Re: [Goanet] Goanet Reader -- The Creeping Malaise: When Youth Consume Themselves, Meaninglessly (VMdeMalar)

2006-08-20 Thread CARMO DCRUZ
If Opposition Leader Manohar Parrikar and Chief Minister Pratap Singh Rane
have the Political Will and A Crime-Free Goa in mind, they both will ensure
swift Biblical justice in Goa to the murderers of Mandar Surlakar - by fast
tracking the case through the courts and a widely televised public
cruxifiction upside down on the cross in the Panjim Maidan. There should be
no excuse or sympathy for these heartless criminals who commit senseless
murders whether Christao or Kokne, Goenkar or Bhaile.

I recommend that CM Mr. Rane  and Opposition Leader Mr. Parrikar also work
to change the constitution or the penal code or do whatever is necessary to
institute the death penalty by public Hanging on the Cross - the symbol of
the popular Catholic religion in Goa. I also recommend the constitution be
changed to facilitate harvesting the organs of these criminals for
transplant so that many others may live after these notorius criminals are
executed biblical style. After all all life is sacred and we must uphold
victim's rights and not criminal's rights and facilitate saving the lives of
many Goans who are waiting for organ transplants in Goa. All the pity for
these murderous criminals shown by Goans is just encouraging Goans and
inviting Bhailles to come to Goa and commit murder because they are assured
of a free-ride from the dealth penalty by pro-criminal rights Goans ! All
this has got to stop and we Goans need to make a statement by instituting
public cruxifiction and harvesting of the criminals organs as the form of
death penalty in Goa.

Apparently, Rohan Pai Dungat (19), Sheikh Nafiyaz Mamlekar(19), Shankar
Lalta Tiwari (22), all from Vasco, Ryan Francisco Pinto (20) from Ucassaim
near Mapusa and Al-Saleha Gani Beig (20) of Bicholim have been charged with
the murder.

These murderers of Mandar Surlakar should be made an example of and denied
the priviledge of a delayed, private, painless execution. It appears that
some of our "holier than thou"  Goan members of various forums on the
internet are more for criminal's rights than victim's rights and this is
contributing to the deteriorating law and order situation in Goa ! With this
kind of attitude, criminals are confident of getting a joy-ride in Goa
inspite of their murderous activities and this must stop ASAP !

BTW The UAE and Saudi Arabia have got much lower crime rates than the US, UK
or India. Although the US has the death penalty, it is implemented
semi-privately through a painless injection and that is not an effective
enough deterrent and they have yet to harvest the organs of the criminals as
they do in China - another country with a low crime rate !

I am sorry for Ryan Pinto's and the other muderers' relatives - they will be
horrified at these suggestions and at the thought of what awaits their
murderers if these measures are instituted in Goa - However, if these
biblical measues were instituted a few months back when I suggested them for
Fr. Eusebio's killers, Ryan and the others might have thought twice before
committing such a ghastly murder - Mandar Surlakar may have been still alive
and so many lives may not have been disrupted.

Such widely publicized death sentences and harvesting of the criminal's
organs for transplants are effective deterrents and are the need of the hour
if Goa is to remain relatively safe and crime-free. Goans should have no
mercy on guys who commit such heinous crimes.

Best Regards,
Dr. Carmo D'Cruz,
Indian Harbour Beach, FL


>From: Goanet Reader 
>
>The Creeping Malaise: When Youth Consume Themselves, Meaninglessly
>
>by V. M. de Malar
>
>The senseless murder of Mandar Surlakar by his own best
>friends has been a rude shock. All involved are our children
>-- young men who grew up in our famously relaxed, supposedly
>peaceful atmosphere. The murderers are not gangsters; they
>represent an affluent part of our society.
___
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[Goanet] Goanet Reader -- The Creeping Malaise: When Youth Consume Themselves, Meaninglessly (VMdeMalar)

2006-08-18 Thread Goanet Reader
The Creeping Malaise: When Youth Consume Themselves, Meaninglessly

by V. M. de Malar
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

The senseless murder of Mandar Surlakar by his own best
friends has been a rude shock. All involved are our children
-- young men who grew up in our famously relaxed, supposedly
peaceful atmosphere. The murderers are not gangsters; they
represent an affluent part of our society.

  This tragedy aches so much precisely because
  everyone involved is so clearly part of us, the
  best of our youth in whom so much is invested. In a
  steadily booming Goa, in a dramatically resurgent
  India, these kids had the world at their feet. All
  gone now, as their lives have been individually and
  collectively destroyed.

Mandar has been cremated, and now we will watch helplessly as
the hopes, dreams and potential of his killers also turn to
mere ashes.

It has been a rough few weeks for our gracious Goenkarponn.
There has been ugly jostling on the insider-versus-outsider
fault line.

Just this week, we seen a spate of drownings, two and three
at a time, bright young lives poured down the drain in an
amazingly careless manner. And we've seen the constant
presence of violent crime, of assaults and murders at the
fringes of the real estate and tourism businesses, as profits
and land values have soared past any expectations we might
have had a few years ago. 

Mandar Surlakar's murder is surely connected to this boom.
His killers demanded 50 lakhs (five million) rupees from his
father, and killed him when they realized they weren't going
to get it. It's the money culture that had them in its grips,
and it is possible that drugs were involved. Either way, it's
the environment of fast times and fast money that consumed
these young Goans, and one of them paid the ultimate price.

  You can't blame the youth exclusively. They are
  simply playing out what they see in society around
  them. Every Goan knows that dirty business is afoot
  on a massive scale in our state, and we all see the
  perpetrators get away with everything, including murder.

In our Goa, the "big men" tend to be thugs, kleptocrats,
scamsters, crude wielders of the kind of power that comes
from goons with choppers and contraband weapons. Not only do
they get away with all of it scot-free, we've all seen that
blatantly criminal activity leads directly to great
influence, to an odd kind of popular respect, and to seats in
the state Cabinet. Mandar's killers were nurtured in this
environment, what messages did they absorb from childhood?

* * * * * * * * * * 

Other Goanet threads on this topic:

Peer rivalry cause of kidnap and killing? godfrey gonsalves
http://lists.goanet.org/pipermail/goanet-goanet.org/2006-August/047102.html

Murdered Vasco boy's close friends are the 'kidnappers and
killers'   JoeGoaUk
http://lists.goanet.org/pipermail/goanet-goanet.org/2006-August/047117.html

Murder of a DJ ... do we need to wait for a gruesome murder
to know something is going wrong? FN
http://lists.goanet.org/pipermail/goanet-goanet.org/2006-August/047149.html

* * * * * * * * * * 

After his friend Anuj Joshi was brutally murdered by unknown
assailants, the writer Sudeep Chakravarti diagnosed something
he called "Malaise de Goa." He looked at our raging tourism
economy, at the tidal wave of cash overwhelming our state but
leaving most locals high and dry, and found "the stakes have
become too high."

Chakravarti says "piece-of-the-action is also driving Goa to
the edge" and points the finger at that can of worms that we
all know and recognize, the Mafia-like "web that involves
foreign once-tourists, thugs from the subcontinent, local
land sharks, local law keepers, local lawyers, and local
politicians." He's absolutely right -- we're living on top of
something quite like a malevolent time bomb. It will continue
to tick and claim victims until it is properly defused.

Mandar never made it to his twentieth birthday. His murderers
will see their lives wiped out as surely as their victim. It
is a form of justice done. But that particular cycle of
retribution does nothing for our broken culture.

  When will the murderers of our age-old values pay
  the price? When will the hopelessly corrupt
  officials be brought to reckoning? Will we shake
  free of the pestilential scourge of property
  developers who have formed such potent nexus with
  the shameless politicians?

All of it can happen, but we need to recognize what is
happening and what is at stake if we do not take hold of our
culture right now. We need a change of heart, a collective
conviction that enough is enough, that we can and will change
course for the better. If not, it's clear to see, we'll find
ourselves tormented again and again, as our youth consume
themselves in the terrible, meaningless manner that we were
compelled to witness this week.

---