24930
CONGRESSIONAL RECORD — HOUSE December 18 1963
ANNIVERSARY OF A 36-HOUR WAR—THE ARMED SEIZURE OF GOA

Mr. BEERMANN. Mr. Speaker, I ask unanimous consent that the gentleman from 
Massachusetts [Mr. Keith] may extend his remarks at this point In the Recess 
and Include extraneous matter.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Is there objection to the request of the gentleman 
from Nebraska?
There was no objection.

Mr. KEITH. Mr. Speaker, today is the second anniversary of a flagrant and 
shameful act of armed aggression against a virtually defenseless people, an act 
more to be deplored because its perpetrators struck from behind the of 
nonviolence, neutrality, and a self-proclaimed nonaggression policy. On 
December 18, 1961, India’s “Man of Peace,** Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, 
gave the orders that set in motion a three-pronged attack against the tiny 
Portuguese trading centres of Goa, Damao, and Diu. To overwhelm Goa’s 3,500 
Portuguese defenders, a modern force of 46,000 troops, jet bombers and 
fighters, and a fleet that Included a cruiser various destroyers was used.

The defenders put up a gallant but hopeless fight. One small Portuguese 
sloop,for example, took on the cruiser and two Triton destroyers in a 45-minute 
gun-battle before the little vessel was hit and beached by its captain. By 
military conquest, in complete violation of the Charter of the United Nations, 
Nehru abruptly ended 451 years of Portuguese rule. The effect was more 
far-reaching, however, than the conquest of the three tiny Portuguese enclaves. 
It put an end to the myth that Nehru's India opposed aggression, as we had so 
often been told, and It threatened the very existence of the United Nations. 

Newsweek, on January 1,1962, had this comment:The blows dealt by Nehru's attack 
on Goa last week fell not on the Portuguese colony and Its tiny sister 
enclaves, but on two far more substantial Institutions: The symbol of India as 
a nation of peace, and the symbol of the United Nations as an Instrument for 
preventing war.

While India was being congratulated by Russia and Red China for the liberation 
of Goa, Newsweek noted. President Sukarno drew the most direct inspiration from 
the attack—he mobilized 500,000 troops to Invade Netherlands New Guinea.

The implication was obvious, Mr. Speaker, when the U.N. failed to counteract, 
in anyway, this blatant aggression. If this world organization, created to 
establish and foster world peace, sanctions by Inaction such an act, then there 
will be no basis In precedent for future action by the U.N. should armed 
attacks occur elsewhere In the world. Mr. Nehru tried to justify his war on Goa 
and India’s claim to this ancient Portuguese territory by the fact that It was 
geographically a part of India. The extension of this principle, apparently 
accepted by the United Nations, would permit Panama, for example, to occupy the 
Canal Zone, or Spain to seize Gibraltar. There is little doubt that the 
inaction of the U.N., in this case, served as an Inducement to President 
Sukarno.

On this occasion of the second anniversary of the attack on Goa, it seems to me 
most appropriate to call attention to India's unlawful conquest and to note 
that to 700,000 Goans this did not mean liberation but only a change from the 
long-accepted rule of Portugal to the unwanted control by India. This change 
did not come with their consent, as indicated in the recent rejection of 
Nehru’s handpicked candidates for the proposed local assembly.

Ever since the forcible occupation of Goa, Goans all over the world have been 
deeply concerned about the fate of their fellow countrymen In the occupied 
territories of Goa, Damao, and Diu. They have been reduced from the status of 
free citizens in a free country to that of displaced persons in their own land. 
This concern crystallised earlier this month at a conference In Paris, where 
Goans from all over the world met and unanimously resolved to send a delegation 
to the United Nations, which has a special committee to hear petitions from 
oppressed peoples—the Trusteeship Committee of the General Assembly.

A four-man delegation appeared before the Committee on December 10. The 
following story from the December 11 edition of the New York Times will explain 
that they were denied an audience before the Committee and that an effort was 
even made to expunge their initial remarks when the Committee discovered they 
were not there to condemn Portuguese colonial policy, but in fact to protest 
that Goa was now a colony of India:

[From the New York Times, Dec. 11, 1963 ] Four silenced in UN. In Protest on 
Goa—
Committee Restricts Debate* to Portuguese Colonialism (By Thomas J. Hamilton)
United Nations, N.T., December 10.—

African delegate silenced four petitioners today after the petitioners had 
protested India's seizure of Goa, a Portuguese colony, in December 1961. A 
motion to expunge their testimony from the record was dropped, how-ever, as a 
result of opposition by the United States and other Western members and Liberia.

The petitioners, all former residents of Goa or of Goan descent, apparently had 
received a hearing In the Trusteeship Committee of the General Assembly In the 
expectation that they would denounce Portuguese colonial rule.

All four were silenced by the Committee Chairman, Achkar Marof of Guinea. He 
cut their statements short on the ground that they had been given a hearing 
solely to express their views on Portuguese nonself-governlng territories 
Included on the list approved by the United Nations. Goa, which was annexed by 
India after occupation by Indian troops, Is not on the list.

PROPAGANDA AIM SEEN 
Dlallo Seydou, the Guinean representative, said that the Committee’s "sad 
experience” of yesterday, when another petitioner, Henrique M. Galvao. declared 
that Angola and Mozambique were not ready for Independence, showed that It was 
being used for "propaganda purposes.”

Meanwhile, Ghana, Morocco, and the Philippines Introduced a resolution In the 
Security Council criticising Portugal’s non-compliance with a resolution, 
adopted last July 31, that urged Portugal to give Immediate recognition to the 
right of the people of her colonies to self-determination and Independence.

The earlier resolution also called on Portugal to withdraw all military forces 
employed for “repression” in her colonies and urged all states to stop exports 
to Portugal of arms and
military equipment for such use.

Today’s resolution urges all states to comply with the previous resolution, but 
does not call for additional measures against Portugal. However, It says that 
recent talks between African representatives and Dr. Albert Franco Noguelra, 
the Foreign Minister of Portugal, has not succeeded because of dis-agreement 
over the meaning of “self-determination.”

THE 1960 DECLARATION CITED
It cites the definition of self-determination contained In the General 
Assembly’s antl-colonlal declaration In 1960:
"All peoples have the right to self-determination; by virtue of that right they 
freely determine their political status and freely pursue their economic, 
social, and cultural development.”

The resolution asks the Secretary General, U Thant, to report on developments 
by next June 1.

The first petitioner heard by the Trustee-ship Committee. Antonio da Fonseca, 
started by saying that self-determination could never be compatible with armed 
invasion of a territory, referring to Goa. He was interrupted by the Chairman 
when he was about to ask what guarantee there would be that other non 
-self-governing territories would not be Invaded If the United Nations did not 
condemn such action.

Mr. Marof allowed Mr. da Fonseca to say a few more sentences, but he cut short 
the three other petitioners, Wolfgang Does de Souza, Leo de Souza, and Remeo da 
Silva, as soon as it became clear that they also were protesting against the 
seizure of Goa. Having been silenced in the United Nations, the delegation 
hoped to earn the sympathy of the American people in their resolve to win 
self-determination forGoa. They wrote me on December I5 from New York, asking 
If I would meet with them to hear their story and help arrange for them to talk 
with officials of the State Department. The following is a copy of that letter:

New York, N.Y.,
December 13.1963.

Hon. Hastings Keith,
House of Representatives,
Washington, D.C.
Dear Sen: Three representatives of Goan communities around the world and myself 
appeared before the Fourth Committee of the United Nations on December 10, 
1988. to ask help In getting self-determination for the people of Goa, Damao, 
and Diu. As you know, our homeland Is now under the military domination of the 
Government of India.

The Chairman of the Fourth Committee, Achkar Marof, of Guinea, refused to 
permit us to speak about Goa. Mr. Keith, we are official representatives of 
communities of people of Goa, Damao, and Diu. A conference of representatives 
of all these communities, held In Paris on December 3, 1963, Issued a 
declaration of rights, demanding self-determination for the people of Goa, 
Damao, and Diu. The conference vehemently condemned the Indian aggression and 
occupation of our homeland and asked the United Nations, and all governments 
who believe In the charter of the United Nations, to help us attain 
self-determination.

We know, sir, that you represent many Portuguese people In the United States. 
We know of your great interest In and sympathy with the Portuguese people. 
Printed copies of the articles about Angola by the great American 
correspondent, Robert Estabrook, which you placed In the Congressional Record, 
have been circulated among Portuguese people around the world. We also have 
seen In this record of the American Congress editorials from the Standard-Times 
newspaper in New Bedford—articles that are sympathetic to the captivity of the 
people of Goa, Damao, and Diu and articles that you put In the Record.

We therefore request an audience with you In Washington on December 18th, which 
Is the day of infamy to us. It Is the day the Indian army Invaded our homeland. 
We feel we must keep alive the conscience of the world about the conquest of a 
free province of Portugal. We solicit your help In presenting our communique of 
the declaration of rights to the State Department of the United States, so the 
great American people will realise that the people of Goa, Damao, and Diu still 
sorrow and are resolved to secure the right of self-determination which Is 
being granted elsewhere around the world.

Please receive our request favourably

Respectfully,
Antonio dr Fonseca,
Secretary General, Goa Freedom Movement.

I felt the Indian attack went far beyond a question of colonialism and was an 
act that should not go unchallenged. I notified the delegation I would be glad 
to meet with them and do whatever I could to bring their cause to the attention 
of my colleagues In Congress and appropriate officials In the Department of 
State.

Three members of the group met with me in my office today: Prof. Leo Anthony de 
Sousa of Karachi, Pakistan; Antonio da Fonseca, a Goan who now lives in Lisbon, 
and Romeo de Silva, a former resident of Goa who now lives in Nairobi, Kenya.

I would like to include in the Record at this point, an excellent statement 
prepared by Professor Sousa for delivery at the United Nations—a statement 
which the so-called Committee on Colonialism refused to hear. It is an eloquent 
statement in defence of the principles of self determination and due process of 
law, which the Indian Union contemptuously flouted when it sent troops into 
Goa, Damao, and Diu 2 years ago today:

Statement of Prof. Leo A. de Souza

Mr. President and distinguished delegates, members of the Fourth Committee of 
the United Nations, I Join my colleagues in thanking you for having permitted 
us to appear before you. You would like to know my credentials. I present them 
to you. By race I am a Goan. My dear father hailed from the village of Assagao, 
nestling amidst the hills of Goa. By birth, I am a Slndhl. I was born In 
Karachi, when It was the capital of Sind in pre partition India. By law 
established, I am a citizen of Pakistan. By the grace of God, I am a Roman 
Catholic.

Please don't ask me the reasons for my coming here. The heart has its own 
reasons which the head may not understand. I have come here to address you on 
the accepted principle of the Right of self-determination for all peoples 
Including those listed in the permission very kindly granted to us as 
petitioners. I have come here because I have been greatly perturbed by the 
manner In which this principle is being applied In various cases. I do believe 
that the small countries and peoples In the world live In the hope that the 
United Nations is there to guarantee their safety against the appetites of 
bigger nations, who might engage with Impunity in land-grabbing escapades.

It Is true that colonialism is done for. It is a remnant of the past. But this 
does not mean that the law of historical evolution should be allowed to obviate 
the International law represented by the UN. Charter. History may consign 
colonialism to oblivion but the charter provides that the remains be disposed 
of according to due process of law. We are witnessing today a new form of 
anti-colonialism which can have disastrous consequences and serious 
repercussions on world peace.

Sir, I respectfully submit that whatever may be the mechanics of 
self-determination there can be no doubt that the principle of 
self-determination emphasise the right of such distinct groups, Irrespective of 
whether they be large or small, to determine their own future freely and 
without pressure from any other group.

I submit that the UN. can survive the baffling twists and turns of its fortunes 
in the protected territories. It can survive the almost paralysing use of the 
veto by a certain great power. It can survive its present financial crisis. But 
the greatest threat to its existence is the fact that It Is becoming more and 
more frequent that world peace is being subordinated to national self-interest 
that the use of force Is being condoned in the seizure of colonial territories.

If this continues and I have grave apprehensions that It will, it will sound 
the death-knell of the UN. I appeal to you, sir, and to the distinguished 
members of this august Committee that the peoples of the territories listed as 
being under Portuguese administration and which have been the subject of 
debates here since 1967 must be given the right to determine their own future 
freely, without let or hindrance from any other people.

I have great faith and confidence in the UN. and mankind has placed high hopes 
In its charter. If, however, nations bound together by this charter follow 
those nations who have, as they claim, liberated their smaller neighbouring 
peoples from their erstwhile masters by recourse to force of arms, they shall 
thereby renounce their charter pledge not to use force save In the common 
interest. This charter, sir, was designed to save men from the scourge of war 
and not to condone the enslavement of one people by another in the name of 
self-determination.

If the UN. can condone such grave violations of the rights of man then the very 
purpose for which the UN. was established shall have ceased to exist. I have 
said all this because I am still deeply mindful of what happened In the case of 
Hyderabad, Manavade, Junagadh and Kashmir and recently in Goa, Damao and Diu. 
which were annexed by armed invasion by a member of the United Nations.

I am unable to believe how the UN. could have acquiesced in the manner of its 
annexation. If the principle of self-determination Is accepted as sacrosanct by 
the peoples of the United Nations I appeal to you to help the peoples of not 
only Goa, Damao and Diu, but all those territories annexed by force of arms to 
achieve their freedom to decide their own future. This applies equally to the 
Portuguese territories listed in the permission given to us.

I thank you.
Mr. Speaker, 

I have seldom read a finer plea in defense of the principle of 
self-determination or a sounder warning against the consequences of 
disregarding the law of nations as embodied in the Charter of the United 
Nations—principles and laws that were coldly rejected in favor of greed and 
self-interest and of bolstering a faltering domestic political situation 2 
years ago by India.

I would like to Include in the report at this point a copy of a communique 
issued by the Goan Conference in Paris earlier this month, which calls for the 
withdrawal of Indian occupation forces
and the right of self-determination for Goa, as well as a copy of the statement 
the delegation issued on its arrival in Washington today.

Communique of the Goa Freedom Movement Delegates representing the various 
groups of the peoples of Goa, Damao and Dui met on the 3rd day of December 1963 
at Hotel de Palais d* Orsay in Paris, to consider practical steps to meet the 
situation which has arisen as a result at the armed Invasion and occupation at 
these territories by the Indian Union. The Conference convened by the Goan 
Association of Nairobi, Kenya was attended by delegates representing the 
communities of peoples of Goa, Damao and Diu in Macau, the Far East, Ceylon, 
Pakistan, Indian Union, Arabian Gulf area, Ethiopia, Uganda, Tanganyika, 
Mozambique, Angola, Iraq, United Kingdom, Germany, Portugal, Brazil, and Kenya.

The Conference Issued a Declaration of Rights of the peoples of Goa, Damao and 
Diu vehemently condemning the Indian aggression and occupation and notifying 
the Goverment of India to quit the occupied territories on or before the 18th 
day of December 1963 by withdrawing all Its civil and military personnel as 
well as Indian civilians who entered the territories after the respective dates 
of Invasion. The declaration calls upon the United Nations to uphold the 
Inalienable right enshrined in the Charter and Resolutions of the United 
Nations Organization by virtue of which the peoples of Goa, Damao and Diu are 
entitled to the right of self-determination. The declaration further appeals to 
all governments to support the just cause of the peoples of Goa, Damao and Diu. 
Finally' this declaration serves notice upon the Government of India that, 
should the Government fail to comply with the terms of the declaration, the 
peoples concerned will use all means to secure this right.

The preamble of the declaration stresses that the people of Goa, Damao and Diu 
are a distinct community In the Indian subcontinent and Inhabit territories 
with well defined and universally respected frontiers. Over the centuries of 
European Influence these peoples have evolved a distinct and unique culture. It 
also emphasises that the peoples of these territories always repudiated and 
resisted Interference of the Government of India In their way of life.

The conference adopted a constitution and set up an organisation called the GOA 
freedom movement to carry on the struggle for the liberation of the territories 
under Indian occupation. Membership of the organization Is open to all persons 
born In Goa, Damao and Diu or to their descendants in the male line, provided 
they repudiate Indian rule and stand for free and unfettered self-determination.

The organization will have a secretariat and as many other branches as may be 
deemed necessary in the different parts of the world. The organisation will be 
run by a supreme council of seven members elected by the conference. The 
council has been vested with powers to co-opt two other members. 

The names of these persons may be kept In strict confidence for reasons of 
their personal safety. The supreme council has unanimously elected Mr. Antonio 
da Fonseca to hold the appointment of the Secretary-General of the 
organisation. The venue of the head-quarters of the organisation will be made 
known shortly.

The conference also adopted several other resolutions among them one on the 
unity and solidarity of the peoples of Goa, Damao. and Diu and another 
protesting against the high-handed methods of social, cultural, and economic 
strangulation adopted by the Indian authorities with the calculated design of 
rapidly exterminating the peoples of Goa, Damao, and Diu.

The conference passed a resolution condemning the failure of the Indian Union 
to obtain a mandate from the peoples of Goa, Damao, and Dlu to rule these 
territories on the assumption that those peoples acquised in the Integration of 
those territories with the Indian Union. This resolution further condemned the 
proposed elections to be held In these territories as a calculated attempt to 
vest aggression with respectability and further reiterates an unswerving 
resolve to demand the right of self-determination.

The conference decided to light a torch in the Castle of Navarre, the home of 
St. Francis Xavier, patron of Goa. Damao, and Diu and Invoked his blessings on 
ths Just cause of the movement.

M. Da Gama Rose, President.
S. L. Sirvoikar Vice President.

Statement of the Delegation of the Goa Freedom Movement
 
As representatives of ths Goa Freedom Movement, we are asking for the United 
Nations and the United States to support self-determination for the people of 
Goa. Damao, and Diu. We appeared before the Fourth Committee (on colonialism) 
at the United Nations on December 10, but we were Not permitted to discuss Goa. 
The Fourth Committee Chalrman, Achkar Marof of Guinea. Objected because he said 
our homelands were no longer considered non-self-governing territories.

We apparently were permitted to appear before the Fourth Committee because the 
Chairman thought we planned to speak against Portugal. When he discovered we 
were seeking self-determination for Goa,Damao and Diu , he denied us the right 
to be heard.

We have come to Washington today to ask the United States to help place the 
subject of Goa, Damao. and Dlu before the United Nations. The United States has 
consistently supported the principle of self-determlnation and this right has 
been denied to the people of our homeland. We have been made a colony of India.

Today December 18, 1963, marks a Day of infamy in International relations and 
human rlghts. It is the second anniversary ofthe brutal and unprovoked Invasion 
of Goa,Damao, and Diu by the armed forces of the Indian Union. Since then, 
these areas have remained under subjugation.

On the third day of this month in Paris, France, delegates representing Goa, 
Damao, and Diu, met and formed the Goa  Freedom Movement. The conference was 
attended by representatives of the peoples of Goa, Damao,and Diu and also of 
Goan communities in Macao the Far  East, Ceylon, Pakistan, the Indian Union, 
Arabian Gulf area, Ethiopia,Uganda, Tanganyika, Mozambique, Angola, the United 
Kingdom, Germany, Portugal, Brazil, and Kenya.

The attached communique outlines the Declaration rights and the decisions taken 
at theParis Conference.

Following the Paris meeting, a delegation was chosen to appear before the 
Fourth Committee of the United Nations at its current session In New York. The 
delegation cameto plead the rights of self-determination under the Charter of 
the United Nations,for the peoples of Goa, Damao, and Diu.

The delegation was promptly and brutally shut off from speaking on the grounds 
that Goa, Damao. and Diu—which had been a part of the Portuguese world for over 
400 year? and had developed their own distinctive culture and civilisation—were 
no longer considered non-self-governing territories.

This ruling was made despite the fact that our homeland was conquered by the 
Indian Army and has been under the colonial rule of the Indian Government ever 
since. The people of Goa, Damao, and Diu never were given an opportunity to 
choose under what principles they want to live. This act is colonialism at its 
worst.

This subjugation is contrary to the charter of the United Nations, and to the 
noble principles for which the United Nations stands. We were grateful when the 
American Ambassador to the United Nations, Adlal Stevenson, gave his verbal 
support to Goa at the time of the aggression 3 years ago. We appreciate the 
spirit of his condemnation of this most aggressive act, and we recognize that, 
India would have been condemned in the Security Council except for the veto by 
Russia. However, we cannot let the world forget this tragic violation of human 
rights guaranteed by the United Nations Charter.

The world recognizes that the people of the United States have helped a great 
many peoples to attain freedom in and since the past World War. They have 
helped make it possible for United Nations member states to grow from 61 to 113.

The people of Goa hope that the people of America will not forget them, even 
though 3 years have passed since our homeland felt the conqueror’s heel.

Doubtless our country and our people are small In the context of world 
problems, but the moral and political issues involved are those on which the 
United Nations was founded—the protection of the weak and poorer peoples of the 
world.

In the name of our people, we demand a free plebiscite. We ask a plebiscite in 
the name of the same moral and political concepts which gave birth to the 
United Nations.

We request the United States to rescue us from alien oppression. We ask that 
the United States, as a champion of Justice for free men in the world, insist 
that the rights of the people of Goa, Damao, and Diu be recognized In the 
United Nations. The whole world is aware that the United Nations Is already 
obsessed by colonial problems. But let us not forget that colonialism by the 
Indian Union is Just as oppressive as any other type of colonialism.

Not only did the Indian Union forcibly subjugate the people of Goa, Damao, and 
Diu by violent means, but it is actually forcing on them political, economic, 
social, cultural, and religious institutions which they detest and which they 
wish to repudiate.

We reject the false contention that Goa should become a part of India because 
of geography. If geography should pertain, why should not Pakistan, Ceylon, and 
other nations of the Indian subcontinent also be annexed? Why should not Alaska 
be a part of Canada? Politically, Goa. Damao, and Diu had nothing to do with 
the old British Indian Empire except to live as good neighbors. 

Economically, we were far ahead of the Indian Union. We have never depended on 
her patronage and, on the contrary, we have prospered In every way. And now 
India has wrecked our economy and ended our prosperity.

We do not speak in behalf of Portugal. We do not predict what the people of 
Goa, Damao, and Diu would choose under a free plebiscite. But we do Insist that 
it is our right as human beings to choose how we shall live, whether as an 
Independent nation, as a part of the Portuguese nation, or as a part of India. 
The people of Goa should make the choice.

Having failed to gain a hearing or a forum before the United Nations, this 
delegation appealed to Members of the Congress of the United States to hear 
their case so they could make an appeal to the conscience of the free world. 
This time we were not disappointed. True to the traditions of your great 
country, which is looked to as the champion of freedom by all mankind, 
representatives of your Congress answered our appeal, and that is why we are 
here today.

We wish to express our deep thanks to Congressman Keith and the representatives 
of the press who have honoured us by coming here.

The day following the attack on Goa, our Ambassador to the United Nations, 
Adlal Stevenson, made clear the reaction of the United States: It is a question 
of the use of armed force by one state against another and against Its will, an 
act clearly forbidden by the Charter (of the United Nations). We have opposed 
such action in the past by our closest friends as well as others. We opposed It 
in Korea In 1950, In Suez and in Hungary in 1956, in the Congo in 1960, and
we do so again In Goa In 1961.

When Russia, the same day, vetoed a U.N. resolution calling for cease-fire, 
Indian withdrawal from Goa and peaceful negotiations, Ambassador Stevenson 
warned that “we are witnessing the first act in a drama which could end with 
its—the UN’s—death.”

The United Nations has not died, but its voice could only have been seriously 
weakened and Its high purpose undermined by the failure to challenge India's 
aggression.It Is my sincere hope that this Government will come to the 
assistance of the people of Goa. Damao, and Diu in helping bring this matter 
before the United Nations. The passage of 2 years has not lessened the crime. 
To allow Goa to be forgotten would not be consistent with our role as the 
leader of the free world and could only breed a further contempt for the peace 
and order.

The above can be found at
http://www.mocavo.com/Congressional-Record-Volume-109-9/125615/247

--------------------------

Comment: 
When one reads through the circumstances and reaction to India's aggression and 
Annexation of Goa, the realisation is clear. 
There is all round condemnation of The Indian aggression and refusal to hold a 
plebiscite,
The UN is a toothless fairy with no magic wand,
The US gave us lip service but India is a billion people market. Goa has 
nothing.
No government in the world gives a S**t what happens to the People of Goa.
Neither do the government or Indian people. With two representatives in 
Parliament, nobody listens to them. Just ornamental value.
We have nothing that the world craves sufficiently to ensure us self 
determination and Independence (like Kuwait). So we must forget the world as 
the world has forgotten us. 
It is not feasible nor is it possible to be an independent nation, we are still 
an agrarian society and it would not be possible for us to ensure a sustainable 
economy. With India in the background we cannot hope to compete for investments.
We must therefore remain a part of India. AS Partners Not as a conquered people 
or second class citizens they have made us. (During Portuguese rule Goa sent 
two representatives to Portugal, they were atleast given a hearing. New Delhi 
gives our two ear rings.)
There is one thing we can do. We must turn our adversity into a strength. We 
must become powerful politically and financially. The Goan diaspora must begin 
investing in Goa open a facilitation centre and hire people to run the same 
professionally. Leave the politicians out of it as, let us accept that many of 
our politicians have passed their use by date and will cause more harm then 
good, they must be advised and accept the inevitable, retire. 
We must accept as Goans those who have settled in Goa out of love for our 
country. No matter the colour of their skin or language. We are a land 
developing a unique "International flavour" and we must be prepared for the 
challenges such a situation will bring. We therefore need a local political 
party and politicians who understand the future and are ready to take a call. 
Who better to support then the GSRP as at present it is the only party that has 
plodded along being true to its goal of a better Goa. Honest people at the helm 
working on a shoe string budget with nothing to support them but their love for 
our Land. The other parties seem to have become vehicles of political ambition 
and greed. 
The GSRP must now become the opposition the congress should have been. They 
should ensure that jobs are first provided to our Goans and not people from a 
neighbouring state who are encouraged to migrate so as to create a votebank and 
destroy the culture and amity of the Goan people. There as so many issues that 
need immediate attention one wonders where to begin.
They should be careful who they rub shoulders with and provide the foil to the 
CM who needs a challenging opposition.
It is our Land, we are one people, do we unite and fight or lay down and die. 
Goa is ours to keep.
I close with the last sentence many never see nor read " Aij Maka Falea Tuka". 
(my interpretation: Today my dream dies tomorrow yours will)

God bless
Cyrus

Socegado Express

Statement: I am not a member of the GSRP or any other political party. Neither 
am I involved in politics in any manner or form. 

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