*March 10, 2008*

*Eye Spy*

*Lionel Messias*

* *

*Around The World In 365 days*

*From the time when man inherited the earth, the dream of flying has always
been paramount. Legend tells of Pegasus, the flying horse, Hermes, the
winged messenger of the Gods, of the Greek inventor, Daedalus who made wings
for himself and his son Icarus, of the Arabians and their flying carpets.
Among the dreamers were Leonardo DaVinci who seriously studied birds and
drew pictures of wings, parachutes, propellers and helicopters; Edgar Allen
Poe and Jules Verne who wrote many stories of flying above the earth and
space, including 'Around The World In 80 Days.' *

* *

*Man has even flapped his arms and jumped off cliffs repeatedly and
unsuccessfully. Only in 1783 man could float freely through the air for the
first time in baskets attached to big balloons filled with hot air. The
romantic era of aviation, the era of helmeted and be-goggled young men who
flew for the love of flying, is over, unfortunately. Today, it's different.
Today in Goa, a group of MLAs like Vishwajeet Rane and his modern day
apparatchiks get into a flap over such dreary notions as the government not
functioning, and before you can say "Hell, no" they take off with the speed
and versatility of a (VTOL) vertical takeoff and landing aircraft like the
Navy's Sea Harrier. None is prepared to jump off for example the Porvorim
cliff, and I do not mean literally, but figuratively, meaning they wouldn't
in exchange for a flight on board the Apollo even be willing to eject from
their pilot seats in the Secretariat. No, they have to fly off to **Dilli**.
In a way they are fearless, primed to be airborne more, and therefore, they
are called Goa's Flying Circus. The leader of our very own team of Red
Devils is Dayanand Narvekar whose unquenchable thirst for flying cost the
taxpayer Rs14,94,884 between February 2, 2000 and October 11, 2007. Fasten
your seat belts and be ready for takeoff. *

* *

*Free flying*

*Beginning the year 2000 (I have records from 2000-March 1, 2007 only)
Narvekar flew once to Mumbai. In 2003 he flew Goa-Delhi, Goa-Bangalore and
Goa-Delhi. In 2004 he flew Goa-Kolkata-Alzwal-Guwahati-Delhi. In 2005
Goa-Pune, Goa-Delhi, Goa-Pune-Mumbai, Goa-Bangalore, Goa-Delhi-Mumbai,
Goa-Delhi and Goa-Hyderabad. Between February 25 and September 25, 2006 he
flew to Sydney, Australia (cost Rs2,20,818) Goa-Delhi, Goa-Delhi, Goa-Delhi,
Goa-Delhi, Goa-Chennai-Bangalore, Goa-Mumbai, Goa-Mumbai, Goa-Mumbai,
Goa-Bangalore-Mumbai, Goa-Mumbai, Goa-Delhi, Goa-Mumbai, Goa-Mumbai. And in
our wisdom we thought they flew to Delhi only. We were wrong.  Between
October 13 and November 6, 2006 he flew to Delhi and Mumbai. Analyze his
flight patterns if you can. Unfortunately I did not want to bore you with
the periods of his stay outside Goa, though that might have provided the
methodology. But, I do hope someone somewhere is getting the frequent flyer
mileage benefit out of this flying. Because my own calculations tell me this
could be huge, the frequent flyer benefit, that is. *

* *

*Above ground!*

*In 2007 Narvekar was airborne most of the time flying six times to Delhi
including via Mumbai once, ten times directly to Mumbai and once each to
Mumbai- Ahmedabad, Mumbai-Chennai and Bangalore. Once to London-Sao
Paulo-Rio (cost Rs5,14,054.) That's 20 flights in 12 months! Add the days
spent in these destinations plus the usual flight delays and travelling time
to airports that (delays + traveling time) in India normally amounts to more
than double the flying hours, Narvekar must have been hard pressed for time.
Only the chief secretary JP Singh at Rs17,43,663 (for the same period)
bested that among politicians and IAS officers.*

* *

*Obfuscator par excellence*

*Perhaps only Narvekar knows why he spends your money travelling to Mumbai
because only he seems to know what is best for Goa. At the Biotech 08
seminar on March 1 in Mapusa he said this 'Lots of people, who know nothing,
decide lots of things for Goa." He it can be said practices a UK version of
politics called "Economical with the truth" -if someone, especially a
politician, is economical with the truth, they leave out information in
order to create a false picture of a situation, without actually lying.
Narvekar and every other minister hauled over the coals over SEZ, by the
proletariat, has off course been saying this ad nauseam in so many words.
And strangely Srinivas Dempo appeared to concur with Narvekar on this at the
same venue according to the media report I read. Narvekar even had the
bravado to make fun of an MLA who in the Assembly he said exposed his deep
ignorance of what an industrial park was. According to Narvekar an
industrial park is 60 percent open space and greenery. Is he perhaps himself
confused over the difference between an industrial park and a green park or
recreational park as you understand the meaning of it? I imagine the thugs
who set fire to the shrub and forest in Socorro so that an IT park could be
built there also have a different opinion.  *

* *

*Shooting yourself in the foot*

*Why is it the Congress that claims to know what is good for the aam aadmi
just can't seem to win an election. Look at Gujarat, HP, MP and Punjab where
elections were last held. Lost Karnataka, an old bastion, and could never
rise there again as it never will in Orissa or UP and Bihar. It lost
Maharashtra, perhaps forever, and is quite a joke in Tamil Nadu. In fact,
apart from Andhra Pradesh it is on the wane, and can only rule as a
coalition partner. And in a coalition the ground rules are that you listen
and not get grouchy. It got into a huge tangle across India on the SEZ issue
and now hopes to preempt the anti-incumbency factor by holding a general
election anytime now. And now Tripura and Meghalaya.  *

*(Feedback 2280935, 9822152164, [EMAIL PROTECTED])*

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