Read this : http://www.navhindtimes.com/articles.php?Story_ID=061411
"It was also informed that the legislature wing of the BJP will decide its 
independent course of action against Mr Narvekar, during the Monsoon Session of 
the state Assembly, if he continues to hold the office."

The onus of sacking the governor is on the President.
 Sacking a minister is in the hands of the Chief Minister.

-Cajetan Rego
 


--- On Wed, 6/18/08, cedrico dacosta <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
From: cedrico dacosta <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [Goanet] Going soft on Narvenkar
To: [email protected]
Date: Wednesday, June 18, 2008, 11:41 AM

Going soft on Narvenkar  Even after being framed in a scandal involving 
corruption of a high degree...Narvenkar still continues to hold the finance 
portfolio in the current ministry.  That any of the current 40 legislators from 
any of the parties in Goa have any ethics and are purely driven by greed of the 
kodel is a well dramatised fact.  I feel that in a democracy, it is not only 
the party in power, but also the opposition is to be blamed if such corrupt 
people are continuing in power.  We take great pride in trying to blame the 
chief minister and the ruling congress...but open your eyes wide...see if the 
leader of opposition is doing his role well...  See the logic...the opposition 
goes up to the president to seek the removal of a governor...but goes soft on a 
framed minister of the ruling party...  At the height of the alleged 
molestation case that featured the same minister...it was the guts of the then 
leader of opposition ramakanth khalap, ably
 supported by the students lobby that led a defiant narvenkar to finally budge 
in and resign...  Today, nobody seems to go for Narvenkar?  And all this 
assemblies and mobs claiming to save Goa?  First step to save Goa is to get rid 
of tainted ministers...but then if that happens..there are hardly any among the 
current 40 that are not tainted?  Cedric D Dubai



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