Remembering the Fall of Portuguese India in 1961 

Francisco Cabral Couto, O Fim do
Estado Português da Índia, Lisboa, Tribuna, s.d, ISBN.10:972-8799-53-5, pp.
136. Priced at € 21.60 by FNAC in Lisbon, this hard cover coffee-table
publication is perhaps the latest addition to the surprisingly rich and often
controversial historiography about the end of the Portuguese colonial rule in
India. The author, now a retired general, was a young 26-old fresher from
Military Academy when he arrived in Goa on 27 March 1961 and was posted at the
Afonso de Albuquerque military camp in the village of Navelim, with command
over 47 «caçadores» (hunters) with responsibility for the defence of Borim
bridge, Paroda canal, river Sal and Anjidiv island. Within months the
reinforcements made a total of 158, including many youngsters with little
military training. They were mostly involved in reconnaissance missions to ward
off terrorist attacks. Describes the lack of basic conditions for any sort of
defence in any terms of strategic or military means at disposal. The camp
headquarters at Navelim had a generator that did not work, and depended upon
the use of kerosene lamps and stoves. With the exception of the delicious
mangoes and abundant supply of bananas, classifies the food resources in Goa as
of poor quality. There were canned supplies of quality food and drinks from UK
and Holland, but few could afford them. The author admits that he did not stay
in Goa long enough to take the pulse of the civil society, but remained with
the impression that most Goans favoured autonomy or integration with India.
Felt that the Portuguese presence was tolerated and even respected, but not
much loved: «Quanto aos portugueses, é importante dizê-lo, pareceu-me que eram,
dum mode geral, respeitados, bem tolerados, mas não amados, a não ser por
aqueles que com eles tinham fortes laços familiares» (pp. 20-21). While the
acts of terrorism in Goa were multiplying, the Portuguese authorities were
curiously encouraging the families of the men posted in Goa to join them,
giving a false impression that all was well in Portuguese India. The author had
his first son born on the eve of his departure to India. His wife and 5-month
old son arrived by the first flight of TAIP in July. While reporting about the
relics of the Portuguese naval force in Goa, the author refers to a curious
incident in September 1963 when Salazar ordered the ground batteries at the
fort of Almada in Portugal to fire upon the cruiser Afonso de Albuquerque for
having joined the republican forces in the Spanish civil war! Hence,
ironically, the Indians were the not the first ones to do fire upon this war
vessels. The author does not fail to report that the Commander of the warship
was gravely hurt in the Vijay Operation, but his life was saved by the Indian
military medics who treated him on shore in the Naval Club at Caranzalem. The
author reveals that in an emergency defence planning meet in September 1961 he
had opposed the «Plano Sentinela» that was approved by the home government for
resistance to Indian attack, suggesting that the defence should concentrate in
the capital island, and not in Mormugão. Confesses that he was asked to drop
his objections and withdraw his suggestions. Reveals another «Plano de
Barragens» that has found no mention in earlier publications known to me. It
complemented the «Plano Sentinela». It was meant to demolish the vital bridge
links to delay the advance of the enemy forces. The same plan envisaged also
mining of the main roadways and beach approaches. But lack of mines did not
make it viable. We have a fairly detailed description of the events at Anjidiv
on 23-24 November, when the Portuguese forces stationed there fired upon the
passenger vessel Sabarmati passing between the island and Kochi harbour,
causing some deaths. The Portuguese forces were convinced that Indians were
planning to disembark in the island. The Indian press was agog with news on 25
November and provoked a rapid escalation of diplomatic and military tension.
The Portuguese official sent from Goa to investigate the case reported that the
soldier manning the gun had fired upon the ship alleging that it was within the
Portuguese territorial waters on 17 November and had kept his action
unreported. On December 9 the vessel India arrived from Timor on its way to
Lisbon. With capacity for 380 passengers, it left on 12 December carrying 700,
despite a telegram received from Lisbon ordering the Governor General to not
permit any families to embark in the ship. The Governor General ignored the
order. Allowed all who wanted to leave to embark and the passengers were fitted
even into the bath rooms during night time. It arrived in Lisbon on the last
day of the year. The most valuable and original contribution of this book are
the very personal experiences of the author after his detention by the invading
forces. Such details as we read in pp. 103-116 constitute the value that this
kind of personal memoirs can bring to historiography, despite and precisely
because of their questionable nature of subjective version. Every personal
version counts and is important for the re-construction of an «objective»
history. Francisco Cabral Couto describes the humiliation he felt when the
Indian troops forced them to break up their weapons and arrange them in mounds.
He got a gun-handle knock on his knuckles when tried to play dumb. Greater
humiliation awaited him when his group was taken to the Navelim camp where he
had been in command. Now he and his colleagues had to sleep on cement floor,
dig trenches to serve as open-air latrines, and had to go make do with a jar of
water that was supplied by tanks of Margão Muncipality. Confesses that this
shortage was caused by the Portuguese themselves by destroying the bridges and
other supply routes. Remembers how the Christmas was celebrated with some dry
biscuits that meant much in the context. Most interesting is the fact that
among the guards, soldiers of Indian army he recognized three who had served in
Goa as train TC, another as Longuinhos bar servant and a third who would be
seating as a beggar under a banyan tree. After all, they seem to have been
serving the Indian spy system, and nobody had sensed it. The Navelim internees
where shifted to the Ponda camp in mid January 1962, where the Alfa Detenues
Camp was much better organized. Describes how a few soldiers tried to escape,
provoking a serious incident when the some of the Portuguese officials were
called upon to admit lack of responsibility and were threatened with death by
shooting. The timely intervention of a Jesuit military chaplain ended it all
without any tragic consequences. The author admits that he and his Portuguese
colleagues admired the discipline of the Indian army, which was equally just in
punishing its own members who failed to comply with rules. Describes how he
left Goa by air to Karachi on May 8 and embarked on 9th for Lisbon aboard Vera
Cruz. On arrival in Lisbon 11 days later, they were taken away early in the
dark of night under police escort and without access to the families that
awaited them. In the following months all were subject to unending
questionings, until on 22 March 1963 a list was published of those who were
subject to punishment of some kind, and many were dismissed from service
without right for self-justification. The book ends by admission that Salazar
failed to calculate well the international support, but that also the Indian
invasion proved the Portuguese capacity to resist subversion. This conclusion
appears to be a non sequitur after the author admits that Nehru has shown great
patience for nearly two decades, and implying that no one can be tested
indefinitely, as did the Portuguese diplomatic intransigence. Perhaps the photo
chosen to be included in the book reveals author’s bias and provides an answer?
Is the photo meant to illustrate Nehru’s intimacy with the Mountbatten 
couple.Teotonio R. de Souza
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Forum/1503/teo_publ.html  

Posted by Teotonio R. de Souza at
8:40 AM 
"The casualties were minimum. I am in favour of all wars being like the war 
between India and Portugal -- peaceful and quickly over!" - J. K. Galbraith, 
former US ambassador to India

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