-

NEW DELHI SEEKS TO DRAW PARTICIPATION OF GOAN NRIs

From Frederick Noronha

PANJIM, Dec 29: New Delhi is planning to host a meet of NRIs who trace their
origins to different parts of India from Jan 9-11, and the Federation of
Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry, which is organising the event,
made an attempt to draw the participation of Goan expats.

Overseas Indians

[GOANET] NEWS: Give safety, good infrastructure, expats tell Goa govt

2002-12-29 Thread Frederick Noronha
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Give us safety and good infrastructure, Goan expats tell govt

By Frederick Noronha

PANJIM, Dec 29: Goa wants to lure back expat interest in Goa, to bring in
investments and skills. But expats are telling the state to pull up its
socks and improve things, and deliver results instead of promises.

From problems (and even fraud)  with banks, to threats to their ancestral
properties, and the growing urban chaos... expats had a lot to complain
about, as a one-day overseas Goan convention turned sharply critical of the
failure of governance in India's smallest state.

Sunday's gathering was the fourth annual event of its kind. It was smaller
than earlier years' gatherings, but organisers argued that this event was
qualitatively different in that it had the official state-government backing.

Earlier in the day, the limited number of expats -- mingling with a larger
crowd of officials and local participants in the Kala Academy Black Box --
heard out what was being offered to them. Banks, insurance companies and
other institutions made offers to attract expat interest.

Goa also offered to help those expats in need (specially less-affluent Gulf
workers) and harness the skills of those who have achieved education and a
wide range of professions abroad.

NRI Goa Facilitation Centre chairman and local 'Rashtramath' Marathi daily
editor Chandrakant Keni, remarked to this correspondent that chief minister
Manohar Parrikar had promised to actively promote the non-resident Goan
involvement in Goa. 

It was possible that the cell could grow into a corporation or some such
body, he suggested.

But expats voiced their concern over the way in which things were sliding,
and sharply voiced their need for a fair deal.

Panjim-based J.Silveira, who spent 33 years in Dubai, explained how he had
returned home in an emergency once, and the bank manager where his
fixed-deposits were kept had failed to give him a small loan against his
deposits.

I asked the branch manager if he could lend me Rs 30,000 against my deposit
of Rs 250,000. He said there was no rule to do so, said Silveira. This is
what we get as an NRI-reception from the ban. We don't want any favours or
special treatment (but just our due).

He explained how the collapse of the rupee against the dollar meant that he
would be heavily penalised for an insurance policy which he had to pay for
in dollars, being an NRI.

He criticised former chief minister Luizinho Faleiro for not taking any
initiative over his proposal to invest in Goa. I've been out (of Goa) for
33 years. We lost, lost and lost. In banking we have no respect, in LIC we
lose, and in the government, we have no respect either, he complained.

Vivian D'Souza, a US-returned expat based in Socorro, called himself a
victim of the 'bhailo' syndrome, where he was being treated as an
'outsider'.

To laughter and ire, he narrated how he tried to buy a scooter, for which he
needed a ration card, and on going to the panchayat and mamlatdar, he was
told he was a bailo. Said Vivian: I love Goa, this is my land.

What is a ration card? I don't know what it is because they won't give it
to me. It seems like anything I do, I'll need a ration card, he commented. 

Wilson Coelho of Curtorim and the Kuwait-based Goan Welfare Society
suggested that the needs of the Gulf-based Goan was different from that of
Goans in the West. 

We do need such assurances (like the newly unveiled group insurance
policies). Our (less-fortunate) brothers in the Gulf need safety, he said.
Coelho noted that the stay of Goans in the Gulf was temporary, and as long
as they held on to their jobs. 

Once your job is gone, you need to pack your bag and baggage and come
home, he noted.

In a sharp presentation, he suggested that NRIs could build their own
township if the government helped them with getting land. 

Coelho criticised Indian Airlines for monopolising the Kuwait-Goa route
and over-charging. It costs 212 Kuwaiti Dinars (nearly Rs 40,000) for the
four hour flight. For the Kuwait-Toronto flight, which is nearly 18 hours
long, it costs just 250KD, he added.

He suggested that Air-India, Kuwait Airways or Gulf Air or Emirates be
given slots to fly on the Gulf-Goa sector. There are not less than 30,000
Goans in Kuwait alone, he said, indirectly questioning the earlier estimate
of cell officials that there are just about 70-100,000 people of Goan origin
settled globally.

We don't want orations. We want action, he said.

Coelho argued that tourism needed a good communication infrastructure, good
roads, and something to do while visiting Goa. He accused parasites and
corrupt people locally of preying on the earnings of expats. We are sons
of the soil. Why are parasites attacking us, he questioned.

He said the EDC was slow in helping his

[GOANET] Mando Festival in Goa on Jan 4

2002-12-29 Thread Frederick Noronha
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The 36th Mando Festival gets underway at the Kala Academy at 3.30 pm on
January 4, 2003. Some 15 groups are expected to take part. There will
senior and juniors and original and traditional categories. -FN


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[GOANET] NEWS: Nepal's alternative to Goa -- Pokhara

2002-12-27 Thread Frederick Noronha
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Nepal's alternative to Goa - Pokhara

By Sudeshna Sarkar, Indo-Asian News Service

Kathmandu, Dec 27 (IANS) Taking a leaf out of the Indian state of Goa, Nepal
is attempting to project Pokhara as the hottest destination for travel
junkies.

A unit of the Restaurant and Bar Association of Nepal (REBAN) along with the
Nepal Tourism Board has started the Pokhara campaign.

Patterned on the carnivals of Goa, street festivals are planned in Pokhara,
a five-hour drive from Kathmandu.

The Annapurna mountain range, serene waterfalls and caves are the major
attractions of Pokhara. It is also the starting point for many of Nepal's
trekking and rafting destinations.

Considered to be safer and warmer than the capital Kathmandu, Pokhara boasts
of a divine and long nightlife.

We've been receiving complaints from tourists that Goa is getting too
crowded and too expensive, said Prozol B. Shrestha, coordinator of the
three-day festival that will commence Monday.

Besides, during the carnival time in Goa you have to book hotels two months
in advance.

We thought, if Goa can be a festival destination, so can Pokhara. Here we
are with our very own carnival that has ethnic dances, live bands, contests,
local and international cuisine and fun galore.

But, unlike Goa, where prices peak during festivities, Pokhara is planning
to dish out special discounts to attract tourists.

The street festival hopes to offer a 25 percent discount on food, drinks,
handicrafts and hotels.

An added incentive for adventure lovers is a 30 percent discount on
paragliding and ultra flights - flights in light, single-engine aircraft.

The December-January period tends to be quiet in this Himalayan kingdom with
a slump in the number of tourists. The situation has been aggravated by the
spectre of insurgency hanging over the country for over six years.

With the Maoist guerrillas having called a strike in Kathmandu Sunday and
Monday, the festivities would be affected in the valley.

Kathmandu's loss would be Pokhara's gain. We hope people will decide to
spend the New Year eve in Pokhara, said Shrestha.

It may not be good for the country but it certainly is a big mileage for
our festival. Pokhara is considered one of the safest places in the kingdom.
We've never had any violence.

Last time, we had an unprecedented turnout of over 100,000 people. This
time too we hope it would be the party of a life-time.

--Indo-Asian News Service

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Ongoing: Exhibition of paintings, Art Chamber, Calangute www.goa-art.com
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Jan  18-19: International kite carnival at Morgim beach, Pernem





[GOANET] NEWS: Vajpayee to ring in New Year in balmy Goa

2002-12-27 Thread Frederick Noronha
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Vajpayee to ring in New Year in balmy Goa

By P. Jayaram, Indo-Asian News Service

New Delhi, Dec 27 (IANS) Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee has chosen the
coastal paradise of Goa for a New Year holiday that officials said would be
strictly a family affair.

The prime minister will leave for an undisclosed quiet beach resort on
Sunday and return to the capital on New Year day, a senior aide told IANS.

He said Vajpayee had been flooded with requests from various state
governments to spend his customary New Year holiday in their state.

One of the reasons is that having the prime minister as a guest has done a
world of good to tourism in the state, especially the locations where he had
spent the New Year in the past few years, the aide said.

He noted that the prime minister's holiday at picturesque Kumarakom in
Kerala, from where he penned his musings in December 2000, had made the
place a famous tourist destination that has attracted a stream of celebrity
visitors since.

Among them were former Beatle Paul McCartney and actor Sean Connery, the
original James Bond, who reportedly thoroughly enjoyed their holidays.

The aide said Manali and Nainital, where the prime minister had spent
holidays in the last two years, had also experienced a spurt in tourist
arrivals.

People seem to think if the Indian prime minister considers a place worth
spending a holiday at, it must be really good.

He said only Vajpayee's foster family members and close personal staff would
accompany him to Goa on the holiday.

There are no special arrangements being made, like setting up camp office
or anything, in Goa as it is just a two-day holiday, the aide said,
referring to the fact that Vajpayee would be at the resort effectively for
two full days.

The prime minister would, however, be kept informed about day-to-day
developments by officials, he added.

The holiday will be timely for Vajpayee as he has a hectic January ahead
with his counterparts from Singapore and Mauritius and the president of Iran
due to pay official visits to India and he himself scheduled to undertake a
series of tours to the states.

Vajpayee will hold talks with Singapore Prime Minister Goh Chok Tong January
4-5 and with Mauritius Prime Minister Anerood Jugnauth January 8-9.

Iranian President Mohammed Khatami will be the chief guest at the Republic
Day celebrations here on January 26.

Vajpayee will pay a three-day visit to the federally administered Andaman
and Nicobar islands from January 17, his second to the scenic coral
archipelago in the Bay of Bengal as prime minister.

He is also scheduled to visit Bangalore on January 3-4 to inaugurate the
Indian Science Congress. This apart, he will be visiting Mumbai and Pune on
January 8 and 9 and Kochi on January 15.

The prime minister does not have any time for rest in January. You can see
his calendar is full, the aide said.

--Indo-Asian News Service

*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
Copyright 2002, Indo-Asian News Service. For permission to reproduce 
please contact ians at del2.vsnl.net.in or kpk.kutty at eians.com 
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[GOANET] A High-Tech Fix for One Corner of India

2002-12-27 Thread Frederick Noronha
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Of course, some of these controversial politicians have the way of
becoming the darlings of the Western media. Anyway, here goes one
story...FN

A High-Tech Fix for One Corner of  India

An Indian politician has moved decisively to transform
Hyderabad into a computer programming and pharmaceuticals hub
that is trying to rival Bangalore.

[ Full story at...(requires free registration)... .ed ]  
http://www.nytimes.com/2002/12/27/technology/27RUPE.html?today
sheadlines

December 27, 2002

A High-Tech Fix for One Corner of India

By KEITH BRADSHER




HYDERABAD, India — Soon after N. Chandrababu Naidu became 
chief minister of the state of Andhra Pradesh in August 1995, he 
ordered that a partly built and abandoned government building here 
on the edge of the city be finished and turned into a college for 
computer software engineers.

Today, the building houses one of 300 institutions of higher learning 
in a state that graduates 65,000 engineers a year, compared with 
7,500 when Mr. Naidu took office. The institute is one example of 
how Mr. Naidu has moved decisively to transform Hyderabad from 
the quiet administrative center of an agricultural state into a 
computer programming and pharmaceuticals hub that is trying to 
rival Bangalore, nearly 300 miles to the south.

With a businesslike, long-term approach to public policy in a 
country long bedeviled by populists pursuing short-term fixes, Mr. 
Naidu, who is 52, has become the darling of Western governments 
and corporations.

He has emerged in their eyes as one of the most promising local 
leaders not just in India but in the developing world. Big 
international companies like Microsoft and Oracle have been setting 
up operations here in Hyderabad, even though Andhra Pradesh has 
long been one of the poorest states in India.

It's only the last four or five years that this place is booming, said 
Maruvada V. Raman, the executive officer of the college, the 
International Institute of Information Technology. These things 
might not have happened if someone else were in his place.

Mr. Naidu's successes have made him a hit for the last six years at 
World Economic Forum meetings in Davos, Switzerland, and 
elsewhere, where he has moderated panels and been praised as an 
example for other leaders of poor regions. His agreeing to appear is 
a breakthrough of sorts for the chief minister of an Indian state. 
Other chief ministers — whose responsibilities are similar to those 
of a governor of an American state — have avoided the event for 
fear of hurting populist credentials by hobnobbing with corporate 
leaders.

They are all thinking, `We will get a negative image,'  Mr. Naidu 
said. It is not true.

Mr. Naidu added, If you do not meet business people and rich 
people, you will not get investment.

He has watched the success of Bangalore, India's Silicon Valley, 
and tried to turn Hyderabad into sort of a Route 128 high-
technology region to match.

Andhra Pradesh has been developing so quickly that although rural 
areas in the state still have many problems, the departing Treasury 
secretary, Paul H. O'Neill, quipped in a visit here last month that the 
state no longer even seemed to need foreign aid. I don't think he 
needs any help at all, Mr. O'Neill said. I was really impressed with 
him and what he is doing.

That was an exaggeration. Hyderabad, home to about 6.6 million 
people, has become a green, prosperous hub for computer 
programming, telephone call centers and drug manufacturing. But 
most of the state's 76 million people still live in rural villages where 
change has been slow, and where a two-year drought has brought 
considerable suffering.

Andhra Pradesh is nonetheless becoming an international model for 
certain public policies. Some involve little details, like using 
automation to cut the time needed to get a new driver's license to 
two hours from two days, or quintupling the number of trees in 
Hyderabad to make it one of India's greenest, most livable cities.

Mr. Naidu has also been one of the first Indian politicians to tackle a 
problem that has effectively bankrupted most of the country's state 
governments: electricity subsidies. State politicians across India 
have long won elections by promising cheap electricity, a middle-
class subsidy in a country where the poor have no access to 
electricity at all.

Electricity has been kept so cheap in most of the country that it has 
been uneconomical to build new power plants or even maintain 
many power cables, resulting in frequent lengthy blackouts that 
force businesses to buy and run their own diesel generators. Murky 
laws have long discouraged private investment in power generation 
and distribution, although efforts are now under way in New Delhi to 
change this.


[GOANET] LINK: GNU/Linux meeting in Goa on Dec 28... all welcome

2002-12-26 Thread Frederick Noronha
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Dec 28 is the last Saturday of the last month of 2002. We're planning some
talks to draw diverse interests during our GNU/Linux meet that is being
held from 2 pm to 6.30 pm at the CSI office. Please note we start early,
in view of the extra number of talks volunteered.

Programme is as follows:

o 2 pm - 4 pm: Trevor Warren (to be confirmed) of Media Lab Asia on
embedded computing, GNU/Linux initiatives in Mumbai, Bombay LUG's college
initiatives, lobbying with governments, and the importance of LUGs.

o Demo of Knoppix, courtesy Ashutosh Naik, with support from Animesh
Nerurkar.

o Arvind Yadav: How Small Can You Get... a surprise talk and demo.

o Blinston B2: Talk on stack overflow security exploits... I can run you
through how they are done... how to write them.. and how to check and
correct your code for possible exploitable sections. The target audience
would be people working with C.

o FN will put up a demo on 'freely borrowable and copyable GNU/Linux CDs,
magazines and books'. 

TALKS FOR FUTURE: Arvind Clement has offered to do his 'anatomy of a
security attack' demo in Panjim. This is slated for a future meeting.



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[GOANET] COMMENT... The Goa Agenda meet

2002-12-26 Thread Frederick Noronha
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Express Computer editor Val Souza comments on the recent Goa Agenda meet. 

http://www.expresscomputeronline.com/20021223/opinion1.shtml
   
   Goas got IT on its agenda now
   
   When you proclaim you're 365 days on a holiday, it's kind of dodgy
   to--in the same breath--ask businesses to come set up serious shop in
   your State. They'd assume you'd been out sunbathing a tad longer than
   sensible. That's perhaps one of the reasons why Goa has been late off
   the blocks in wooing the IT services and IT enabled services
   industries to set up base on its pristine shores; and been reluctant
   too to hold out a begging bowl, like some other states unabashedly do,
   each time a visiting CEO is doling out the dollars.
   
   Of course it didn't help much that while the rest of the country was
   going gaga over the success of the Indian software industry, Goan
   politicians were busying themselves in toppling each other over--13
   chief ministers in a decade, surely that's Guinness-world-record level
   material.
   
   But it's been 26 months now that the BJP government, headed by
   IIT-Bombay alumnus Manohar Parrikar, has held its own in Goa. And over
   this time, albeit in its inimitably unhurried style, Goa has been
   working on policies and initiatives that seem set to make the tiny
   state a model for the rest of India to follow, in terms of utilisation
   of information technology to meet the needs of society.
   
   Sounds fishy? Well, for starters, Goa's draft IT Policy is
   refreshingly different from what most others have put out. The broad
   mission is to enhance the state's capacity for quality decisions in
   every sphere, whether at the government, corporate or individual
   level. There's an InfoTech Corporation that has been set up to serve
   as a single window for implementation of all IT initiatives by the
   government, and an InfoTech Council to facilitate creation,
   development and implementation of India's first RD park, co-locating
   several RD laboratories on a single campus.
   
   Throughout, the emphasis of the policy is on IT for development rather
   than a blind leap onto the software exports bandwagon. Yes, the
   document does talk of investment incentives and concessions, but the
   difference is that everything's directed at making Goa the RD hub of
   the country.
   
   The behind-the-scenes groundwork done so far culminated earlier this
   month in the hosting of The Goa Agenda--a conference jointly organised
   by the Goa Chamber of Commerce  Industry and the government--that
   brought together powerful minds from all over the country to
   deliberate on how the state should take the lead in utilising IT for
   the benefit of the common man in its society.
   
   Good intentions have already been translated into actual action in
   some areas. For instance, every single one of the secondary schools in
   Goa has at least one computer in place. Some have many more, thanks to
   the largesse of expatriate Goans and other well-wishers abroad--almost
   400 donated computers were distributed to schools via the Goa Sudharop
   NGO and the Goa Schools Computers Project recently. And next year,
   every student in the science stream at the pre-university level will
   be eligible to purchase a computer from a government agency for a
   paltry thousand rupees.
   
   Interestingly, many of these computers in the schools run the
   open-source alternative operating system Linux. One local expert
   estimates that Goa has the highest density of Linux-based PCs and
   users in the country. Complementing this alternative experiment is the
   fact that Goa is getting wired up pretty quick, with optical fibre
   criss-crossing the state and high bandwidth availability already a
   reality. It's been suggested that Goa should go all out to provide
   WiFi Hotspots (802.11 access points to use with wireless LAN devices)
   across the state as soon as the 2.4 GHz band of the spectrum is
   completely delicensed for outdoor use.
   
   Goa is an ideal state in which to experiment taking IT to the masses
   with these alternative technologies and innovative devices, for
   several reasons. For one, it's tiny--just about 105 km long and 35 km
   wide, with a population of around 1.4 million spread over only about
   2,000 square kilometres of the entire area. Literacy is over 80
   percent, with a high proportion of English-language fluency and a per
   capita income double the national average.
   
   Can Goa become India's first intelligent state, completely IT
   literate and fully wired? Well, The Goa Agenda showed that quite a few
   intelligent and dedicated individuals are working towards this dream.
   But they will have to go far beyond pitching Goa's 

[GOANET] RandomSiteWatchGoa: Remembering college days on a hilltop

2002-12-25 Thread Frederick Noronha
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If you know of an interesting Goa-related site please send along the 
URL. Thanks, FN [EMAIL PROTECTED]


URL :  http://www.xavierscollege-goa.com

St. Xavier's College
  
  Hey, hey, hey! Is this something or what? Ain't we getting hi tech
   here at Xavier's!
   
  Well you have just entered the official site of St. Xavier's
   College, Goa, India. To carry on hit the map at the bottom of this
   page.
___
   
The Aim

 Well our aim is to update the ex-Xavierites about what is
   happening here at Xaviers. It's not fair that after graduating they
   forget their good ol' college and its days. We wish to inform them
   what is the present state of the institution where they spent three
   eventful years of their life. Those were the days guys, and we wish to
   rekindle those lost memories of probably the best three years of your
   life.
   
   But that does not stop others from visiting our site coz
   everyone's welcome here. If you want to become a Xavierite check it
   out. Even if you were never a Xavierite, no problem, you will feel
   like one once you check out this site.
___
   
Our Mission Statement

  St. Xaviers aims at providing a balanced all-round education to its
students with a view to forming young men and women who will be intellectually
able, high-minded and disciplined Citizens of our Country and particularly, at
helping the Catholic youth to be committed followers of Christ.

___
   
Location

   Well for those who do not know, our college is situated on the top
   of a hill, looking over the town of Mapusa. Mapusa is an important
   town of the Indian state of Goa, the land of the Fish, Feni, Football
   and Fun. I guess every body knows where India is. Well Goa is
   situated on the west coast of India. It is a paradise state with
   beautiful beaches, swaying palms and friendly people and that's
   precisely why Goa is known as the land of sun, sea and sand.
   The 'X' in the map shows you Goa and believe me that is the size
   of Goa.
   Click on the map to carry on !!!
   
  [1]Hit the Map to move on and HURRY!!! 
___
   
 Address :   Xavier Nagar,
   Altinho, Mapusa,
 Bardez, Goa,
India.
 E- mail :  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  
   We are thankful to our students Sarvesh, Selwyn, Satyajit, Fritz,
   Hemant for maintaining this site.

References

   1. http://www.xavierscollege-goa.com/homepage.html


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[GOANET] NEWS: Thousands pray for peace on Christmas

2002-12-25 Thread Frederick Noronha
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Thousands pray for peace on Christmas

From Indo-Asian News Service

New Delhi, Dec 25 (IANS) Thousands of Christians as well as people of other
faiths celebrated Christmas Wednesday in the Indian capital and prayed for
peace and tranquility.

Churches across the city were decorated with colourful lights and people
gathered there Tuesday evening to light candles and greet each other.

At a special inter-religious prayer meeting at the Sacred Heart Cathedral on
the eve of the Christmas, people prayed for peace, brotherhood and religious
tolerance.

Archbishop of Delhi, Vincent M. Concessao, appealed to the people to respect
each other's feelings and forget the sectarian violence that gripped Gujarat
earlier this year.

We should look at the horizon and pray for the future. The year has been
full of violence and attack on various institutions that has pained all
right thinking people, said Concessao.

But let us forget all that and think of the poor and unfortunate brothers
and sisters. There are so many orphans and homeless people facing problems
in the winter season. Lets pray for them.

Religious leaders of different faiths attended the prayer meeting.

Midnight mass, carols, plum cakes and fraternal feelings marked the
festival. Services were also offered at churches dotted throughout the city.

Santa Claus was seen all over the city, especially at shopping plazas and
market areas, greeting Merry Christmas to everyone.

The city is home to over 100,000 of India's 24 million Christians.

They participated in the reading of scriptures and the singing the carols
and distributed cakes and sweets.

Said college student Joshua Ebenezer: The festivities begins with Christmas
and continues till the New Year. It's a good time to meet friends and
remember old ones.

Sending and receiving greeting cards, gifts and sweets keeps you busy
throughout the festival.

--Indo-Asian News Service


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[GOANET] NEWS-GULF: UAE declares amnesty for illegal immigrants

2002-12-25 Thread Frederick Noronha
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UAE declares amnesty for illegal immigrants

By Mridula Krishna, Indo-Asian News Service

Dubai, Dec 25 (IANS) The United Arab Emirates (UAE) has announced a
long-awaited amnesty for illegal immigrants, including many Indians,
permitting them to leave the country without punishments or fines.

The amnesty will run January 1-April 30.

The official Emirates News Agency said the ministry had extended the
deadline to four months to give illegal expatriates enough time to either
regularise their residency status or leave.

As part of the ministry of interior's keenness to implement all the
immigration laws, and in view of the presence of large numbers of violators
of the Residency Law, it has been decided that an amnesty be granted to
these violators, provided that they leave the country within a grace period
that will start from January 1 until April 30, 2003, the ministry said in a
statement.

The statement said that the ministry would take action against those who
remain in the country at the end of the grace period.

Around 300,000 illegal immigrants are expected to leave under the second
amnesty to be officially declared since 1996. In 1996, about 200,000 illegal
immigrants, including 50,000 Indians, left the country under a six-month
long amnesty.

Earlier this month, Indian Ambassador K.C. Singh said the embassy was ready
to handle the expected rush in emergency certificates, a one-way and
one-time passport for people in UAE without authentic documents to travel to
India.

He had said fewer Indians were expected to avail the amnesty this time.

According to George Joseph, Indian consul general in Dubai, around 35,000
Indians staying in UAE without any valid documents are likely to seek
amnesty.

--Indo-Asian News Service

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[GOANET] BOOKS-MORAES: Crisply baked stories from a fractured land, India

2002-12-24 Thread Frederick Noronha
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Crisply baked stories from a fractured land, India

By Smita Mitra, Indo-Asian News Service

New Delhi, Dec 24 (IANS) They toppled out of god's oven one by one, each a
shade lighter, each more superior -- and that is how they have lived ever
since in their fractured land, India.

Or so goes the grandmother's tale that Saryu Srivatsa narrates in the book
Out of God's Oven: Travels in a Fractured Land that she has co-authored
with veteran writer Dom Moraes.

The work of non-fiction, which had a seven-year gestation period, was
launched at the Taj Mahal hotel late Monday. It explores the concept of
India through the eyes of Indians.

The authors interviewed nearly 400 people, famous and anonymous, on their
notion of India. What emerged was the story of a fractured land strung
together by the experiences of the authors themselves.

Moraes said the book lays bare the hollow credentials of many deeply held
notions of caste and class in India.

About the title of the book, Srivatsa had a little story to tell.

(Hindu god) Vishnu decided to make the perfect human being out of clay. But
the first one came out all black and burnt from the oven. He flung it down
on earth saying, 'This will be the shudra.'

The second model also roasted a bit too long, came out brown. Vishnu,
annoyed, said it would represent the non-Brahmins on earth. But the third
doll came out perfect. Pleased, Vishnu said it would represent the
Brahmins.

This story was told to Srivatsa by her grandmother. But then, the author
told IANS, I always asked her why I was so black despite being a Brahmin!

While the concept of the book itself is unique, it is the two distinct
voices in the book that make it an interesting read.

Said Srivatsa, a winner of the Outlook-Picador prize for Best Creative
Non-Fiction Short Story: We were working on a film script. But we
discovered then that we had radically different viewpoints on what India
stood for.

While Srivatsa had a rosy, patriotic picture of an undivided country,
gleaned from schoolbooks, Moraes had the view of a splintered India, based
on first-hand experience.

She, brought up in an orthodox Tamil Brahmin family, was an insider in
India. I have always felt slightly exiled, wherever I have lived, said
Moraes.

Collecting material for the book took four years. By 1999, the manuscript
was too voluminous to be published. The next three years saw Moraes and
Srivatsa struggling to give the book a structure and format.

It was finally David Davidar of Penguin India who got the ball rolling. A
professional edit later, the book was a readable 400 pages.

A special chapter on Gujarat written by Moraes perhaps makes the book
especially relevant to contemporary India. It also documents landmark
movements like the Maoist extremism in Bengal, terrorism in Punjab and caste
wars in Bihar.

As Shekhar Gupta, The Indian Express editor who released the book, put it,
Out of God's Oven... could be called the first book written about India
by Indians.

--Indo-Asian News Service

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[GOANET] RandomSiteWatchGoa: Tofu and hummus in Anjuna

2002-12-24 Thread Frederick Noronha
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If you know of an interesting Goa-related site please send along the 
URL. Thanks, FN [EMAIL PROTECTED]


URL :  http://www.travelingoa.com/beanmeup/

   The Tasty Alternative
   Contact : Lisa Camps
   Ph # : 0832 - 2273977
   Email : [1][EMAIL PROTECTED]
   [2][EMAIL PROTECTED]
   Address : 875/2 Soranto,
   Anjuna, Bardez - Goa. The first of its kind on the Sub Continent with
   Ardent Lounge Music, a verdant setting and good friendly service.
   International Vegetarian / non Vegetarian Cuisine.
   TOFU CREAM CHEESE
   TOFU ICE CREAM
 _
   
 Gazpacho
   
 Guacamole
   
 Kadai Tofu
   
 Hummus
   
 Capresse
   
 Lemon Curd Cake
   
 Tofu Cheese Cake
   
 Organic Brown Rice
   
 Tempeh Satay
   
 Tofu Lasagne
   
 Green Bean Salad
   
 Pasta Salad with herbs, nuts, olive oil  balsimico vinegar.
  [pic1.jpg]
   Designed by ACCESS GLOBAL for [3]www.travelingoa.com

References

   1. mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
   2. mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
   3. http://www.travelingoa.com/

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Ongoing: Exhibition of paintings, Art Chamber, Calangute www.goa-art.com
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Jan  18-19: International kite carnival at Morgim beach, Pernem





[GOANET] Debating Konkani...

2002-12-23 Thread Frederick Noronha
--
* CHRISTMAS PARTIES 2002 *

Dec 21 - GOA-LA, Los Angeles, +1 (714) 821-6168

Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] for a free party announcement

Archives:
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 From: Tim de Mello [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 Goa has been part of India since 1961. Is this not long enough?
 Why wait another 10 years?

Tim, is your suggestion that some scripts are more 'Indian' than others,
and that the Indianness or usefulness of the script is based on its
origins.

 My cousin who is well educated in English andnbsp;fluent in oral
 Konkani has great difficulty reading Konkani in the the Roman
 script

Are you sure this problem stems from the script itself, or from the
vocabulary of that the priest-defined Konkani (called 'padri-bhas' by
some)? This variant of Konkani, particularly after the end of Portuguese
colonial rule, has shifted to being excessively (?) Sanskrit-influenced,
making it arguably unintelligible to the average speaker of Konkani. 

FN


Ongoing: Exhibition of paintings, Art Chamber, Calangute www.goa-art.com
Dec  19-22: Gauri Divan's studio pottery, Rust, Aguada Rd Ph 2479340
Dec 23-Jan 7: Dayanita Singh's photo exhibition, Art House Tel 2276123
Jan  18-19: International kite carnival at Morgim beach, Pernem





[GOANET] PRIORITY: GoaNet needs your Christmas present...

2002-12-23 Thread Frederick Noronha
--
* CHRISTMAS PARTIES 2002 *

Dec 21 - GOA-LA, Los Angeles, +1 (714) 821-6168

Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] for a free party announcement

Archives:
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--

FOR MUCH OF the year, the guys out at GoaNet have been trying hard to be
of some use to you. Herman Carneiro's 1994 dream is growing, and reaching
out to more Goans across the world. 

GoaNet is succeeding in building a virtual community that has undertaken
various innovative initiatives (kickstarting the Goa Schools Computers
Project, getting an Internet node for Goa early on, a campaign against
paedophilia, getting magazine subscriptions donated to a few schools in
Goa, above all giving a voice to Goans worldwide and in Goa amidst a
situation where newspapers have diminishing space and/or inclination to
discuss news and views that make a difference to our small region...).

Not just that, GoaNet has inspired a whole set of mailing-lists, who are
harnessing the power of this simple tool called e-mail to share ideas and
information, and do something positive for Goa. Some of the mailing-lists
influenced directly or indirectly by GoaNet/GoaNews/GoaNet-Digest include
Goa-Research-Net, GoaNet-BSG (horticulture issues), SaligaoNet, a whole
set of lists working out of www.indialists.org and even BytesForAll.

OKAY, WE NEED your help now... and we're not even asking for money!

In order to expand, we need you to send us a Christmas gift of at least
*ten* email addresses of Goans/people interested in Goa, who would like to
be part of either GoaNet/GoaNews/GoaNetDigest. Please send these addresses
to [EMAIL PROTECTED] In case any one on your list would not like to
be part of these networks, we will promptly unsubscribe him/her.

Numbers are important. As Dr Ashok Jhunjhunwala of IIT-Chennai argues,
the larger the size of a network, the more efficient it becomes and the
more affordable too. Help us to help you! --FN
--
Frederick Noronha * Freelance Journalist * Goa * India 832.2409490/2409783
BYTESFORALL www.bytesforall.org  * GNU-LINUX http://linuxinindia.pitas.com
fred at bytesforall dot org * Mobile 9822 122436 (Goa) * Saligao Goa India
Writing with a difference ... on what makes *the* difference

Grove giveth and Gates taketh away. 
 - Bob Metcalfe (inventor of Ethernet) on the trend of hardware speedups
   not being able to keep up with software demands 


Ongoing: Exhibition of paintings, Art Chamber, Calangute www.goa-art.com
Dec  19-22: Gauri Divan's studio pottery, Rust, Aguada Rd Ph 2479340
Dec 23-Jan 7: Dayanita Singh's photo exhibition, Art House Tel 2276123
Jan  18-19: International kite carnival at Morgim beach, Pernem





[GOANET] Who's the I...

2002-12-22 Thread Frederick Noronha
--
* CHRISTMAS PARTIES 2002 *

Dec 21 - GOA-LA, Los Angeles, +1 (714) 821-6168

Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] for a free party announcement

Archives:
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--

 --__--__--
 
 Message: 5
 Date: 21 Dec 2002 17:06:10 -
 From: Charlotte Maria Alvares [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: [GOANET] Wildgoa Update of 20/12/02
 Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 Who's the I in the update?  What's the name of the writer?
 
 Interested reader!

Guess it's the little boy who was missing from his bed during all those
unearthly hours On a more serious note, it's great to see young Goans
realising their dreams (and being able to write about it in such an
engaging manner). FN


Ongoing: Exhibition of paintings, Art Chamber, Calangute www.goa-art.com
Dec  19-22: Gauri Divan's studio pottery, Rust, Aguada Rd Ph 2479340
Dec 23-Jan 7: Dayanita Singh's photo exhibition, Art House Tel 2276123
Jan  18-19: International kite carnival at Morgim beach, Pernem





[GOANET] NEWS-KOLKATA: Knock, knock, Santa Claus here to deliver mail

2002-12-22 Thread Frederick Noronha
--
* CHRISTMAS PARTIES 2002 *

Dec 21 - GOA-LA, Los Angeles, +1 (714) 821-6168

Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] for a free party announcement

Archives:
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--

Knock, knock, Santa Claus here to deliver mail

By Krittivas Mukherjee, Indo-Asian News Service

Kolkata, Dec 23 (IANS) This Christmas, Santa Claus has been delivering
postal packets and mails in several hill villages of West Bengal.

Postal officials hit upon the idea of dressing some postmen like Santa,
complete with a red robe, red cap, a glowing white beard and a cheerful
disposition, to increase business in the festive month in which millions of
Christmas cards and cakes are sent and received.

So postman Santa Claus goes delivering mailers in his inimitable style and
the loud Ho-Ho-Ho Merry Christmas greeting.

This Christmas, Santa is delivering festive cards, cakes and gift packets
for four days from January 22 between 6 p.m. and midnight, says John
Samuel, postmaster general, north Bengal and Sikkim circle.

For the role, preference has been given to rotund employees. They put on
their dress and makeup at office and set off to make the deliveries. These
Santa Clauses don't travel on reindeer sleighs, but mostly use smart
motorbikes.

We hope to do good business these four days as the Darjeeling hills has a
sizeable Christian population. We hope this venture will prompt parents to
surprise their children at midnight with gifts and cakes, Samuel says.

The charges for delivering a card are Rs.20 and a cake is Rs.50. The sender
can also order a cake of his choice with the postal department. All
deliveries will be made on the same day as the bookings.

The postal department is making this novel effort to increase business,
which is facing stiff competition from courier companies. We need to make
people come to the postal department. They have to be attracted in new
ways, Samuel explains.

Depending on the scheme's success, the north Bengal and Sikkim circle will
decide on extending it beyond the Darjeeling head post office zone.

--Indo-Asian News Service


Ongoing: Exhibition of paintings, Art Chamber, Calangute www.goa-art.com
Dec  19-22: Gauri Divan's studio pottery, Rust, Aguada Rd Ph 2479340
Dec 23-Jan 7: Dayanita Singh's photo exhibition, Art House Tel 2276123
Jan  18-19: International kite carnival at Morgim beach, Pernem





[GOANET] NEWS: Kolkata celebrates Mother Teresa's papal approval

2002-12-21 Thread Frederick Noronha
--
* CHRISTMAS PARTIES 2002 *

Dec 21 - GOA-LA, Los Angeles, +1 (714) 821-6168

Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] for a free party announcement

Archives:
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http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Goanet2003/
--

Kolkata celebrates Mother Teresa's papal approval

By Krittivas Mukherjee, Indo-Asian News Service

Kolkata, Dec 20 (IANS) With the Pope endorsing a miracle attributed to
Mother Teresa Friday, Kolkata that she made her home decades earlier
witnessed joyous scenes.

Sisters at the Missionaries of Charity, the order founded by Mother Teresa,
were visibly moved and offered a special prayer for the nun at the Mother
House, the movement's global headquarters.

The Missionaries of Charity has also lined up a special thanksgiving mass.

We will hold the special mass on Sunday morning to express our gratitude to
the Vatican, Sister Christie said.

It is such a happy occasion for us. We all have been waiting for the news
since morning, she said.

While sisters at the Mother House immersed in subdued celebrations, the mood
was one of utter joy at the numerous orphanages, destitute homes and shelter
for lepers run by the Missionaries of Charity.

One inmate at one of the homes said: The final step of cannonisation should
also not be delayed for a person like Mother Teresa.

Members of at least two city clubs distributed sweets to passers-by after
receiving the news.

It is being speculated that Mother Teresa could be beatified in 2003.

With the Pope recognising that the event of an ailing girl regaining health
by wearing a medallion with Mother Teresa's picture on it as a miracle, the
Albania-born nun has become blessed and moved a step closer to sainthood.

The process of sainthood consists of three steps: veneration, beatification
and canonization (sainthood). Mother Teresa is the 14th person to be
considered for sainthood from India.

Mother Teresa was born Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu in Skopje, Macedonia, on August
26, 1910.

She came to Calcutta, now Kolkata, on January 6, 1929. Her life was
transformed after hearing a call within a call to serve ailing humanity on
her way to Darjeeling on September 10, 1946.

She founded her order, Missionaries of Charity, in 1949. It received the
Church's approval in the following year. Mother Teresa was awarded the Nobel
Peace Prize in 1979. She died here on September 5, 1997.

--Indo-Asian News Service



Ongoing: Exhibition of paintings, Art Chamber, Calangute www.goa-art.com
Dec  14 onwards: Shireen Mody's Goa 2002 exhibition, Arpora. Tel 2276759
Dec  17, 18, 20: Indo-Portuguese furniture, lectures Fundacao  Ph 2230728
Jan  19-22: Gauri Divan's studio pottery, Rust, Aguada Rd Ph 2479340
Dec 23-Jan 7: Dayanita Singh's photo exhibition, Art House Tel 2276123
Jan  18-19: International kite carnival at Morgim beach, Pernem





[GOANET] FEATURE: Goa gives photographer Dayanita Singh a new perspective...

2002-12-21 Thread Frederick Noronha
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Goa makes prominent Indian photographer keep people out of her pictures

By Frederick Noronha

PANAJI (Goa), Dec 22: Living in a Goan village has shaped her art in
unexpected ways, so much so that prominent Indian photographer Dayanita
Singh has now surprised those familiar with her work by coming out with
photographs that simply don't have people in them.

Singh's latest photographs are black-and-white pics from Mumbai and Goa. She
comments on her work, which go up on exhibition in the beach-village of
Calangute December 23: It's of spaces without obvious people, as though
people by unseened generations. There are no people in the photographs, yet
they are full of mental energy.

It is hard to describe one's own work. Hopefully, they force the viewer to
make their own stories, rather than (play the role of) photographs that tell
the whole story as one does in photo-journalism. (Thus they could be) more
engaging, Singh told IANS in an interview. 

She added: I think they are quite evocative. But it's not always clear what
they evoke.

Until Singh visited Goa in 1999, she says she could never imaging making
images without people. But the change has been drastic. Now I photograph
clouds!, she says. 

Singh, based in Delhi, has made a name for herself in an otherwise
male-dominanted field, by attracting attention for her feature and
news-based photographs in capitals across the globe. 

A retrospective of the artist's work is planned at the Hamburger Bahnhoff in
the German capital of Berlin next year, along with a book from reputed
publisher Scalo, focussing on the same work. 

My publisher and guide made the decision of the retrospective after seeing
my Goa images. That's the kind of difference Goa made to my work, she says.

In January 2003, the curator of the Bahnhoff is expected to come to India to
choose some one hundred images for this show. Besides Kolkata, the
lady-curator also is keen to visit Goa to understand how my work shifted so
drastically in Goa, Singh informed. 

In particular, Singh has been infatuated by the old world charms of a quaint
village called Saligao, which lies just outside the beach-belt. 

Except in recent years when villagers have protested the large quantities of
water being transported from here to the beach-belt, and the dumping of
holidayers garbage nearby, the village has been mainly aloof from the hustle
and bustle of the over-commercialised beach belt. ks

I don't know how (the curator) would understand the sense of Saligao
without actually living there. I miss Saligao deeply, said Singh.

Incidentally, her 'Goa work' formed a major part at a solo show put up in
the Frith Street Gallery in London during the past year. I think the Goa
work will always be part of any major show I have, Singh argued.

Mostly people cannot believe this is Goa. (There are) no beaches, no
colour, just little details, as though hints of something, not quite telling
the whole story. So people get intrigued, says Singh. 

She suggests that someone could infact start 'architectural tours' in a Goa
which is itself struggling to find ways to emerge from its current image of
being a low-budget sand-and-surf tourist destination, to one which could
claim its historical legacy as a meeting place for East and West, both in
the past and possibly in the present. 

Over the past year, her book titled 'Myself Mona Ahmed' was published by
Scalo. It covers 13 years of photographing Mona, an eunuch whom the famed
photographer also sees as her friend.

The best part for me was that she (Mona) wrote the text for the book
herself, dictated as e-mails to the publisher in Switzerland. So she decided
what was told and how, said Singh. 

The much celebrated Delhi-based photographer also had a show of her work on
the holy city of Varanasi (Benares) at the Ikon Gallery. These included
images from the Anandamayee Ma Ashraam.  Singh also spent a month as
artist-in-residence at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum. 

Her dream is Inshallah (god-willing) to one-day start a museum in Goa. 

Such tours, suggest Singh, could be a way for the interesting and sometimes
grand houses of the region to pay for their maintenance. Some of her plans
in the past were to work on the dream of a museum in Goa, a photo studio and
centre where I could invite peopl efrom different fields. Singh was at one
stage also contemplating open air film screenings. 

I also would have liked to make an archive of all the family portraits
existing in Goan homes, she said, adding that her personal plans compelled
otherwise. Who can fight fate? she asks. 

Singh broached the idea with the New York-based

[GOANET] NEWS: Ambitious plans drawn for women's soccer in India

2002-12-18 Thread Frederick Noronha
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Ambitious plans drawn for women's soccer in India

By Qaiser Mohammad Ali, Indo-Asian News Service

New Delhi, Dec 18 (IANS) Women's football in India may not be as well
established as the men's version of the game, but things are looking up,
especially in the wake of the hugely popular film Bend it like Beckham.

A private body established by a British national has drawn up ambitious
plans to start a schools' league in a few Indian states.

With the All India Football Federation (AIFF) indifferent to women's soccer,
the Indian Youth Soccer Association (IYSA) has taken upon itself the job of
spreading the gospel in a few satellite towns of Delhi before moving on to
other states.

Although there is a national tournament for women and a few states like West
Bengal, Manipur and Goa have established state-level tournaments, there is
no national league. The entire focus of the AIFF is on men's football, which
in any case is not in too good a shape.

Then came Gurinder Chadha's Bend it Like Beckham, which has inspired many
girls in schools and colleges to play like the determined heroine of the
popular movie.

We encourage girls in every project that we do, IYSA technical director
and founder Bill Adams told IANS. The film has made a huge difference.

For a start, Adams will be organising a girls' league in Delhi from January
11. It will be the first of its kind in the Indian capital and will be meant
only for school students.

Adams' uncle Edward Spearitt played for England under legendary football
captain Bobby Robson in the 1970s.

Backed by 14 sponsors, including majors like Ambuja Cement, Bajaj Auto and
Godrej, Adams will then venture out of Delhi to other states.

We will organise a league in Ghaziabad (on the Delhi-Uttar Pradesh border)
from next year and then our main sponsor Ambuja Cement wants us to organise
a similar tournament in Gujarat, where the company is headquartered,
disclosed Adams.

IYSA already runs a camp for the poor children in Sat Tal near Nainital in
U.P. every summer. Every Friday, it organises a football game in Delhi that
is watched by some 5,000 street children.

Money is no problem for IYSA. If you are honest and sincere, you can get
sponsors, said Adams of the top-of-the-line corporate houses he has roped
in.

Perhaps, encouraged by the response to Adams's efforts, the Delhi Soccer
Association (DSA) is also planning to start a state league for women.

We may start it this year itself, said DSA secretary N.K. Bhatia. But we
are facing two major problems, like with the men's league. Firstly, we do
not have enough grounds to hold matches and it is very difficult to get free
days to hold the state league in Delhi.

--Indo-Asian News Service




Ongoing: Exhibition of paintings, Art Chamber, Calangute www.goa-art.com
Dec  14 onwards: Shireen Mody's Goa 2002 exhibition, Arpora. Tel 2276759
Dec  17, 18, 20: Indo-Portuguese furniture, lectures Fundacao  Ph 2230728
Jan  18-19: International kite carnival at Morgim beach, Pernem





[GOANET] LINK: Convention of Overseas Goans

2002-12-13 Thread Frederick Noronha

Ongoing: Exhibition of paintings, Art Chamber, Calangute www.goa-art.com
Dec  13: Dance workshop, with Jaap Van Maanen. Tel 2275733 BB Cafe
Dec  14 onwards: Shireen Mody's Goa 2002 exhibition, Arpora. Tel 2276759
Dec  14: Customer Relationship Mgt Seminar, Xaviers, Mapusa Tel 2262356
Dec  17, 18, 20: Indo-Portuguese furniture, lectures Fundacao  Ph 2230728
Jan  18-19: International kite carnival at Morgim beach, Pernem


The NRI Goa Facilitation Centre is to organise a Convention of Overseas
Goans on Sunday, December 29, 2002 at the Kala Academy, Campal to discuss
issues pertaining to Goan NRIs spread all over the world. Chief Minister
Parrikar will inaugurate.

A news release put out here recalls that the Goa government formed the
committee under 'Rashtramath' editor Chandrakant Keni to evolve various
welfare schemes for Goan NRIs. 

Other tasks assigned to the committee include registering all NRIs of Goan
origin and set up a data bank of the same to channelise entrepreneurship
skills and resources of NRIs to give a boost to the Goan economy and to
operate schemes for the benefit of the NRI community as declared by the
government and also to ensure adequate measures for protection of land
holdings and properties of NRIs of Goan origin.

The NRI Goa Facilitation Centre has been functioning from EDC House.

This convention -- the programme for which is being finalised -- will
mainly focus on what benefits government, other corporations, banks etc
want to give to NRIs and at the same time to understand what NRIs expect
from these agencies, said the news release.

A social security scheme for Goan NRIs will be launched, in collaboration
with the New India Assurance Company Limited.

Participation is by registration. Desirous NRIs and others can register
their names with the NRI Goa Facilitation Centre on tel 2227608 or by
email at [EMAIL PROTECTED] before December 20, 2002, says the press note
from the EDC Limited's deputy manager for PR. (ENDS) 

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[GOANET] NEWS: Kerala collector hoping to enter Guiness Book

2002-12-13 Thread Frederick Noronha

Ongoing: Exhibition of paintings, Art Chamber, Calangute www.goa-art.com
Dec  13: Dance workshop, with Jaap Van Maanen. Tel 2275733 BB Cafe
Dec  14 onwards: Shireen Mody's Goa 2002 exhibition, Arpora. Tel 2276759
Dec  14: Customer Relationship Mgt Seminar, Xaviers, Mapusa Tel 2262356
Dec  17, 18, 20: Indo-Portuguese furniture, lectures Fundacao  Ph 2230728
Jan  18-19: International kite carnival at Morgim beach, Pernem


Keralite collector hoping to enter Guinness Book

By Sanu George, Indo-Asian News Service

Thiruvananthapuram, Dec 13 (IANS) A Keralite collector is hoping to strike
the winning note with the compilers of the Guinness Book of World Records
through his vast collection of antique musical instruments.

Joseph Fernandes has built up a collection of nearly 2,000 instruments of
all kinds and is preparing to put them on display in this city soon so the
Guinness authorities can make an assessment.

Fernandes, 45, had written to the Guinness authorities last year informing
them of his collection. They wrote back saying they had no existing record
in the category.

Even though I got their letter in July 2001, due to financial problems I
was not in a position to hold an exhibition for them to come and evaluate.
Now I am ready and they are expected to arrive between January 17 and
February 2, when I am holding an exhibition here, Fernandes told reporters
here Friday.

I have instruments from many countries. The pride among my possessions is a
500-year-old veena and one instrument used in Australia gifted to me by a
German.

The Australian instrument, he said, is made out of the root of a tree and
was shaped by packing termites in the hollow portion.

While more than half of my collection is original, I have made the rest
after seeing pictures (of antique instruments), Fernandes said.

Fernandes manufactures musical instruments at his house here and has
hundreds of customers from various countries who place orders with him. A
major portion of the collection he has come by way of gifts from his valued
customers, said Leela Panicker, a member of the Sangeet Natak Akademi who
is helping organise the exhibition.

Despite his financial problems, (Fernandes) has rented a house to keep
these precious instruments. Apart from his house, he has kept these
instruments in a few relatives' houses too, she added.

Said Fernandes: Out of my collection, more than half of the instruments are
not in working condition and storing them safely is a big problem. Some of
these instruments, if not handled with the utmost care, would crumble. I am
hoping the Kerala government comes forward to help.

--Indo-Asian News Service

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[GOANET] NEWS-DELHI: Portuguese, Indian authors call to fight 'McDonaldisation'

2002-12-12 Thread Frederick Noronha

Ongoing: Exhibition of paintings, Art Chamber, Calangute www.goa-art.com
Dec  13: Dance workshop, with Jaap Van Maanen. Tel 2275733 BB Cafe
Dec  14 onwards: Shireen Mody's Goa 2002 exhibition, Arpora. Tel 2276759
Dec  14: Customer Relationship Mgt Seminar, Xaviers, Mapusa Tel 2262356
Dec  17, 18, 20: Indo-Portuguese furniture, lectures Fundacao  Ph 2230728
Jan  18-19: International kite carnival at Morgim beach, Pernem


Portuguese, Indian authors call to fight 'McDonaldisation'

By Hindol Sengupta, Indo-Asian News Service

New Delhi, Dec 12 (IANS) Communism is dead, so is fascism, ideology has
evaporated, long live McDonald's.

Five prominent Indian authors and two of Portugal's best lamented the
decline of politics and personal principles across the world, shaking heads
and clicking tongues at the McDonaldisation of the 21st century.

It's the same all over, and it's a shame, said 42-year-old Portuguese
author Clara Pinto Correia, her red hair falling like licking flames over
her shoulder and coal black eyes blazing.

We have to constantly fight against cultural domination, where everything
becomes a McDonald's, said Correia at a seminar organised by Delhi's niche
literary magazine, The Little Magazine.

The seminar on the writers and politics was also attended by one of
Portugal's most well known authors, the white-haired, 78-year-old Urbano
Tavares Rodrigues and Indians Keki N. Daruwalla, M. Mukundan, Nirmal Verma,
Upamanyu Chatterjee and Mrinal Pande.

Moderated by Pande, a writer, journalist and television anchor, the
deliberations centred on the decline of traditional political stances and
the arrival of new-age angst in literature.

The main forms of experimentation today are in disoriented and disjointed
writing, said Rodrigues, who lived through the grim years of Salazar's
dictatorship and was expelled from university as a young man.

We were more active against a certain type of autocracy, said Rodrigues,
one of whose books was banned in Portugal until the fall of Salazar.

Those were the times when people like Rodrigues found ways to express their
opposition in diverse and subtle ways. We used humour and sometimes very
sexy mediums to get across our message, smiled Rodrigues, bespectacled and
in a grey suit looking more like a loving granddad than a revolutionary.

That's nice, replied Pande, if caught, you could always say it was about
sex.

Added Verma: I was in Czechoslovakia during the revolution and I know that
using alternative means is the best ways sometimes.

But times have changed and somehow there's nothing left to fight.
Everything that we used to protest about is gone, said noted Malayalam
author M. Mukundan.

Said Correia: A lot of the old authors and journalists who were very
effective fighting old regimes suddenly cannot function in normal times. But
these times too are very traumatic and need reflecting upon.

She spoke of the constant hunt for material goodies that are making people
insensitive and insignificant. By the time you are through with gathering
all the things you think you need, you are too tired to delve into your
spirituality.

This is why Portugal has one of the highest intakes of psychotropic drugs
and one in every five take anti-depressants. Everyone works more than one
job and there is this constant need to look like a winner, she said.

The situation in India is quite the same, in many ways we are even a more
unhappy country, said Daruwalla.

All this is pouring into writing. More and more, we must reflect on our
times, our angst is different from those like Rodrigues, we must fight
McDonald's.

Started three years ago, The Little Magazine is a very niche and elite
literary magazine that has had everyone from Noam Chomsky, Pete Seeger,
Amartya Sen to Harold Pinter writing for it.

--Indo-Asian News Service

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[GOANET] CYBERMATRIMONIALS: Canada, Bangalore, Gulf, London, Delhi...

2002-12-12 Thread Frederick Noronha

Ongoing: Exhibition of paintings, Art Chamber, Calangute www.goa-art.com
Dec  13: Dance workshop, with Jaap Van Maanen. Tel 2275733 BB Cafe
Dec  14 onwards: Shireen Mody's Goa 2002 exhibition, Arpora. Tel 2276759
Dec  14: Customer Relationship Mgt Seminar, Xaviers, Mapusa Tel 2262356
Dec  17, 18, 20: Indo-Portuguese furniture, lectures Fundacao  Ph 2230728
Jan  18-19: International kite carnival at Morgim beach, Pernem



C Y B E R  - M  A T R I M O N I A L S **

LOOKING OUT FOR a life partner? Circulate your message among thousands of
Goans for free. For a *FREE* listing in this column send details to
[EMAIL PROTECTED] with the subject-line reading CYBER-MATRIMONIALS.
Respondents are requested to verify details for themselves. We carry, in
good faith, details as sent in by our readers. There's no way we can check
or verify the veracity of the submissions. Make sure to include an email
address to enable you to get faster responses.


EXECUTIVE SECRETARY, WITH THE RIGHT VALUES: Goan Roman Catholic Spinster, 43
yrs, 5' 3, graduate, fair, beautiful, refined, affectionate, trustworthy
and God fearing working as an Executive Secretary invites proposals from
Goan Roman Catholic Bachelors upto 48 yrs, good natured, well educated, well
settled from cultured family either from Bombay/Gulf/abroad.  Please write
with full details to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

ENGINEERING-GRADUATE, SOFTWARE PROFESSIONAL: Hi! I am a 29 yr old, Goan RC
bachelor seeking alliances from well qualified, religious and good-looking
spinsters. I am an engineering graduate working as a software professional
in an MNC. I am an outgoing and friendly person who loves music, movies and
reading.  If you share similar qualities, please reply to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
(if possible with a scanned snap).

ENGINEER, MBA BASED IN BANGALORE: Goan Roman Catholic Bachelor, 33 years,
5'9, average built, fair complexion, graduate engineer (B.E-Mechanical),
M.B.A. very good family background and working as a senior Manager in an
multinational company. Considerate, honest, responsible, fun loving and
sober. Presently based in Bangalore and looking for a matrimonial alliance
from a well-educated, attractive Goan Roman Catholic spinster of age between
25-33 years with very good family background and a pleasing personality. If
interested, get in touch with details and your latest photograph at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

GULF-BASED GOAN: Goan Catholic bachelor 35 yrs-looks much younger, slim, 172
cms, based in Middle-East, sober, non-smoker, drinks only occassionally, God
fearing, humourous and fun loving. Hobbies include travelling, music.
Employed in a reputed company in the Middle East with good perks. seeking a
God fearing, slim, attractive good-natured Catholic spinster (preferably of
Goan origin). and a pleasing personality. If interested please feel free to
drop me a line at [EMAIL PROTECTED] with photograph.

MALE, SINGLE GOAN, CATHOLIC, PROFESSIONAL: 46 years old living in London
seeks single female living in Britain for relationship/marriage.  I am from
a good family background, level headed and honest with a wide range of
hobbies.  Reply to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

TORONTO-BASED GOAN, LOVES READING, MUSIC AND TRAVEL: Toronto-based Goan
Catholic spinster (30 years), enjoys reading, music and travelling, seeks
matrimonial alliance from good family background professional bachelors (30
- 35 years), preferably of Goan origin.  I am looking for a compatible
partner who is well mannered, caring, has good moral values and is
ambitious.  If interested, please feel free to write to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

GOAN, LOOKING FOR LOVE AND COMPANIONSHIP: Alliance invited from well settled
single boys between the age of 28-33, for a Goan girl (28/5'2 feet, average
looking) hailing from well respected Goan Roman Catholic family, living and
working as a teacher in Delhi for the past 5 years. And looking for love,
companionship, security and understanding in my life partner... I believe
life is so much better when you have someone special to share it with. My
desire is to have a strong, happy and loving family. I am a responsible,
caring and a down to earth person with a positive outlook in life. As far as
my hobbies and pasttime I love art and craft and like to watch romantic,
thriller and old classic movies.  Listen to any music which feels good to
the ears and do like to party occasionally. Interested parties may respond
to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

READING, TRAVELING, SAILING...: Matrimonial alliance sought for a Goan
Catholic male living in the USA. I am 43 yrs of age, slim, 5.8 height. Enjoy
reading, traveling, sailing, animals and 

[GOANET] NEWS-DUBAI: Who is Irfan G -- mobster or businessman?

2002-12-11 Thread Frederick Noronha

Ongoing: Exhibition of paintings, Art Chamber, Calangute www.goa-art.com
Dec  13: Dance workshop, with Jaap Van Maanen. Tel 2275733 BB Cafe
Dec  14 onwards: Shireen Mody's Goa 2002 exhibition, Arpora. Tel 2276759
Dec  14: Customer Relationship Mgt Seminar, Xaviers, Mapusa Tel 2262356
Dec  17, 18, 20: Indo-Portuguese furniture, lectures Fundacao  Ph 2230728
Jan  18-19: International kite carnival at Morgim beach, Pernem


Who is Irfan G -- mobster or businessman?

By Kavita Bajeli-Datt, Indo-Asian News Service

New Delhi, Dec 11 (IANS) Who is Irfan G, for whose murder the Dubai
authorities have charged Mumbai terror blasts suspect Anees Ibrahim?

Is Irfan G the same man once known in the underworld as Irfan Goga? If so,
then Indian investigators say, he was once a close aide of Anees Ibrahim and
his alleged ganglord brother Dawood.

Irfan Goga is alleged to have committed many crimes, including kidnapping
for ransom, at the behest of the Ibrahim brothers.

The Dubai authorities have charged Anees Ibrahim, who was arrested there
last week, with the murder of Indian businessman Irfan G. But the dead man's
full name has not been revealed.

Officials here indicate he is the same man who once controlled the purse
strings of the flourishing kidnapping racket in India, which earned the
Ibrahims millions.

Investigators say Irfan Goga was once the most trusted lieutenant of Dawood
Ibrahim but parted ways over financial dealings.

Their enmity resulted in Goga mysteriously disappearing from Dubai in 1998.
Investigators said the businessman was last seen with Anees Ibrahim.

At that time, Goga's wife had registered a complaint naming Anees Ibrahim as
a suspect in his disappearance. She said they were hosting a party when
Anees Ibrahim came to their house and asked her husband to accompany him,
and then Goga never came back.

Two days after his disappearance, she reported the matter to the police.
Investigators said Anees Ibrahim was arrested for a brief period but was let
off for want of evidence.  He left the country after his release.

A senior Dubai policeman said: We have strong evidence of his (Anees
Ibrahim's) involvement in the murder of a fellow businessman whose body was
buried in a villa four years ago. The remains were uncovered recently by the
owner of the villa who was doing some maintenance work.

Goga's name also surfaced when the Gujarat police while investigating the
kidnapping of an Ahmedabad-based industrialist stumbled upon the role of the
underworld.

The incident happened in January 1998, a few months after which Goga
disappeared from his Dubai home.

The abducted businessman returned home after paying millions but remained
tight-lipped about his abductors. Police say Irfan Goga was behind it and
was spreading his tentacles in India, targeting rich businessmen.

--Indo-Asian News Service

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* CHRISTMAS PARTIES 2002 *

Dec 14 - Goan Association of New Jersey, Inc., Somerset +1 (732) 599-7644
Dec 21 - GOA-LA, Los Angeles, [EMAIL PROTECTED] +1 (714) 821-6168 (late fee on tickets 
after Dec 10)

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[GOANET] NEWS: Goa's college, Xavier's, says it needs space to grow

2002-12-08 Thread Frederick Noronha

Dec 7-8: Seminar 'Jesuits in India', at XCHR-Porvorim
Ongoing: Exhibition of paintings, Art Chamber, Calangute www.goa-art.com
Dec  14: Customer Relationship Mgt Seminar, Xaviers, Mapusa Tel 2262356
Dec  13: Dance workshop, with Jaap Van Maanen. Tel 2275733 BB Cafe
Dec  09: Martial arts for women and travellers. Tai Chi, Karate, BB Cafe
Jan 18-19: Int't kite carnival at Morgim beach, Pernem

* * * * * * * * * * * * 
Note: Some events continue beyond the starting date mentioned above


Xavier's says it needs space to grow

By Frederick Noronha

PANJIM, Dec 9: One of Goa's most prominent college, Xavier's of Mapusa, has
voiced its anguish over constraints being placed on its growth potential,
saying this was blocking its chances to offer relevant education.

College principal Newman Fernandes told alumni on the weekend, In these
days when the licence-permit raj is being dismantled, the (Goa) University
still wants to keep control. We ask for starting new programmes, but they
in turn tell us to continue with our B.A., B.Com and B.Sc classes.

Fernandes pointed out that Goa was producing too many non-specialised
graduates, and hinted that if the university did not give permission, then
Xavier's would think of launching 'twining' with universities and colleges
in the rest of India, Europe or the US.

He underlined the need for vast changes in the quality of education offered
in this nearly four-decade old institution, telling ex-students: You are
what you are inspite of the educational system. In our (the Goan) system, we
only encourage work related to memory. We don't create people who think for
themselves or leaders.

For possibly the first time, the college has rallied its alumni, hoping to
build up their links with their alma mater, and anticipating this loyalty
could yield help for the institution to grow further.

Fernandes noted that Xavier's has touched a peak strength of as many as 3000
students, including 1700 in the college section and the rest in the higher
secondary.

Speaking out his mind, he noted that the Catholic Church had no business
to help those affluent enough to help themselves, but should be taking
education to those who didn't have the means regardless of caste, class or
community.

Xavier's, which celebrates its 40th anniversary in 2003, was one of the
first crop of post-1961 colleges of Goa set up after the end of Portuguese
colonial rule in this state. 

It is one of only three Catholic-run general colleges in Goa, together with
Carmel's in Nuvem and Rosary in Navelim. 

Incidentally, the first-ever Jesuit seminary in India was called the College
of St Paul's and started in Goa in 1541. Currently, the Jesuits have no
college-level institution in Goa, though they run few schools in the state.

Its students have reached across the globe, some by now holding responsible
positions, like the dean of Monmouth University Graduate School Datta Naik,
a chemistry graduate from this then-fleding institution. 

Xavier's numbers had increased, but the facilities had not grown
proportionately, Fernandes suggested. 

Currently, the college has plans for modernising labs, setting up an
independent library facility with a language lab and Net connectivity, an
indoor stadium, auditorium, LCD screening facilities, and buildings for
schools of management, IT and biotechnology.

Our old (yellow-and-blue) college bus is still there, he noted. Our labs
have served their role; today they're being stretched.

Fernandes however argued that the existing infrastructure also needed to be
better used, as it was being put to use mainly from 8.45 am to 1.56 pm.
Others who require these facilities could make use of them, he said,
suggesting that the college be opened up to the wider community.

Last Friday, some 200+ alumni attended the meet, and urged the institution
to build up a database of all old students, make such meets a regular
affair, and take their help and support for expanding the institution.

Fernandes stressed the need for Xavier's to shed its image as an elitist
institution. He paid tribute to earlier priest-principals of the college,
Fathers Cruz, Nicolau Pereira and Antimo Gomes.

Staff members who died were remembered at a mass, including Fr Pallithanam
(botany), Fr Ivo Mascarenhas (Portuguese), Nelson D'Souza (microbiology), C
R Bhonsle (physics), Peter Morris (physics), S Ramaswamy (maths), F David
(English), P M Tarakan (physical education), S Kelekar (history), Lino Abreu
(French), Mathew (chemistry) and P K Naik (history).

Non-teaching staff who passed away -- Maxi D'Souza, Vincy D'Souza, Bento
D'Souza, Anthony Queiroz, Sharad Naik, Felise Fernandes, Victor D'Souza,
Maxi Fernandes and Lusso -- were also remembered.

Xavier's website is up at www.xavierscollege-goa.com and the alumni body can
be contacted at [EMAIL PROTECTED] Membership is open

[GOANET] Re: My brother passed away.

2002-12-06 Thread Frederick Noronha

Give a Goan a gift... introduce him/her to GoaNet!


Really sorry to hear of the death of the brother of GoaNetter's Mario
Fernandes' [EMAIL PROTECTED] brother Marcelo. Mario, who is based in
Calgary, keeps in regular touch with Goa.  -- FN

On Mon, 2 Dec 2002, Mario Fernandes wrote:


 Obituaries 
 MARCELO S. F. DIAS FERNANDES 
 
 31st January Road, (Corte de Oiteiro), Panjim 
 
 Born on: 16th January 1944 
 
 Died on: 2nd December 2002 
 
 Son of late Francisco Mariano, late Julia, brother of Sales / Mariana
 (Portugal), Pia Vitoria/Faustino (Portugal), Margarida/Pio, Antonio
 (Portugal), Mario/Diana (Canada) and Elsa, nephew of Mrs Barbara Dias
 expired on 2nd December 2002. 

--
* CHRISTMAS PARTIES 2002

Dec 14 - New England Goans, Wellesly, MA, USA [EMAIL PROTECTED], +1 (603) 673-3762 
(deadline for tickets Dec 5th)

Dec 14 - Goan Association of New Jersey, Inc., Somerset, NJ, USA, +1 (732) 599-7644

Dec 21 - GOA-LA, Los Angeles, CA, USA, [EMAIL PROTECTED] +1 (714) 821-6168 (late fee on 
tickets after Dec 10)

Please contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] to advertise a party. This service is FREE!
--




[GOANET] NEWS-EXPATS: Every house in rural Punjab wants a rooftop plane

2002-12-01 Thread Frederick Noronha

Goa's phone numbers change from Nov 10, 2002. Prefix old number with a 2. New numbers 
will be seven-digit 2XX (where XX is the old number).


'Every house in rural Punjab wants a rooftop plane'

By Hindol Sengupta, Indo-Asian News Service

New Delhi, Dec 1 (IANS) They are called the rooftop plane families --
because all of them have concrete models of aircrafts on their roofs.

In rural Punjab, that's the greatest symbol of foreign money. Dollars and
pounds flowing from family members settled in that magic land called
aboard.

The airplanes are the most poignant image captured by filmmakers G. S.
Chenni and Harleen Kohli in their hour-long documentary, Nonresident
Dollar, screened at the Habitat Centre here late Saturday.

They are the best way to tell the world that your family has money from
abroad, that you've made it, that you've arrived, the filmmakers say in the
film, as the camera moves across the words Air India painted on a dull
grey model plane on a roof.

The point the filmmakers are emphatically trying to make is -- almost every
house in rural Punjab wants a plane.

With returns from farming steadily declining, it is felt that the only
option is to go abroad, said the narrator in the film.

To make Nonresident..., the director duo travelled across the heart of
Punjab, crisscrossing scores of villages in cars, carts and dozens of
tractors. They found a land yearning to cross the shores, at any cost.

Where do you want to go? the filmmakers asked a young man in a dirty
kurta-pajama astride a tractor.

Foreign, he said.

But how? they ask. I don't know, but I will, he added, with a grim
determination.

That's almost a fatal determination, said professor Harbans Singh,
interviewed in the film.

A determination that urges young men and women to get married to
non-resident Indians (NRIs) simply to go abroad, an urge so vital that songs
about travelling West are now part of the folklore, more important than the
undying love tales of yore.

I like England, I like the boy too, said one girl in gold embroidered
lehenga-choli interviewed on her wedding day.

Added another boy: If you ask me honestly I am willing to marry any girl
who will take me abroad.

See, if I put Rs.500,000 in business here, there's no guarantee of return
and I can definitely migrate once I get married to an NRI.

With visas and citizenships thinning down, marriage and illegal migration
are the only options left to people who, as the film said, have no modern
skills, no knowledge of the Western culture and no clue of the language.

But it doesn't seem to matter when you see your neighbour magically
transform their hutment into a four-floor mansion, complete with the plane
on the roof.

And you see neighbours, who emigrated long ago, return with riches.

Said Udham Kaur, settled in Britain for two decades: Your own country is
your own country, and you have to return to your fields, your water; but we
must go, that too is important.

The 75-year-old mother of a man living in the U.S. for the last 13 years
shares the same sentiment, albeit in a rather different sense.

I ate bread and salt and bread and pickles for months to send my son
abroad.

Now he is living with a white girl, but he will return, oh, yes he will. He
finally wants to marry a Punjabi girl, someone I can talk to.

Till then, as the song goes: I am the son of a farmer, I want to go
abroad.

--Indo-Asian News Service

--
What's On In Goa (WOIG): 
Nov 06 Children's book exhibn opens, Walkabout, Anjuna... (all weekdays)
Nov 06 ArtHouse, Calangute: Chaitali's acrylics on canvas till 19.11
Nov 07 Revision of electoral rolls (till Nov 30) See schedule.
Dec 01 Two day conference, Goa Agenda. IT For Society. (Ends 2.12) 
Every Sunday: Music therapy sessions at Moira, 5 pm. 278, N.Portugal

--



[GOANET] NEWS: Another Rane in the news... just outside Goa

2002-11-30 Thread Frederick Noronha

Goa's phone numbers change from Nov 10, 2002. Prefix old number with a 2. New numbers 
will be seven-digit 2XX (where XX is the old number).


Former Maharashtra CM's house burnt

By Shiv Kumaar, Indo-Asian News Service

Mumbai, Nov 23 (IANS) Police reinforcements including contingents of the
state reserve police were called in after the house of former Maharashtra
chief minister Narayan Rane was torched.

The incident occurred in Kankavli town in Sindhudurg district, 450 km from
here, and was the fallout of local body elections in the area, police said.

According to the state police control room, Rane's house was set ablaze
after his supporters allegedly killed a man identified as Satyavijay Bhise,
who had won the elections to a local council of Kalsuli town.

Bhise's supporters in the Nationalist Congress Party, a partner in the
Congress party-led ruling coalition, immediately hit the streets and
attacked property belonging to members of Rane's Shiv Sena party.

Rane's house was also targeted in the incident that happened Friday night,
police said.

Sindhudurg district, bordering the state of Goa is Rane's the ancestral
hometown. The former chief minister is said to be expanding his hold in the
district, much to the detriment of his rivals from the Congress and the NCP,
observers here say.

Apart from the house, a petrol pump belonging to Rane and some vehicles
parked at his residence also went up in flames. Police vehicles and fire
appliances called to douse the blaze were also torched.

Police say a mob comprising Shiv Sainiks attacked Bhise and his associates.
While Bhise died, three of his associates sustained serious stab wounds.

The police have arrested former Shiv Sena chief of Sindhudurg district Rajan
Krishna Teli.

--Indo-Asian News Service

--
What's On In Goa (WOIG): 
Nov 06 Children's book exhibn opens, Walkabout, Anjuna... (all weekdays)
Nov 06 ArtHouse, Calangute: Chaitali's acrylics on canvas till 19.11
Nov 07 Revision of electoral rolls (till Nov 30) See schedule.
Dec 01 Two day conference, Goa Agenda. IT For Society. (Ends 2.12) 
Every Sunday: Music therapy sessions at Moira, 5 pm. 278, N.Portugal

--



[GOANET] Query to advertiser on CyberMatrimonials

2002-11-17 Thread Frederick Noronha

Goa's phone numbers change from Nov 10, 2002. Prefix old number with a 2. New numbers will be seven-digit 2XX (where XX is the old number).


 Could you the person who sent me the following note kindly get in 
touch? Unfortunately, due to some oversight, the address of the person 
who sent in the original note was not included in the Cybermatrimonails 
issue. My apologies for the oversight and negligence. FN

READING, TRAVELLING, SAILING...: Matrimonial alliance sought for a Goan Catholic living in the USA. I am 43 yrs of age, slim, 5.8 height. Enjoy reading, traveling, sailing, animals and music. Vastly traveled. Good family background and very well settled with a US government job. Looking for a compatible partner and best friend who is ambitious, educated, well mannered, simple, attractive and supportive. You can expect the same! Honestly is important.




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--
What's On In Goa (WOIG): 
Nov 06 Children's book exhibn opens, Walkabout, Anjuna... (all weekdays)
Nov 06 ArtHouse, Calangute: Chaitali's acrylics on canvas till 19.11
Nov 07 Revision of electoral rolls (till Nov 30) See schedule.
Dec 01 Two day conference, Goa Agenda. IT For Society. (Ends 2.12) 
Every Sunday: Music therapy sessions at Moira, 5 pm. 278, N.Portugal

--


[GOANET] TALK AT GU: Tourism Education in Portugal: Situation and Challenges

2002-11-17 Thread Frederick Noronha


 Original Message 
Subject: Professor Carlos Costa
Date: Mon, 18 Nov 2002 08:02:54 +0530
From: Ancheri Sreekumar [EMAIL PROTECTED]





*Please circulate this announcement to others interested*
Talk on

*Tourism Education in Portugal: Situation and Challenges

by Professor Carlos Costa*

Professor, Tourism Management Group, University of Aveiro, Portugal

at 11 am on Tuesday, 19 November 2002

in the Seminar Hall of the Department of Management Studies (Faculty 
Block D) of Goa University.
All are invited.

A. Sreekumar.
(Fellow of IIM Ahmedabad)

Professor and Dean, Faculty of Management Studies and
Coordinator, Tourism Studies Group, Goa University, Goa, INDIA 403206

Phone 91-832-2451347 Ext. 350 Res. 2452769 Fax 2451184
Email [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Website www.gudms.org
###
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[GOANET] Note from Dave Futers in Goa....

2002-11-17 Thread Frederick Noronha

Goa's phone numbers change from Nov 10, 2002. Prefix old number with a 2. New numbers will be seven-digit 2XX (where XX is the old number).



 Original Message 
Subject: Posting for Goanet GONAS TEACHER EXCHANGE
Date: Sun, 17 Nov 2002 23:26:18 +
From: David Futers [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Frederick Noronha [EMAIL PROTECTED]


David Futers the UK Co-ordinator of GONAS the teacher exchange programme
between Goa and the UK is in Goa for two weeks to discuss the selection
of teachers for next years exchange with the staff of the co-ordinating
organisation Nirmala Institute of Education in Panjim.

Funding continues to be raised for the next exchange program which will
see Goan teachers visiting UK schools in May 2003.
--
David Futers
In Goa India at the moment
Contactable but only just



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--
What's On In Goa (WOIG): 
Nov 06 Children's book exhibn opens, Walkabout, Anjuna... (all weekdays)
Nov 06 ArtHouse, Calangute: Chaitali's acrylics on canvas till 19.11
Nov 07 Revision of electoral rolls (till Nov 30) See schedule.
Dec 01 Two day conference, Goa Agenda. IT For Society. (Ends 2.12) 
Every Sunday: Music therapy sessions at Moira, 5 pm. 278, N.Portugal

--


[GOANET] NEWS-ISLAM: Powell slams fundamentalists for anti-Muslim remarks

2002-11-15 Thread Frederick Noronha

Goa's phone numbers change from Nov 10, 2002. Prefix old number with a 2. New numbers 
will be seven-digit 2XX (where XX is the old number).


Powell slams fundamentalists for anti-Muslim remarks

By Vasantha Arora, Indo-Asian News Service

Washington, Nov 15 (IANS) Secretary of State Colin Powell has hit out at
religious fundamentalists for spreading hatred against Muslims in the
country, saying the U.S. was a welcoming nation for global communities.

Speaking at his department's 17th annual meeting of the Overseas Security
Advisory Council (OSAC), Powell said: We will reject the kinds of comments
you have seen recently, where people in this country say that Muslims are
responsible for the killing of all Jews... This kind of hatred must be
rejected.

We cannot allow this image to go forth of America because it is an
inaccurate image of America. We are a welcoming nation, a nation that is a
country of countries, touched by every country, and we touch every country
in the world.

According to the State Department secretary, we share values with every
religion, with every faith, with every culture, with every creed and with
every colour on the face of the earth. That is what makes America what it
is.

I can walk out this door in five minutes and I can be at a temple, I can be
at a mosque, I can be at a church of any one of a dozen denominations, I can
be at a synagogue -- all within five minutes of here, all living in peace
with one another. That is the kind of society we are, Powell said.

As for the U.S.-led war on terrorism, Powell said events of the past 14
months had shown that the world is a dangerous place, for private Americans
as well as for American officials. In the past 10 months, I have taken three
casualties within the State Department family. Two of them were family
members killed in Pakistan in a church bombing. The third one was an AIDS
worker in Jordan.

He said: It is dangerous to be overseas now, so we have to do everything we
can to protect ourselves and not let the terrorists drive us back home. If
they do that, if they succeed in doing that, then they have won.

Powell added: We all know that security is too big for you or for us to
manage alone. We can only make it work, we can only make our people secure,
if we cooperate in the way that we are cooperating here today. And that, of
course, is what OSAC is all about.

The State Department established OSAC in 1985 to foster the exchange of
security information between the government and the American private sector
operating abroad. The State Department's Bureau of Diplomatic Security
administers it.

Through OSAC, the American private sector, including colleges and
universities, is provided timely information on which it makes decisions on
how best to protect its investments, facilities, personnel and intellectual
property abroad.

--Indo-Asian News Service

--
What's On In Goa (WOIG): 
Nov 06 Children's book exhibn opens, Walkabout, Anjuna... (all weekdays)
Nov 06 ArtHouse, Calangute: Chaitali's acrylics on canvas till 19.11
Nov 07 Revision of electoral rolls (till Nov 30) See schedule.
Dec 01 Two day conference, Goa Agenda. IT For Society. (Ends 2.12) 
Every Sunday: Music therapy sessions at Moira, 5 pm. 278, N.Portugal

--



[GOANET] NEWS: Conservative Christians in US biggest backers of war on Iraq

2002-11-15 Thread Frederick Noronha

Goa's phone numbers change from Nov 10, 2002. Prefix old number with a 2. New numbers 
will be seven-digit 2XX (where XX is the old number).


-- Forwarded message --

CONSERVATIVE CHRISTIANS IN U.S. BIGGEST BACKERS
OF WAR ON IRAQ

A new survey shows that of the major religious groups in the United States, 
evangelical Christians are the biggest backers of Israel and Washington's 
planned war against Iraq. Almost two-thirds of the above religious group 
also say that they support Israeli actions towards 'Palestinian terrorism'.

By Jim Lobe


Washington: Of the major religious groups in the United States, evangelical 
Christians are the biggest backers of Israel and Washington's planned war 
against Iraq, says a new survey released here on 9 October by a politically 
potent group of fundamentalist Christians and Jews.

Some 69% of conservative Christians favour military action against Baghdad; 
10 percentage points more than the US adult population as a whole.

And almost two-thirds of evangelical Christians say that they support 
Israeli actions towards 'Palestinian terrorism', compared with 54% of the 
general population, according to the survey, which was released by Stand 
For Israel, a six-month-old spin-off of the International Fellowship of 
Christians and Jews (IFCJ).

'The single strongest group for Israel in the United States, apart from 
Jews, is conservative Christians,' declared Ralph Reed, co-chairman of 
Stand for Israel and former executive director of the Christian Coalition. 
He also noted that 80% of self-identified Republicans also favour military 
action against Baghdad.

Reed, who was widely regarded as the wunderkind of the Christian Right 
during the 1990s, said that the poll results might have important political 
implications in upcoming US elections, particularly for the Jewish vote, 
which has traditionally gone overwhelmingly to Democrats. In 2000, for 
example, only 18% of Jewish voters cast ballots for President George W Bush.

'There is a new openness among Jewish voters to support this president and 
other Republicans who strongly support Israel,' Reed said, adding that he 
believes Bush in 2004 may reap close to 38% of the Jewish vote harvested by 
Ronald Reagan in 1984, the highest percentage ever received by a Republican 
presidential candidate.

Some 81% of Jewish respondents said that they see Bush as a strong 
supporter of Israel, and 46% said that they were more likely to vote for 
him based on his handling of the 'war on terrorism'. The poll also found 
that two-thirds of Republicans said that they supported Israel in the 
current conflict, compared to 46% of Democrats.

'The bottom line is that Bush appears to be making some significant inroads 
with this heavily Democratic group, something that could have an impact on 
the next two election cycles,' said Ed Goeas, head of the Tarrance Group, 
which carried out the poll.

The survey tends to confirm the findings of similar polls over the last 
several years that have shown strong support for Israel on the part of 
evangelical Christians, who together make up about one-third of the US 
adult population.

Historically apolitical, the group first came to the attention of the 
political elite in 1976 when large numbers of them helped elect Jimmy 
Carter, a 'born-again' Christian.

Disillusioned by Carter's liberal politics and social attitudes, they 
became a major recruiting ground for the 'New Right' that in turn paved the 
way for the election in 1980 of former president Ronald Reagan.

At the same time, Christian fundamentalists were also avidly courted by the 
right-wing Likud government in Israel, which saw in them a promising new 
constituency that, for theological reasons, could be persuaded to oppose 
the return of Jerusalem and the West Bank to Arab rule.

In 1979, the government of Israel reportedly gave Jerry Falwell, head of 
the 'Moral Majority' and the leading Christian Right figure of the time, 
his first private jet.

The Israeli government has also arranged special tours for evangelical 
Christian groups that have contributed tens of millions of dollars to 
Jewish and Israeli agencies involved in resettling Jews to Israel and in 
building Israeli settlements on the occupied territories.

With offices in Chicago and Jerusalem, the IFCJ has acted as a key forum 
for promoting the relationship between conservative US Jews and evangelical 
Christians since 1983.

As violence between Israelis and Palestinians intensified last spring, the 
group created 'Stand for Israel', which it called 'an effort to 
strategically mobilise leadership and grassroots support in the Christian 
community for the State of Israel'.

'Jews are only now beginning to understand the depth of support they have 
among conservative Christians,' said IFCJ's 

[GOANET] FEATURE: Catherine, 11, proves a bridge between Goa and Sweden

2002-11-15 Thread Frederick Noronha

Goa's phone numbers change from Nov 10, 2002. Prefix old number with a 2. New numbers 
will be seven-digit 2XX (where XX is the old number).


CATHERINE, 11, PROVES A BRIDGE BETWEEN GOA AND SWEDEN 

By Frederick Noronha

PANJIM, Nov 16: Catherine, 11, is the link between Maria Zitting-Nilsson and
Goa. It was this 'beautiful child' who pushed the 48-year-old Swedish
e-banker to have a place in her heart for this distant place otherwise
better known just as a land of beaches in her country.

It was a very sad story in the beginning. But it's a very happy story in
the end... not that it's the end as yet, says the light-haired business
development project manager of Swedbank AB from Stockholm.

Maria and her husband Rolf's story is one of adoption, it's travails and
struggles, and finally wanting to do just that little more to help a region
that helped her.

She was 36 and her husband 43 when they decided to go in for an adopted
child. We waited nine years, four years trying to get a biological child,
and five years with adoption agencies, she recalls.

But getting an adoption done in affluent Sweden -- where demand outstrips
supply -- is an uphill task. Some adoption agencies cash-in on the
parents-to-be's desperation, and costs spiral to thousands of dollars.

First we waited for a child from Chile (in Latin America). Suddenly
adoptions from there were stopped. We were already too old to have our own
children. I discussed it with my cousin (who married a Goan), and learnt
that adoptions might be possible from Goa, the thrilled mum explains.

But this was in the early 'nineties, communication with Goa was still
primitive and life was trying. Late priest Albert Luis, who helped in this
process, was awaiting a fax, and tiny Catherine was to be taken to Stockholm
after the lengthy process and an exhausting search. 

But someone who was supposed to deliver the fax to Fr Luis fell sick, and
their search almost fell through. There were some panicky moments, when
Maria thought they would loose the child. 

All ended well, however. She's a wonderful girl. We're the happiest
parents, says Maria Zitting-Nilsson of Catherine, now in the fifth. She
loves art, music and is good at maths. 

Some years back, the child visited Goa and all the places she came from --
the Bardez hospital where she was born, the home for unwed mothers in
Nachinola, and the priest who helped with the adoption. 

Catherine gets on fine with her fellow students, and speaks Swedish fluently.
They see her as Catherine, not as someone (having a brown skin). Maybe they
first saw her as someone different (because of her colour) but now now,
says Maria.

But that was not the end.

Each time they visited Goa, Maria and Rolf spared a thought for those less
fortunate than Christine, who could have still been struggling. She spoke to
her colleagues and also convinced her 1851-founded Swedbank to support
children who needed it. Their help goes to an orphanage in Calangute.

Eleven dollars a month (for a child's upkeep) is so little for us. Yet it
means so much for them (the children), she says. Maria is keen to do
something that would help the girls get a better education, so that they
could stand independently on their own feet one day.

Maria is perturbed by the fact that adoption of a child has become such a
phenomenally costly affair for Swedes. You really don't need to be rich to
be a parent. You should be a good parent. So why should only some (Swedes)
be able to get children (just because they can afford it), she asks.

After her experience in getting Christine home, Maria was chairperson of one
of the smaller adoption agencies herself. 

There are a lot of middlemen, so the government (of Sweden) should be
strict in overseeing this. But there are still people who try to earn money
(out of adoptions), she says.

There are some six adoption agencies in Sweden, and Maria feels the smaller
ones face a relatively tough time, while those who are more influential get
away largely uncontrolled. 

Incidentally, Dr Aloma Lobo, author of the recent 'Penguin Guide to Adoption
in India' (published in 2002) says that couples who are both foreigners get
fourth preference in adoptions -- after Indians who live in India, Indians
or foreign passport holders of Indian origin, married couples where one
partner is Indian or of Indian origin.

There is considerable paperwork to ensure that adopting parents,
particularly foreigners, are healthy, financially sound, that the adoption
would be legally valid abroad, and the like. (ENDS)

Email: Maria Zitting-Nilsson 
   [EMAIL PROTECTED]

--
What's On In Goa (WOIG): 
Nov 06 Children's book exhibn opens, Walkabout, Anjuna... (all weekdays)
Nov 06 ArtHouse, Calangute: Chaitali's acrylics on canvas till 19.11
Nov 07

[GOANET] Re: Re. telephones

2002-11-14 Thread Frederick Noronha

Goa's phone numbers change from Nov 10, 2002. Prefix old number with a 2. New numbers 
will be seven-digit 2XX (where XX is the old number).


Francis, Have you been adding a '2' to the local number, at the right
place? This is how it works

For instance my old number was 409490 (Saligao). Now it becomes 2409490.

To ring from abroad, you'll have to dial 0091.832.2409490
  ^^^
Please note where the additional two has to go... before the six-digit
local number.

Waiting for your call ;-) FN

On Thu, 14 Nov 2002, Francis wrote:

 Subj:Telephone lines
 Sir,
 Since there was change of telephones numbers on 10th Nov. No tel line is 
 going through Saudi exchange to Goa. when we dial our old number we get 
 responce that to sufix 2 on old number but whem dialing we get message 
 to use correct number since 10th Nov we are facing problems from
 Yanbu Saudi Arabia I kindly request to pass this message to concern 
 authority in Goa.
 Thanking you,
 Francis.


--
What's On In Goa (WOIG): 
Nov 06 Children's book exhibn opens, Walkabout, Anjuna... (all weekdays)
Nov 06 ArtHouse, Calangute: Chaitali's acrylics on canvas till 19.11
Nov 07 Revision of electoral rolls (till Nov 30) See schedule.
Nov 07 Creative science, for children, Goa Sc Centre (till 16.11)
Nov 10 Corporate summit on IT and biotechnology, Intl Centre (till 11.11)
Nov 17 Goan Engineers and Assoc meet, at Pickering, Canada.
Nov 20 Fr Agnelo's 75th death anniversary, Pilar
Dec 01 Two day conference, Goa Agenda. IT For Society. (Ends 2.12) 
Every Sunday: Music therapy sessions at Moira, 5 pm. 278, N.Portugal

--



[GOANET] Getting books from Goa

2002-11-14 Thread Frederick Noronha

Goa's phone numbers change from Nov 10, 2002. Prefix old number with a 2. New numbers 
will be seven-digit 2XX (where XX is the old number).


For books on Goa, try the mail-order Other India Bookstore
[EMAIL PROTECTED]. Of course, books purchased in Goa are far more
inexpensive. But they can sell books to any part of the globe. FN

 Date: Thu, 14 Nov 2002 13:24:29 -0500 (EST)
 From: Lena Rodrigues [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Hi, I am a Goan Pakistani and now reside in Nova Scotia Canada (The
 landscape is pretty close to Goa except for the cold).
 How can I order a copy of' Sorrowing Lies My Land' by Lambert Fernandes?





















--
What's On In Goa (WOIG): 
Nov 06 Children's book exhibn opens, Walkabout, Anjuna... (all weekdays)
Nov 06 ArtHouse, Calangute: Chaitali's acrylics on canvas till 19.11
Nov 07 Revision of electoral rolls (till Nov 30) See schedule.
Nov 07 Creative science, for children, Goa Sc Centre (till 16.11)
Nov 10 Corporate summit on IT and biotechnology, Intl Centre (till 11.11)
Nov 17 Goan Engineers and Assoc meet, at Pickering, Canada.
Nov 20 Fr Agnelo's 75th death anniversary, Pilar
Dec 01 Two day conference, Goa Agenda. IT For Society. (Ends 2.12) 
Every Sunday: Music therapy sessions at Moira, 5 pm. 278, N.Portugal

--



[GOANET] NEWS: Goa's villages see conflict, corruption over constructionrules

2002-11-13 Thread Frederick Noronha

Goa's phone numbers change from Nov 10, 2002. Prefix old number with a 2. New numbers 
will be seven-digit 2XX (where XX is the old number).


GOA'S VILLAGES SEE CONFLICTS, CORRUPTION OVER CONSTRUCTION RULES

From Frederick Noronha

PANJIM, Nov 12: Goa's small and scenic villages are increasingly becoming
conflict-zones over construction coming up in these areas, a new publication
on the maze of local construction rules says.

Construction is one area in the village panchayat (elected bodies that
govern life in local villages) which has generated much dispute and
complaints before various authorities, says a just-released 28-page
booklet.

Titled 'Goa Village Panchayat: Construction Rules and Regulations', this
publication has been compiled by veteran voluntary sector campaigner Kumar
Kalanand Mani and activist Soter D'Souza. It is being distributed without
charge by the Madkai-based community organisation Peaceful Society, with the
aim of building greater awareness on this issue.

Construction laws have become a source for corrupt practices by some
panchayat functionaries (elected village politicians) and harassment to the
commonman, says the publication bluntly.

It also admits that village self-government bodies (locally called
'panchayats' in Goa) have also been dragged into litigation by some
elements, just to cause harassment and delay the authorities from taking
action against illegal constructions.

Giving details, this slim booklet suggests that the laws in place may be
actually causing hurdles for those wanting to set up bonafide constructions,
a source for corruption among dubious village-politicians, and yet
ineffective in tackling the root of the problem of land speculation-fuelled
urbanisation of the scenic villages.

Sometimes, ignorance of the laws by panchayat functionaries and the
commonman has led to a rise in illegal constructions. The commonman has
sometimes been unecessarily made to run from pillar to post by some
authorities -- either deliberately or sometimes due to ignorance of the
rules, says the study.

This, it concedes, leads to a loss of precious time or finances for both the
citizen and village panchayat bodies. Carelessness on the part of panchayats
has also given rise to several civic and health problems today, it adds.

Present building rules under the Panchayat Raj Act (which governs large
rural areas of 3700-sq.km Goa) are inadequate. But the existing ones
themselves have not been implemented wholeheartedly, says the study.

Bureaucrats sit as appellate authorities -- with the powers to review
panchayat decisions -- this giving enough scope for political
interference. Sometimes (this is) the cause of much frustration to persons
campaigning against illegal constructions, it adds.

This study argues that the existing laws -- if implemented properly -- could
control the menace of building violations to a great extent. Collective
initiatives from the public can help in minimising harassment to the
commonman caused by authorities neglecting their duties.

Awareness of these laws would help the commonman to protect his rights and
his environment, argues Mani.

Officials here say Goa currently has 189 panchayats scattered across
villages in the small state. In some cases, two or more smaller villages are
combined to form a single panchayat. There are a total of 1439 (rpt 1439)
elected village-level politicians (called 'panchas') in Goa.

Government records say the panchayats undertake a range of activities --
building and repairing village paths and roads, planting trees, constructing
schools, setting up drinking water wells, repairing culverts, and linking
areas with footbridges.

But figures available from the 1990s indicate that the total budget
available to the village panchayats then was little over Rs 200,000 each --
a trivial sum in times when inflation has meant that the vgillage would need
to be cared for with just the sum that just three to four average
middle-class families would need for their annual maintenance. (ENDS)


FOOTNOTE: For e-copies of this booklet, contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] or
[EMAIL PROTECTED] with PANCHAYATCONSTRUCTION as the email subjectline.

--
What's On In Goa (WOIG): 
Nov 06 Children's book exhibn opens, Walkabout, Anjuna... (all weekdays)
Nov 06 ArtHouse, Calangute: Chaitali's acrylics on canvas till 19.11
Nov 07 Revision of electoral rolls (till Nov 30) See schedule.
Nov 07 Creative science, for children, Goa Sc Centre (till 16.11)
Nov 10 Corporate summit on IT and biotechnology, Intl Centre (till 11.11)
Nov 17 Goan Engineers and Assoc meet, at Pickering, Canada.
Nov 20 Fr Agnelo's 75th death anniversary, Pilar
Dec 01 Two day conference, Goa Agenda. IT For Society. (Ends

[GOANET] FEATURE: Goa's villages see conflicts, corruption over constructions

2002-11-13 Thread Frederick Noronha

Goa's phone numbers change from Nov 10, 2002. Prefix old number with a 2. New numbers 
will be seven-digit 2XX (where XX is the old number).


GOA'S VILLAGES SEE CONFLICTS, CORRUPTION OVER CONSTRUCTION RULES

From Frederick Noronha

PANJIM, Nov 13: Goa's small and scenic villages are increasingly becoming
conflict-zones over construction coming up in these areas, a new publication
on the maze of local construction rules says.

Construction is one area in the village panchayat (elected bodies that
govern life in local villages) which has generated much dispute and
complaints before various authorities, says a just-released 28-page
booklet.

Titled 'Goa Village Panchayat: Construction Rules and Regulations', this
publication has been compiled by veteran voluntary sector campaigner Kumar
Kalanand Mani and activist Soter D'Souza. It is being distributed without
charge by the Madkai-based community organisation Peaceful Society, with the
aim of building greater awareness on this issue.

Construction laws have become a source for corrupt practices by some
panchayat functionaries (elected village politicians) and harassment to the
commonman, says the publication bluntly.

It also admits that village self-government bodies (locally called
'panchayats' in Goa) have also been dragged into litigation by some
elements, just to cause harassment and delay the authorities from taking
action against illegal constructions.

Giving details, this slim booklet suggests that the laws in place may be
actually causing hurdles for those wanting to set up bonafide constructions,
a source for corruption among dubious village-politicians, and yet
ineffective in tackling the root of the problem of land speculation-fuelled
urbanisation of the scenic villages.

Sometimes, ignorance of the laws by panchayat functionaries and the
commonman has led to a rise in illegal constructions. The commonman has
sometimes been unecessarily made to run from pillar to post by some
authorities -- either deliberately or sometimes due to ignorance of the
rules, says the study.

This, it concedes, leads to a loss of precious time or finances for both the
citizen and village panchayat bodies. Carelessness on the part of panchayats
has also given rise to several civic and health problems today, it adds.

Present building rules under the Panchayat Raj Act (which governs large
rural areas of 3700-sq.km Goa) are inadequate. But the existing ones
themselves have not been implemented wholeheartedly, says the study.

Bureaucrats sit as appellate authorities -- with the powers to review
panchayat decisions -- this giving enough scope for political
interference. Sometimes (this is) the cause of much frustration to persons
campaigning against illegal constructions, it adds.

This study argues that the existing laws -- if implemented properly -- could
control the menace of building violations to a great extent. Collective
initiatives from the public can help in minimising harassment to the
commonman caused by authorities neglecting their duties.

Awareness of these laws would help the commonman to protect his rights and
his environment, argues Mani.

Officials here say Goa currently has 189 panchayats scattered across
villages in the small state. In some cases, two or more smaller villages are
combined to form a single panchayat. There are a total of 1439 (rpt 1439)
elected village-level politicians (called 'panchas') in Goa.

Government records say the panchayats undertake a range of activities --
building and repairing village paths and roads, planting trees, constructing
schools, setting up drinking water wells, repairing culverts, and linking
areas with footbridges.

But figures available from the 1990s indicate that the total budget
available to the village panchayats then was little over Rs 200,000 each --
a trivial sum in times when inflation has meant that the vgillage would need
to be cared for with just the sum that just three to four average
middle-class families would need for their annual maintenance. (ENDS)


--
What's On In Goa (WOIG): 
Nov 06 Children's book exhibn opens, Walkabout, Anjuna... (all weekdays)
Nov 06 ArtHouse, Calangute: Chaitali's acrylics on canvas till 19.11
Nov 07 Revision of electoral rolls (till Nov 30) See schedule.
Nov 07 Creative science, for children, Goa Sc Centre (till 16.11)
Nov 10 Corporate summit on IT and biotechnology, Intl Centre (till 11.11)
Nov 17 Goan Engineers and Assoc meet, at Pickering, Canada.
Nov 20 Fr Agnelo's 75th death anniversary, Pilar
Dec 01 Two day conference, Goa Agenda. IT For Society. (Ends 2.12) 
Every Sunday: Music therapy sessions at Moira, 5 pm. 278, N.Portugal

--



[GOANET] NEWS-INDIA: Brahmins are cream of Indian society... but honesty nottrusted -- survey

2002-11-13 Thread Frederick Noronha

Goa's phone numbers change from Nov 10, 2002. Prefix old number with a 2. New numbers 
will be seven-digit 2XX (where XX is the old number).


Brahmins are cream of Indian society: survey

By Deepshikha Ghosh, Indo-Asian News Service

New Delhi, Nov 7 (IANS) Despite being a microscopic minority, Brahmins are
still perceived to be dominating many aspects of Indian society.

Surprisingly, most other groups among caste-ridden Hindu society think that
Brahmins - who occupy the dominant position in the social hierarchy -- are
more intelligent, more educated and better looking.

This is one of the findings of a survey conducted across the country by
Week-TN Sofres Mode and published in the latest issue of The Week magazine.

Heading the list of the country's most admired Brahmins is Prime Minister
Atal Bihari Vajpayee.

Few other Brahmins come anywhere close to him in national popularity, but
many clearly enjoy a wide following.

These include Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Jayaram Jayalalitha, Human Resource
Development Minister Murli Manohar Joshi, singer Lata Mangeshkar, cricket
icon Sachin Tendulkar, actor Kamal Haasan and Shiv Sena chief Bal Thackeray.

And the future of the Brahmins is very bright, according to at least a third
of the respondents polled by the survey.

The survey indicates that despite the political resurgence of the backward
castes among Hindus in recent decades, Brahmins continue to dominate the
socio-political spectrum in India.

It however does not give the number of respondents polled by the survey.

Be it in national or north Indian politics, the bureaucracy or elsewhere,
Brahmins are far from marginalized, said The Week magazine. The Brahmin
roll call among top civil servants is even more impressive.

According to the 1931 census, the last time that enumerators took caste into
account, Brahmins numbered 15 million - or just 4.32 percent of the
population of the country.

Brahmins still remain a small minority but one to reckon with.

Seventy-one percent non-Brahmins perceive Brahmins as more intelligent than
the rest.

Seventy percent feel they are more educated, 48 percent think they are more
confident, but only a minority of 28 percent feel they are honest.

In physical appearance too, Brahmins get the nod of 46 percent respondents.

But only 19 percent think they are hardworking and 26 percent think they can
be better in entrepreneurship.

Brahmins are also perceived to be best in traditional arts.

Among the so-called forward castes, 54 percent feel Brahmins are the best
performers in traditional music and dance and 52 percent of the backward
castes and 60 percent of the scheduled castes and tribes share the view.

In southern India, all castes feel Brahmins to be the best performers.

In the most populous state of Uttar Pradesh, Brahmins dominate bureaucracy
and boast of sizeable land and economic resources despite the rapid gains by
political groups known to have no special love for the community.

According to the magazine, the Brahmins' main survival weapon has been their
legacy of education.

As second generation and third generation economic reforms follow, as more
and more areas are privatised and more and more (public sector companies)
disinvested, Brahmin hegemony is likely to get a fresh lease of life, it
said.

--Indo-Asian News Service


--
What's On In Goa (WOIG): 
Nov 06 Children's book exhibn opens, Walkabout, Anjuna... (all weekdays)
Nov 06 ArtHouse, Calangute: Chaitali's acrylics on canvas till 19.11
Nov 07 Revision of electoral rolls (till Nov 30) See schedule.
Nov 07 Creative science, for children, Goa Sc Centre (till 16.11)
Nov 10 Corporate summit on IT and biotechnology, Intl Centre (till 11.11)
Nov 17 Goan Engineers and Assoc meet, at Pickering, Canada.
Nov 20 Fr Agnelo's 75th death anniversary, Pilar
Dec 01 Two day conference, Goa Agenda. IT For Society. (Ends 2.12) 
Every Sunday: Music therapy sessions at Moira, 5 pm. 278, N.Portugal

--



[GOANET] FEATURE: A doctor lives on... in her writing

2002-11-13 Thread Frederick Noronha

Goa's phone numbers change from Nov 10, 2002. Prefix old number with a 2. New numbers 
will be seven-digit 2XX (where XX is the old number).


A doctor lives on... in her writing to get published as a book shortly

By Frederick Noronha

PANJIM, Nov 14: She was known as a doctor, the wife of a soft-spoken
businessman and the daughter-in-law of one of Goa's most popular radio
announcers of yesteryears. But few new Tithi Tavora as a poet and writer in
the making.

Four years after the Panjim-based mother died in a gruesome murder, her book
titled 'A Rainbow and A Star' is due to be published later this month.

She was a doctor -- that was well established. That she was a writer was
little known, said Prava Rai, the Chorao-based ex-Delhi editor who gave
final touches to this 99-page book artistically produced by the
Kolkata-based Writer's Workshop.

This book is to be released on November 23 at the Dona Paula-based
International Centre. Well-known writer and Commonwealth prize-winner Githa
Hariharan is scheduled to release the book in Goa. 

Tithi Bhattacharjee, as she was born in 1960 in Pune to Bengali parents, was
murdered in September 1998 in her home by people she had cared for as a
doctor, as this book mentions.

This was a crime that shocked Panjim. 

But there was another side to Tithi which lives on. Unknown to most people
around her, she continued to write poems and stories for children and for
adults. She had always felt the need to express her feelings and thoughts
about life and events around her, truthfully and fearlessly, says editor
Rai.

'Dona Maria' is the story of an encounter with an aging aunt, one which
keeps getting repeated across migration-oriented Goa. I don't forget!, it
begins with the lady protesting, I just can't remember. Such stories come
up repeatedly in home after home in a state where the young have migrated
far and wide over generations.

Apart from a couple of short stories, the book is made up of dozens of
poems. The Mixed-Up Farm is one that catches the child's imagination: My
Uncle has a funny farm/ As strange as can be/ Where fish do walk/ And birds
do swim/ And milk grows on trees.

Other verse from Tithi's pen deals with the need to maintain the charms of
Panjim town, the East-West clash of interpretations, dinner-table politics,
and even one about the daily struggle behind bringing out a newspaper (which
finally gets reduced to a wrapper for two dry chappatis of a weary farmer).

Some of her verse is short, but make a a sharp and bitting point. One poem,
for instance, is titled National Flag and just says this: Saffron for Ram/
Muslims love green/ White for the rest of us/ Spinning in between.

Famine Miss India 1947-97 (pun intended) points to the couldn't-care-less
attitude of most of us in middle-class India for hundreds of millions of the
poor, her gaunt frame/ puts Twiggy's to shame/ her secret is not anorexia
/nor bulimia, but the old Indian mantra/ 'Starvation'.

For Tithi, pain, suffering, old age and loneliness were not just day to day
indignities to tackle; she felt deeply enough about these human
vulnerabilities to express her bewilderment and distress in writing, adds
Rai.

After her medical studies, Tithi had worked at the Marie Stopes' Clinic in
New Delhi, and after the anti-Sikh riots in 1984, she volunteered to join a
medical team to treat the wounded in camps set up across the Jamuna in Delhi.

In Goa, after her marriage in 1987 to Carlos Tavora (who runs the popular
Udupi-style Navtara Hotel and other businesses and who's mother Imelda was a
prominent name on the airwaves of Panjim in past decades), she was a
consultant to the INS Mandovi Naval Base.

Tithi also worked at the Cancer Society's Hospital and also visited the
Peace Haven centre for mentally challenged in Caranzalem. She had an early
love for writing. She had even written a poem and sent it to Neil Armstrong,
the man who landed on the moon, as a child of eight.

Hand-bound by Writer's Workshop at Kolkata, with lettering in the artistic
pen of professor P Lal himself, this book comes from a tiny publishing house
that has helped launch many prominent writers from the Goan world too --
including Africa/US-based Peter Nazareth, Leslie de Noronha, and others.

It is priced at Rs 200 in hard-back and Rs 100 in the flexiback edition.

ENDS

LINK: Contact the editor, Prava Rai at [EMAIL PROTECTED]


--
What's On In Goa (WOIG): 
Nov 06 Children's book exhibn opens, Walkabout, Anjuna... (all weekdays)
Nov 06 ArtHouse, Calangute: Chaitali's acrylics on canvas till 19.11
Nov 07 Revision of electoral rolls (till Nov 30) See schedule.
Nov 07 Creative science, for children, Goa Sc Centre (till 16.11)
Nov 10 Corporate summit on IT and biotechnology, Intl Centre (till 11.11)
Nov 17 Goan Engineers

[GOANET] LINK: Film on Goa and beyond...

2002-11-11 Thread Frederick Noronha

Goa's phone numbers change from Nov 10, 2002. Prefix old number with a 2. New numbers 
will be seven-digit 2XX (where XX is the old number).


DESMOND NAZARETH [EMAIL PROTECTED] is a US-based, IIT-Madras educated
mechanical engineer whose heart is into film-making. One of his present
ideas is to work on issues related to Portuguese colonial history in India
and Sri Lanka. 

Under the working title of 'Souls and Spice', the movie plan is in an
early stage. We've got some 40 hours of footage, two-thirds of it is
interviews and one-third is location shooting. Our plan is to have 60
hours, before we cull that down into a one-hour proposal. Our ultimate
goal is a documentatary series of six to seven hours, says he.

Des, whom we ran into here, adds: People say, why not take on a simple
project and make a movie on it. But there are hundreds of people doing
that. There's no challenge. This is a subject where I don't have the
answers

He can be contacted via email [EMAIL PROTECTED] or tel 6342814 or 9820
426035 (cell). He lives at Versova in Mumbai when in India. (ENDS)
--
Frederick Noronha * Freelance Journalist * Goa * India 832.409490 / 409783
--

Hardware, n.:
The parts of a computer system that can be kicked.

--
What's On In Goa (WOIG): 
Nov 06 Children's book exhibn opens, Walkabout, Anjuna... (all weekdays)
Nov 06 ArtHouse, Calangute: Chaitali's acrylics on canvas till 19.11
Nov 07 Revision of electoral rolls (till Nov 30) See schedule.
Nov 07 Creative science, for children, Goa Sc Centre (till 16.11)
Nov 10 Corporate summit on IT and biotechnology, Intl Centre (till 11.11)
Nov 17 Goan Engineers and Assoc meet, at Pickering, Canada.
Nov 20 Fr Agnelo's 75th death anniversary, Pilar
Dec 01 Two day conference, Goa Agenda. IT For Society. (Ends 2.12) 
Every Sunday: Music therapy sessions at Moira, 5 pm. 278, N.Portugal

--



[GOANET] COMMENT: Have 'none of the above' on ballot paper -- Shiv Khera

2002-11-10 Thread Frederick Noronha

Goa's phone numbers change from Nov 10, 2002. Prefix old number with a 2. New numbers 
will be seven-digit 2XX (where XX is the old number).


Have 'none of the above' on ballot paper: Shiv Khera

From Indo-Asian News Service

New Delhi, Nov 9 (IANS) Arguing that a voter's right to reject was as
important as the right to elect, motivational speaker Shiv Khera has
demanded that ballot papers should have the none of the above option.

Khera, the author of the book You Can Win who many consider a new age
guru, has filed a public interest petition in the courts asking for this new
option to be inserted in ballot papers.

Just as the people have the right to elect a candidate, they should also
have a right to reject one, Khera said here Saturday while launching his
new group called Country First.

His petition also says that if 50 percent voters go for the none of the
above option, then all contestants should be barred for the next election.

Khera's aides said Country First's objective was to create a platform for
social and political justice, liberty, equality, dignity and integrity of
the nation.

The motivational speaker said his next petition would be for reforms in the
judicial system.

Because of delayed justice, thousands of innocents languish in jail for
lack of trial. The next public interest petition would be on criminal
justice.

--Indo-Asian News Service

--
What's On In Goa (WOIG): 
Nov 06 Children's book exhibn opens, Walkabout, Anjuna... (all weekdays)
Nov 06 ArtHouse, Calangute: Chaitali's acrylics on canvas till 19.11
Nov 07 Revision of electoral rolls (till Nov 30) See schedule.
Nov 07 Creative science, for children, Goa Sc Centre (till 16.11)
Nov 10 Corporate summit on IT and biotechnology, Intl Centre (till 11.11)
Nov 17 Goan Engineers and Assoc meet, at Pickering, Canada.
Nov 20 Fr Agnelo's 75th death anniversary, Pilar
Dec 01 Two day conference, Goa Agenda. IT For Society. (Ends 2.12) 
Every Sunday: Music therapy sessions at Moira, 5 pm. 278, N.Portugal

--



Re: [GOANET] Re: A cockeyed vision in harassing missions

2002-11-10 Thread Frederick Noronha

Goa's phone numbers change from Nov 10, 2002. Prefix old number with a 2. New numbers 
will be seven-digit 2XX (where XX is the old number).


Santosh has a point. It's difficult for us to be un-biased about
assumptions we make (or are passed on to us) early on in life. FN

--
What's On In Goa (WOIG): 
Nov 06 Children's book exhibn opens, Walkabout, Anjuna... (all weekdays)
Nov 06 ArtHouse, Calangute: Chaitali's acrylics on canvas till 19.11
Nov 07 Revision of electoral rolls (till Nov 30) See schedule.
Nov 07 Creative science, for children, Goa Sc Centre (till 16.11)
Nov 10 Corporate summit on IT and biotechnology, Intl Centre (till 11.11)
Nov 17 Goan Engineers and Assoc meet, at Pickering, Canada.
Nov 20 Fr Agnelo's 75th death anniversary, Pilar
Dec 01 Two day conference, Goa Agenda. IT For Society. (Ends 2.12) 
Every Sunday: Music therapy sessions at Moira, 5 pm. 278, N.Portugal

--



Re: [GOANET] Re: COMMENT: Have 'none of the above' on ballot paper-- Shiv Khera

2002-11-10 Thread Frederick Noronha

Goa's phone numbers change from Nov 10, 2002. Prefix old number with a 2. New numbers 
will be seven-digit 2XX (where XX is the old number).


George, with due respect, you're talking about a text-book scenario. Read
the report below... this happens in today's world. Specially when the wolf
is left to guard the chickens. Does Goa Suraj still believe that there's
place for the well-intentioned? Or, would more be achived if we had less
illusions on how the system works, with there being no intention in sight
of a cleanup? FN

 None of the above is a lazy person's response in a democracy.  There are barriers 
to running for
 political office in a democracy, but none are insurmountable.  If the candidates are 
not to one's
 liking, find others - or better yet run for office yourself.
 
 George
  
  Have 'none of the above' on ballot paper: Shiv Khera
  
  From Indo-Asian News Service
  
  New Delhi, Nov 9 (IANS) Arguing that a voter's right to reject was as
  important as the right to elect, motivational speaker Shiv Khera has
  demanded that ballot papers should have the none of the above option.

Arms dealer Suresh Nanda withdraws from Rajya Sabha race

By Sharat Pradhan, Indo-Asian News Service

Lucknow, Nov 9 (IANS) Delhi-based arms dealer Suresh Nanda, nominated by
Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) dissidents for a Rajya Sabha seat from Uttar
Pradesh, Saturday withdrew from the contest after he was roughed up here
while filing his papers.

Nanda was pushed around by legislators of different political parties within
the precincts of the state assembly, following which the visibly shaken
businessman announced that he was withdrawing from both the biennial poll
and the by-election to the Rajya Sabha to be held later this month.

With Nanda's appearance on the scene Thursday what had seemed to be smooth
sailing for official nominees of key political parties in the state had
turned into a contest.

Suresh Nanda is the son of former navy chief Admiral S.M. Nanda. Three years
ago, Suresh Nanda's son Sanjeev Nanda had hit the headlines when he
allegedly mowed down several pavement dwellers in New Delhi while driving
his BMW car in a drunken state.

According to eyewitnesses, Saturday's incidents took place inside the closed
hall where nomination papers were being scrutinised.

The trouble began when some Congress leaders confronted Nanda over various
objections they had previously raised against his nomination. What began as
a heated exchange between his supporters and some angry Congressmen
culminated in a free-for all in which BJP legislators also joined.

Former central minister Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi, who is in the fray as a BJP
nominee, was alleged to have slapped Nanda.

While Nanda parried queries about the assault, he admitted there was some
pushing around and much noise following which Pramod Tiwari (of the Congress
party) and (BJP minister) Lalji Tandon ushered me out of the hall to the
safety of the assembly secretary's chamber.

Asked why he had withdrawn from the poll, he said: I am told there is some
FIR (police report) lodged against me, for which I am planning to meet the
chief minister.

Tiwari, Tandon and some others did not permit Nanda to speak to reporters on
his own. When mediapersons insisted that Nanda be allowed to answer their
queries, he was whisked away to the assembly secretary's chamber, where
journalists were disallowed.

Assembly secretary R.K. Pandey declined to comment on the incident.

Political analysts had said the entry of Nanda was bound to raise the stakes
in the polls. With an affluent arms dealer in the fray, legislators are
bound to demand a higher price for their votes in this poll, said one
analyst.

Before Nanda appeared on the scene, there were 10 candidates for the 10
seats in the biennial poll. This would have ensured their unopposed
election.

His entry had raised apprehensions of large-scale cross-voting, largely on
account of the dissidence against the ruling Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP)-BJP
coalition in the state.

Each candidate requires 37 votes to win the election in which only
legislators are entitled to vote.

Since the Samajwadi Party has the highest number of legislators (142) in the
403-member assembly, it could ensure the election of its four nominees.

Its requirement of six extra votes was understood to have been assured by
eight independent legislators, who were the first to revolt by formally
declaring their withdrawal of support to the government heade0d by Chief
Minister Mayawati.

The BSP, with its 99 members, was confident its three nominees would be
elected as it is banking on support from the Rashtriya Lok Dal's (RLD) 14
legislators. RLD chief Ajit Singh had already assured Mayawati of his
party's support.

With 12 of the party's 88 legislators having openly defied the party
leadership and one having 

[GOANET] Book on Dr Gama Pinto released in Goa

2002-11-09 Thread Frederick Noronha

Goa's phone numbers change from Nov 10, 2002. Prefix old number with a 2. New numbers 
will be seven-digit 2XX (where XX is the old number).


BOOK ON DR. CLAÚDIO DA GAMA PINTO RELEASED.

Under the auspices of Fundação Oriente and Villagers of Saligão, a book
entitled 'A Paean To An Ophthalmologist Prof. Dr. Gama Pinto (1853
- 1945)' authored by Fr. Nascimento Mascaenhas was released by the Consul
General of Portugal in Goa, Dr. Miguel de Calheiros Velozo, at a well
attended function held at Lourdes Convent High School, Saligão, on
Sunday, 3rd November 2002.

Dr. Wilfred de Souza, the deputy Chairman of the Planning Board of Goa
and MLA of Saligao and the Guest of Honour who unveiled a rare portrait
of Dr. Claudio da Gama Pinto while the eminent Consulting Ophthalmologist
Dr. J. H. Cuncoliencar garlanded it. 

Dr. Sérgio Mascarenhas de Almeida, Delegate, Fundação Oriente, India
presided over the session. Fr. Francisco Ataíde, the Parish Priest of
Saligão welcomed the distinguished dignitaries before the ceremonial
lighting of the lamp by the Chief Guest Dr. Velozo. Mrs. Berlinda Caldeira
gave a short description of the book. Messages sent by Dr. Ajay Vaidya,
President, Goa Ophthalmological Association, Dr. R. V. Rajadhyaksha and
Mr. Jorge de Abreu Noronha were read by Mrs. Yvonne Rebello.

In his address Dr. Wilfred D'Souza recalled the contribution made by
Dr. Claúdio da Gama Pinto from Saligão in Portugal from 1888 to 1929 at
the Instituto de Oftalmologia de Lisboa which at the time of his
retirement was renamed as 'Instituto de Oftalmologia Dr. Gama Pinto'. 

He said that Fr. Nascimento Mascarenhas, by writing on this international
famous Goan ophthalmologist, did a marvelous job of making him known
among the present generation and suggested to the Goa Ophthalmological
Association (GOA) to celebrate the 150th birth centenary of Dr. Gama
Pinto on 30th April, 2003 by inviting eminent international and eminent
ophthalmologist to Goa for a session on Dr. Gama Pinto, the Father of
Ophthalmology in Portugal.

In his presidential address Dr. Sergio Mascarenhas de Almeida said that
it was a great honour to the village of Saligao for having produced such
an eminent Ophthalmologist who did Portugal as well as Goa proud, through
his contribution towards ophthalmic sciences and that Fundação Oriente,
India was happy to associate itself to this function. 

The Chief Guest, Dr. Miguel de Calheiros Velozo, after tracing the
multifaceted personality of Dr. Gama Pinto recalled the services he
rendered to the society for long years, presiding over international
Ophthalmological sessions in Germany, France, England etc. and writing in
various international reviews on different ophthalmic themes. He said
Portugal was proud of the legacy left behind by Dr. Gama Pinto which is
continued by his successors even today. Finally he read a message sent
for the occasion by Dr. Paulo de Souza Ramalho from Calangute and the
present Director of the Instituto de Oftalmologia Dr. Gama Pinto, Lisbon. 

Earlier the author of the book, Fr. Nascimento Mascarenhas gave a gist on
his work and said that Dr. Claúdio da Gama Pinto being the Professor of
Heidelberg University, Germany and later on as a teaching faculty at
University of Lisbon nurtured the Instituto de Oftalmologia de Lisboa as
his own baby and forty years he worked day and night with love and
dedication to make the Institute a centre of higher learning and service
to the community. 

His letters to his family in Saligão showed that it was not easy going, as
many times he was falsified, lied, intimidated etc. in the metropolis, all
due to petty jealousies. His numerous publications and conferences and
especially the operative technique known as 'Kerotoplastia da Gama
Pinto' made him internationally famous. He died on
26th July 1945, in Lisbon, aged 92 years. 

The other dignitaries present on the dais were Sr. Celine Coelho,
ex-Superior General of the Franciscan Missionaries of Christ the King,
the ex-Sarpanch of Saligão Ms. Vandhana Sakhalkar and Mr. Joaquim Vaz,
the Chairman of the Villager of Saligão Organizing Committee who also
proposed the Vote of Thanks. Mr. Daniel D?Souza compered, while the
Secretary Ms. Olinda Remedios saw to the overall proceedings of the
function.

Launching of the book was followed by a short Cultural programme
presented by the children, youth and villagers of Saligao. The Brass Band
of Mestre Luis Cota regaled the audience. The book priced Rs. 100 will
be available soon at the various book shops in Goa especially the Saligão
Church and Lourdes Convent High School.


Remedios Communication
Emelia Apts.,
Tabra vaddo, Saligao.
Tel. No. 278338/ 409899



--
What's On In Goa (WOIG): 
Nov 06 Children's book exhibn opens, Walkabout, Anjuna... (all 

[GOANET] FEATURE: Fonseca's trailof nationalism and devotion...

2002-11-08 Thread Frederick Noronha

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FONSECA'S TRAIL OF NATIONALISM AND DEVOTION GOES OUT ON DISPLAY AT PILAR

By Frederick Noronha

PANAJI (Goa), Nov 9: In colonial times, his colours were obviously out of
tune with themes prevailing then. But after that too, Indian Christian
artist Agnelo da Fonseca faded away into oblivion with his potential hardly
be realised till he died in 1967 of meningitis.

Finally, an exhibition of this under-recognised Goan artist, whose birth
centenary will be celebrated in December 2002, will go out on display this
week for almost a month at the religious centre of Pilar, in central Goa,
some 10 kms from here soon.

Angelo da Fonseca's eighty odd paintings and other creations be put up for
public viewing around three scenic larger-than-life stained glass windows in
the Pilar seminary chapel, a training centre for Catholic priests.

These stained-glass creations -- virtually the only ones of their kind in a
formerly Portuguese-rule Goa where this art form was not popular -- were
created by Angelo da Fonseca and are today a tourist attractions in Goa. 

Fonseca (b. 1902) on the scenic isles of Santo Estevao, was the youngest of
17 children. He studied in Pune, and then Grant Medical College in Mumbai,
scoring a sensational 100% in anatomy during his two years in medical
studies.

Obviously, his talent lay elsewhere, and he gave up the sthescope for the
paint-brush. He applied for an agriculture course in Pune, but then join the
Sir J J School of Arts in Bombay.

Living as a Goan emigrant in Bombay at a time when the Indian freedom
movement was at its peak, he was imbued with the spirit of a new India,
says Pilar Theological College professor Dr. Seby Mascarenhas, who is the
co-ordinator for his exhibition.

Feeling that the JJ School of Arts still had an European principal,
Fonseca went over to Shantiniketan in Bengal, and became a pupil of
A.N.Tagore. His art is also believed to have impressed Rabindranath Tagore,
India's first Nobel laureate, and founder of Shantiniketan. 

He studied art under Abandindranath Tagore and Nandalal Bose in
Santiniketan. On completion of training, Abindranath is said to have told
him: Go back, young man, and paint churches! Fonseca commented in his
writing: I belong to the neo-Bengal School of painting which is a revival
of the old famous Indian school of painting.

But, on his return to his native Goa in 1931, still then a Portuguese
colony, Fonseca had to face severe criticism in Goa for his art style. He
painted Christian themes in Indian settings, a very revolutionary step at
that time. 

His argument was simple: Why could not the Catholic Church find herself a
home in India since she is Catholic i.e. is really universal. Indian in
India as she is European in Europe?  

Despite criticism he continued painting religious themes in this style.
When Mary shows herself, she appears in the style of the place', he said.

Referring to Indian art form and the trend of copying western styles, he had
then commented: I hope in the future we shall learn to treasure what is our
birthright.

He left Goa and found a supportive place in the Khrist Prem Seva Ashram in
Pune, where he started his early productive work. He lived and painted here
for 17 years, till he married in 1951. 

Angelo speciality was water colours using the wash technique developed in
Santiniketan. Before painting and after completing the picture he would
dampen the picture with water of various colours. 

The effect of this is to make the colours homogenous with the paper and is
similar to the result obtained in Italian fresco work. He produced over 1000
water colours. He also painted about 50 oils.

But he also carved on wood and slate, painted scrolls, made paper cuttings,
pencil sketches, wax drawings, stained glass and baked clay. He designed
chalices, altars, helped design church. Fonseca mainly painted Christian
themes, but he also has delightful portraits of his family, watercolour and
pencil scenes of Goa and other places he visited.

His murals and paintings adorn the St. Xavier Church, Pune, the KPS Ashram,
the De Nobili College, Pune, Rachol Seminary in Goa and other places. A
collection of his paintings is in the Missio Musuem in Aachen, Germany. 

The three stained glass windows in the Pilar Seminary, Goa, with their
stunning colours, serene visages and indigenous elements evoke awe and
wonder and are today a tourist attraction.

True to his love for the region, Angelo mixed his own colours using the
soils of his native Goa. The fresh looking murals, even after forty years,
are testimony to his skill at using natural colours, says exhibition
coordinator Dr Mascarenhas. 

His paintings have a deep spiritual character in true Indian tradition
where art springs from spirituality. He used fine

[GOANET] GOA: International Conference on Universal Knowledge and Language (fwd)

2002-11-08 Thread FREDERICK NORONHA

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  International Conference on Universal Knowledge and Language
  25-29 November, 2002
  Taj Goa, Fort Aguada.
  (http://www.cfilt.iitb.ac.in)

 Knowledge, Culture and Language have been addressed by scientists
 and scholars as isolated domains in the past. Current trends are
 compelling philosophers, computer engineers, social leaders and
 policy-makers to enlarge the understanding of the convergence of
 information media, and to take a more integrated approach to societal
 development.
 THE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON UNIVERSAL KNOWLEDGE organized
 by the UNDL Foundation, Geneva, Transcultura International Institute,
 Paris and the Indian Institute of Technology Bombay, aims at providing
 an appropriate framework and atmosphere for such approach and
 understanding. The Program of the conference is organized under the
 broad and provocative theme Universal Knowledge and Language and will
 be focussed from four interrelated perspectives: Phillosophical, Cultural,
 Linguistic and Engineering. The conference is being chaired by Prof.
 M.G.K. Menon. It will feature a number of eminent speakers from various
 countries, which will also include Prof. Murali Manohar Joshi, the
 honorable Minister of HRD of India. Prof. Ashok Misra, director IIT
 Bombay is the co-chair of the international advisory committee.
 I request you to visit the website of the conference at
   www.cfilt.iitb.ac.in/icukl2002
 and participate in the event which will definitely be an enlightening
 one.

 Dr. Pushpak Bhattacharyya
 Department of Computer Science and Engineering
 Indian Institute of Technology
 Mumbai- 400 076
 India.

 Tel: 91-22-5767718 (o), 5768718 (r), 5721955 (r)
 Fax: 91-22-5720290/5723480
 email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 homepage: http://www.cse.iitb.ernet.in/~pb

--
What's On In Goa (WOIG): 
Nov 06 Children's book exhibn opens, Walkabout, Anjuna... (all weekdays)
Nov 06 ArtHouse, Calangute: Chaitali's acrylics on canvas till 19.11
Nov 07 Revision of electoral rolls (till Nov 30) See schedule.
Nov 07 Creative science, for children, Goa Sc Centre (till 16.11)
Nov 10 Corporate summit on IT and biotechnology, Intl Centre (till 11.11)
Nov 17 Goan Engineers and Assoc meet, at Pickering, Canada.
Nov 20 Fr Agnelo's 75th death anniversary, Pilar
Dec 01 Two day conference, Goa Agenda. IT For Society. (Ends 2.12) 
Every Sunday: Music therapy sessions at Moira, 5 pm. 278, N.Portugal

--



[GOANET] REVIEW: Retracing the 'Roots of Terrorism' in India

2002-11-07 Thread FREDERICK NORONHA

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Retracing the 'Roots of Terrorism' in India  (BOOK REVIEW)

By Hindol Sengupta, Indo-Asian News Service

New Delhi, Nov 7 (IANS) In spite of growing military rhetoric, India has
only two ways to solve the violence in Jammu and Kashmir -- international
pressure on the perpetrators and free polls.

That is what professor Kanti P. Bajpai, one of India's top international
relations experts, calls the hard truth in his latest book Roots of
Terrorism published by Penguin.

This ... is not to our liking, but we have reached the point where there
are no other avenues, writes Bajpai at the end of the 178-page book that
looks at various causes and effects of secessionist violence in Indian
states.

Bajpai begins by grappling with why a liberal, democratic India continuously
faces the terror menace that has made its half a century of independent
existence a rather melancholy history.

Are bad governments and broken promises responsible for the turn to
violence? he asks. Are poverty and social misery the 'swamp' in which
violence is bred?

Is India, given its size and social diversity, simply a historical
impossibility? Is terrorism an inevitability ... is the problem not with us
but rather with the countries neighbouring us?

The bespectacled, suave professor finds that all these are partly true. That
terrorism which comes from the Latin word terrerre (to frighten), is used
by both the state and individual groups to attain their goals.

Both seek to frighten. Both can be bloody. Both may seek to shock and
disrupt, writes Bajpai.

But there is an inherent difference.

Terrorist organisations usually take, if they do not positively affirm,
responsibility for their violence; states on the other hand are reluctant to
acknowledge the use of violence to frighten and intimidate, said Bajpai.

In the book, the professor of international politics at New Delhi's
Jawaharlal Nehru University also dwells on the liberal, conservative and
realist viewpoints on fighting secessionist violence.

The liberals think that terrorism is a response to economic, social and
political deprivation as well as bad government.

Conservatives think that it arises from the process of nation building ...
realists see terrorism as arising out of the competition between states.

The violence in India is the result of the centre denying rights and
economic and social gains to border states and vicious competition from
Pakistan and China, said Bajpai.

But he also rises to the defence of successive governments in New Delhi.

A government that is thoroughly lawless, incorrigible, and violent deserves
to lose the right to rule. The Indian government has not been any of these
things, writes Bajpai.

He also argues that India does not have the kind of military superiority
over either China or Pakistan, especially under the nuclear shadow, which
would make an outright attack successful.

The militarist response is both dangerous and ineffective, said Bajpai,
who hits out at those who point to Israel as an example. If (The Israeli
example) tells us anything it is how not to deal with terrorism.

The Israeli forces operating against Palestinians do not have to worry
about escalation to nuclear war. It is almost certain that if nuclear
weapons exist, they will be used one day.

So his solution is de-legitimising violence. We cannot expect the cult of
violence in the borderlands to be extirpated when our own imaginations are
suffused with thoughts of violence.

Those who are not made uneasy by the anti-Sikh riots, the destruction of
the Babri Masjid, the Mumbai riots, the celebrations when India tested
nuclear devices ... and human rights violations of our governments dignify
the growing affinity for violence.

--Indo-Asian News Service
--
What's On In Goa (WOIG): 
Nov 05 onwards: Wendell Rodrigues Festival. Altinho, Panjim
Nov 05 Bobbin lace-making training, Don Bosco's Panjim (till 17.11)
Nov 06 Richard Stallman, free software guru, speaks Farmagudi 4 pm
Nov 06 Bob Fitts, gospel music singer, Navelim grounds, 6 pm
Nov 06 Fr Britto's health courses, Pilar. Till 10.11. Later Chicalim.
Nov 06 ArtHouse, Calangute: Chaitali's acrylics on canvas till 19.11
Nov 07 Creative science, for children, Goa Sc Centre (till 16.11)
Nov 17 Goan Engineers and Assoc meet, at Pickering, Canada.
Nov 20 Fr Agnelo's 75th death anniversary, Pilar
Dec 01 Two day conference, Goa Agenda. IT For Society. (Ends 2.12) 
Every Sunday: Music therapy sessions at Moira, 5 pm. 278, N.Portugal

--



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