https://www.incrediblegoa.in/focus/top-seven-countries-goans-settled-help-portuguese/



THE TOP SEVEN COUNTRIES WHERE GOANS HAVE SETTLED DOWN WITH THE HELP OF 
PORTUGUESE CONNECTIONS
By Incredible Goa Staff 
Reporter<https://www.incrediblegoa.in/author/staffreporter/> -
February 15, 2017

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Thousands of Indians from the Portuguese colonies have gone to Europe and 
settled there after acquiring Portuguese citizenship. The Portuguese 
citizenship gives them an opportunity to work and settle anywhere in Europe as 
European citizens. Remedios Rodrigues, a former Goa Shipyard employee – a 
government undertaking is on his way to the UK with a stopover in Portugal to 
collect his Portuguese passport and become a Portuguese citizen after 
surrendering his Indian passport. He is a step away from giving up his Indian 
citizenship in search of his European dreams. The 50-year-old Indian from the 
holiday resort state of Goa who has his family of wife and children still based 
in Goa did not have to make rounds at the immigrations offices of the UK 
embassy in India but pursued his English dreams through the Portuguese 
connections. Goa was a former Portuguese colony till 1961, until the Indian 
army liberated it, on December 19 that year.

How an Indian, who is born in this country and has spent his entire life in 
India can he become a European Union citizen, is the immediate question, which 
comes to mind. For some with no connection opting for Portuguese citizenship 
may seem strange. But this is the route, which Indians from the western state 
of Goa and union territories of Daman and Diu have been exploring to further 
their European dreams. Yes, people from the former Portuguese colonies in 
India, which includes Goa, Daman, Diu, Nagar, and Haveli can exercise the 
option to become citizens of Portugal subject to certain conditions.

According to a researcher Constantino Hermanns Xavier, “Indian immigration to 
Portugal has happened in different waves from the 16th Century onwards. The 
first wave was the Portuguese ships, which carried craftsmen, tailors, and 
others with specialized skills from India to Portugal. They have had a distinct 
influence on the architecture and culture of our country. The second wave was 
of Goan intellectuals who went to Portugal to study and then settled down and 
the third and most significant wave was in 1961, when the people of Goa were 
given the choice of opting for Portuguese citizenship,”

[https://www.incrediblegoa.in/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/SEVEN-COUNTRIES-.jpg]<https://www.incrediblegoa.in/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/SEVEN-COUNTRIES-.jpg>GOANS
 TRAVEL ABROAD ON PORTUGUESE PASSPORT

According to the available information, until the early 1970s, there were 
substantial populations of Goans in the Middle East, Africa, and Europe. There 
have also, historically, been Goans in former British colonies ofKenya, Uganda, 
and Tanzania, and Portuguese colonies of Mozambique and Angola. The end of 
colonial rule and the subsequent waves of the expulsion of Indians from Kenya 
and Uganda forced the community to migrate elsewhere, however. The Gulf News 
put the number of Goans residing outside India as approximately 300,000.

But if you look at the chart it will make one thing clear that more than 50% 
Goans perhaps may not want to become Portuguese citizens and hence they have 
Gulf countries and some of them have permanently settled in these countries. 
Goans settled in the Gulf return home at regular intervals – every two years –, 
while some come less often. They time their holidays to coincide with a wedding 
in the family, religious festivals, exposition of the remains of St. Francis 
Xavier, or to attend to some family matters. Others come home to choose a bride 
and get married. The bulk of migrants cannot take their families along, 
particularly those earning low salaries. However, there are migrants of the 
upper class who have taken their families to the Gulf.

[https://www.incrediblegoa.in/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/GOAN-PORTUGUSE-PRIME-MINISTER-.jpg]<https://www.incrediblegoa.in/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/GOAN-PORTUGUSE-PRIME-MINISTER-.jpg>THE
 GOAN ORIGIN PORTUGUESE PRIME MINISTER WITH INDIAN PRIME MINISTER

Goan migration, which began very early, still continues. Today, practically 
every other family has or had a member or a relative in the Gulf countries. In 
some villages in Goa, sizeable numbers of women folk both married and unmarried 
are working today as housemaids in the Gulf. However, the migration to the 
Middle East suffered a setback during the mid-1990s for several reasons. The 
Kuwait-Iraq crisis and more recently the new migration laws passed in UAE has 
affected Indian migration. In addition to this, there is the completion of big 
projects, drop of oil prices and local workers taking up an increasing number 
of jobs. Goans were retren¬ched from their highly paid jobs when the big 
companies began closing down. There has been the repatriation of migrant 
workers from UAE due to the introduction of new migration regulations. The 
situation in other Gulf states is not any better. With Oman government 
stressing on “ Organization ”, a good number of Goans are forced to leave the 
country. Their jobs are being taken up by local workers. However, professional 
in certain trades and Goan domestic staff are still in demand.

The studies show that 62% of emigrants leave Goa at the prime working ages 
between 20-39 years. Among the percentage of emigrants, females are better 
educated than males; 36% of female emigrants are graduates compared to just 26% 
of the male emigrants.

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