------------------------------------------------------------------------
* G * O * A * N * E * T *** C * L * A * S * S * I * F * I * E * D * S *
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Sangath, www.sangath.com, is looking to build a centre for services, training 
and research and seeks to buy approx 1500 to 2000 sq mtrs land betweeen Mapusa 
and Bambolim and surrounding rural areas. Please contact: [email protected] 
or [email protected] or ph+91-9881499458
http://lists.goanet.org/pipermail/goanet-goanet.org/2009-July/180028.html

------------------------------------------------------------------------
Wedding Tourism and More

ERVELL E MENEZES deplores how the government has allowed Goa to become 
dependent on 
tourism, to the detriment of locals

Mapusa MLA Francis 'Babush' D'Souza was in the news recently with his 
suggestion to 
the Ad  Hoc committee on Law to do away with the one-month residential 
qualification 
before getting married in Goa. "You can't decide where you are born or where 
you 
die, but you can decide when you wed, so why fuss about it?" is what he told a 
weekly magazine. D'Souza wants to make Goa the wedding capital of India, if not 
the 
world.

Anyway, he has a good line on births, deaths and weddings though it is not 
necessarily accurate. Like old elephants, Goans come to Goa to die, but until 
now D'Souza 
was known as 'the frog' - for his capacity to jump from one political party to 
another. He, along with wedding planner Lester Melo of Weddings & Dreams, is 
pressing for a change in the law to facilitate weddings in Goa.

The residential clause came to light when Bollywood actor Sanjay Dutt's 
marriage to 
Mayanta came under a cloud because the documents were fake. Former State 
Registrar 
Prabhakar Sardessai says the situation now is to the advantage of "touts and 
middlemen who arrange doctored documents". But isn't that so in any field of 
administration in this paradise state of ours? There have been cases of 
property 
being sold to a third party by a bogus landlord because of absentee 
landlordism. 
Bogus documents have become a way of life, and are often to be found when there 
are 
multiple owners. Why can't this practice be probed and stopped first?

Then, almost sanctimoniously, D'Souza added, "Goa's image should be of a family 
destination rather than a drug or gambling hub." But what has D'Souza done to 
stop 
gambling? Ministers are known to be regulars at the casinos and Tourism 
Minister 
Mickky Pacheco even has a police case against him, but ministers seem to have 
special immunity. What about drugs? When his own party, the Bharatiya Janata 
Party 
(BJP), was in power, it did precious little to curb this menace. In fact Chief 
Ministers in the past have vowed to come down heavily on the drugs lobby but to 
no 
avail. They seem to be all too powerful and well entrenched on the beach belt.

But aren't there more urgent legal issues to tackle in Goa - for instance, the 
snail's 
pace at which justice is dispensed in Goa. There are instances of cases running 
into 
years, even decades. That would be more in the realm of the Ad Hoc Committee on 
Law 
set up by the State Assembly rather than being obsessed with tourism. The 
grapevines 
has it that the Mapusa lawyers have a caucus whose raison d'etre is to prolong 
cases 
and postponements. Or is that too close for comfort, Mr D'Souza?

Making Goa a convenient destination is more because of the Mumbai underworld 
extortionists demanding money from the newlyweds than for the idyllic setting 
of a 
quaint land of sand, swaying palms and old churches. The latter is just hype by 
the 
press. And now it is not difficult for the marriage partners to get into a 
civil 
marriage in Karwar or Hubli and then proceed to Goa for the celebrations. 
Wedding 
celebrations will continue to thrive in Goa, and Goan resorts will continue to 
gets 
25 per cent or even more of their clientele from weddings.

D'Souza also mentions that the Portuguese law which entitles both partners to 
equal 
rights is a good one and "people feel this law is to their benefit". Hence he 
wants 
one part of the law to stay and the other to change. Isn't this selective 
justice? 
The trouble with Goa is that it has become too dependent on tourism, which 
cannot 
and must not be the only industry. Times out of number I've said that tourism 
is a 
double-edged sword which benefits a few but affects even more, and the last two 
decades have proved this. The prices of essential commodities have soared. 
Fish, a 
Goan's staple food, has become a luxury. Paddy fields are left uncultivated or 
converted for building. It is not only a trial-and-error policy but one of 
error-and-more-error that is being adopted by the government and the Goa 
Tourism 
Development Corporation (GTDC), which should be taken to task for some of its 
shady 
its deals.

I know entrepreneurs who have establishments on the beach belt, and they say 
that 
tourism was down by between 20 to 30 per cent this year. Some of them are even 
going 
into non-tourism-related ventures. What is our incompetent government doing 
about 
it? It is reliably learnt that tax collection was down by 30 per cent in the 
first 
quarter.

We seem to be living in a fool's paradise of making Goa the number-one state in 
India. Didn't we see the news headlines: 'Goa bids strongly for Rs 1,310 cr 
grant 
from the Planning Commission'? Of course, it was alongside a picture of our 
wordy 
Chief Minister Digambar Kamat with Montek Singh Ahluwalia, Deputy Chairman of 
the 
Planning Commission. The issues concerned are infrastructural development, 
beach 
safety, the national games and the golden jubilee celebrations of Liberation. 
Does 
this not amount to going around with a begging bowl?

As I've said before, the Comptroller & Auditor-General's (CAG) report annually 
indicts the Goa Government for its loose spending but nothing comes of it. By 
being 
so dependent on the Centre, aren't we abrogating our independence and keeping 
ourselves vulnerable to their demands? "No one does anything for nothing," is 
an old 
and trusted adage. These are clearly signs of abrogating our powers to the 
Centre. 
And haven't Goans in high places (read New Delhi's decision-making hub) allowed 
themselves to be used rather than using their influence to Goa's advantage?

Reminds me of an article I did on air-hostesses in the mid-1970s. It didn't 
take 
long to realize that these pretty young women were a confused lot. Flying with 
the 
rich and famous seemed to wear off on them and unless they were intelligent 
enough 
to see the dichotomy they were likely to get confused and fall between two 
stools. 
This is precisely what is happening in Goa with all its plans of being the 
focal 
point of activity. But what about normal life in Goa. How can the basic 
amenities be 
provided for the long-forgotten aam aadmi?

For a 40-year-old tourist destination (and we are supposed to be among the Top 
5 
wedding destinations), we have an apology of public transport. We only cater to 
the 
car-wallahs. Are we Hawaii or Bali? Why can't the public transport be extended 
to 10 
pm at the least.

Our power situation is pathetic. In this day and age it should have been much, 
much 
better. Replace those rickety transformers and let there be light available to 
every 
citizen. We've been making a hoo-hah about information technology (IT) but 
nothing 
concrete has materialized The first IT Minister Ramakant Khalap was better 
known for 
the number of trees he felled in Pernem. Then Dayanand Narvekar is known more 
for 
his real estate agenda in the IT Habitat in Dona Paula.

And when the government is questioned about the educated unemployed it blames 
it on 
the people and the scrapping of Special Economic Zones (SEZ) Are there no other 
outlets for employment? Or is "buying jobs" the only alternative ? We have so 
many 
youngsters qualified for IT, both hardware and software, but the scope is 
limited, 
if not nil. They have to leave Goa for jobs elsewhere like our forefathers did 
when 
they set off for Bombay or distant Africa. How different are we from them in 
the 
21st century? You tell me.



http://oheraldo.in/pagedetails.asp?nid=25216&cid=14 


Reply via email to