http://goastreets.com/goa-news/the-rebirth-of-baina/

THE REBIRTH OF BAINAby Ashley do Rosario on Mar 21, 2013Photo By: Vincent 
KolaGoa's former red-light district goes cleanGenerations of Goans, especially 
residents of the port town of Vasco in South Goa, had grown up learning that 
'Baina' is a bad word. So bad a word, that kids from middle and upper-middle 
class families residing in the otherwise picturesque beach area, were ashamed 
to say they were from here.Take the case of Erol Christopher Jorge, now 
40-something and well settled in life. While in boarding school, on the first 
day in class the teacher asked the students to introduce themselves and where 
they came from. Erol stood up and only managed― "I'm Erol Jorge. I come from 
'next to Baina'".Ravindra Bhavan approaching completion at BainaFor years, 
Baina was Goa's only red-light district, where sailors, drunks and dicey 
characters of every stripe roamed in search of action. Razed by government 
order nearly a decade ago, the area is now beginning to show signs of life, w
 ith tourist-friendly projects replacing the brothels, and families strolling 
down the beach rather than prostitutes and johns. And for the first time in a 
very long while, people are saying, "I'm proud to be from Baina."The good news 
comes with a catch, however. Several of the court battles emanating from the 
2004 demolition are now coming to a climax, with the government being ordered 
to compensate the displaced. And activists charge that the sudden demolition 
has had negative repercussions, including hastening the spread of AIDS by 
dispersing the sex trade.For decades since liberation in 1961, when Goa gained 
freedom from colonial rule, and even earlier, Baina, perhaps because it is 
located close to the Mormugao harbour, functioned as Goa's only organised, if 
not officially sanctioned, red-light area.It was out of bounds for kids like 
Erol who grew up in the area. He was never clearly told what really went on in 
the slum, mostly occupied by migrants from neighbouring South
  Indian States like Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh.Business flourished with 
decades of tacit support from politicians who represented the area in those 
years. The illegal slum expanded and businesses like bars and restaurants kept 
mushrooming all along the periphery of the nearly one-kilometre-long beach. At 
the peak of Baina's 'red-light' avatar, there were over two dozen bars in the 
area, most illegal sans any licencing or regulation.Sunset at a better 
BainaSurely for the politicians, the 3,000-odd vote bank that the slum and the 
surrounding areas held, was worth fighting for and protecting.But the year 2004 
and the iron-hand of the current Chief Minister Manohar Parrikar, who was also 
CM then, changed all that. In a momentous decision, Parrikar acted on a court 
order directing demolition of some 250 huts, and had the entire slum razed in a 
single day.The swiftness with which the administration acted left residents 
little time to approach higher courts and seek solace from t
 he bull-dozers.The action evoked mixed reactions, with some hailing the 
decision as a clean-up act, but many, especially non-government organisations 
(NGOs), were bitterly critical of the move and faulted him for the demolition, 
without any rehabilitation plan for the displaced.Interestingly, early in 
January this year, the Bombay High Court ordered the Goa administration to 
compensate some of those who were displaced by the June 2004 demolition.The 
court was adjudicating a petition filed by Anyay Rahit Zindagi (ARZ), an NGO 
which had assisted the displaced.A two-judge bench of the court pronounced the 
verdict on January 8 and directed the administration to expedite monetary 
compensation and other rehabilitation packages to the sex workers and others. 
It also ordered that the entire process be completed in six months.Another 
complaint against the demolition was that it inadvertently forced the sex 
workers to go underground and spread clandestinely across the state, making it
  next to impossible for health workers and NGOs to monitor the HIV/AIDS 
situation there.Water sports business gears up"We lost count and contact with a 
number of HIV victims we were monitoring. It's not easily discernable, but it's 
a fact that with this single act, the state government has spread the HIV/AIDS 
spectre across the state," said Vijay Daniels, a social worker with an NGO 
which functioned in the middle of the slum in 2004.Whichever side of the fence 
you may have been on then, nobody can deny that the razing of the slum in 2004 
has all but wiped out the 'red-light' tag off Baina.Now, Baina is slowly and 
surely taking re-birth as a bubbly locale of the Port town. The beach, rated by 
many to be as good as any of its peers in Goa, is also coming of its own as a 
tourist attraction.Once termed one of the dirtiest beaches, it is now a 
beautiful tourist destination like any of the other beaches in Goa, with water 
sport activities emerging as its main attraction."There are
  no beach shacks yet but we will lobby with the tourism department to include 
it in its scheme when they auction beach shacks at the start of the next 
tourism season," says Benny Fernandes, a resident of Baina.The beach apart, 
Baina got a major boost when in 2008, former minister Jose Philip D'Souza 
"resisted" commercial lobbies and succeeded in locating Ravindra Bhavan, a 
government-sponsored cultural centre on the area where the slum once stood.Once 
the Rs 40-crore project is completed and commissioned in the next few months as 
assured by the current Art and Culture Minister, Dayanand Mandrekar,  it has 
the potential of transforming Baina into a major centre for theatre, music and 
even film-making."It will be the first of its kind in Goa which will include 
studio facilities for shooting full length films," said Jose Philip D'Souza.The 
area where the project is located is worth, in real estate terms, anywhere 
around Rs 300-crore, Jose Philip told Streets, adding: "I resiste
 d all the forces that wanted the area for commercial use and made sure the 
Ravindra Bhavan was built there."The centre can help talent bloom and re-shape 
the character of Baina, Jose Philip said.The project is being executed by the 
Goa State Infrastructure Development Corporation on behalf of the Goa 
government's Department of Art and Culture. Civil works of the project had 
begun in 2008 but got delayed, like so many other projects of its kind in Goa. 
The costs, originally estimated at Rs 25 crore, have also escalated now by 
nearly 100 percent to Rs 40 crore.Erol, who grew up living in an apartment of 
the Salgaocar residential colony in Baina, is optimistic about the future. "A 
lot of decent folks now flock to the beach for an evening out. Earlier, it was 
only those involved in the flesh trade and their clientele who went there," 
Erol told Streets.Erol firmly believes that once regular cultural and 
entertainment events begin to take place at the Ravindra Bhavan, Baina's imag
 e will be boosted even further, making its unsavoury history a hazy memory of 
the distant past.                                          

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