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2008 Toronto International Goan Convention
Theme: Goan Identity And Networking Today.
http://2008goanconvention.com/index.php

Mario Miranda Festival, July 24-26,  2008 Old GMC Building
http://lists.goanet.org/pipermail/goanet-goanet.org/2008-July/077732.html

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Now we know why Goans are fully assimilated into India...the
corruption level makes us one and equal....read on:-

With Indian Politics, the Bad Gets Worse
'Shameful' Vote in Parliament Highlights Extent of Government Corruption

By Emily Wax
Washington Post Foreign Service
Thursday, July 24, 2008; A14

NEW DELHI, July 23 -- There were backroom deals. There were wads of
cash waved about as alleged evidence of bribery. There were six
lawmakers on hand who had just been sprung from jail so they could
cast their ballots.

So it went on the floor of India's Parliament this week during a
historic vote on whether to back the government and its controversial
nuclear deal with the United States.

Even by Indian standards, it was bad. Members of Parliament were
throwing money on the floor, asserting they had been paid off by the
ruling Congress party to support a measure of confidence in the
government.

"It's stupefying. And as an Indian, it's shameful," said Jagdeep
Chhokar, a founding member of the Association for Democratic Reforms,
a New Delhi watchdog group that tracks criminality in India's
Parliament. "We have been fighting criminals ruling the roost for a
long time. This just happened to be a stark display for the world to
see."

It was also a reminder to the rest of the world that Indian politics
-- seen here as the fast track to wealth -- is a no-holds-barred
affair.

The problems are many. India's public campaign-finance laws are not
enforced, and candidates are regularly backed by donors and
corporations that expect favors in return. It's a self-perpetuating
cycle of corruption that has carried over since the days of the
British Raj, when politicians and bureaucrats expected under-the-table
payments.

Today, Indians complain that the culture of corruption exists at all
levels of government. It's certainly the case in high office. Nearly a
fourth of the 540 Parliament members face criminal charges, including
human trafficking, immigration rackets, embezzlement, rape and even
murder, according to Chhokar's group.

To many Indians, recruiting convicted lawmakers for Tuesday's vote
seemed particularly egregious. Sonia Gandhi, leader of the Congress
party, enlisted the support of a former cabinet minister serving a
life sentence for murder, and the minister's son was allegedly
promised a cushy posting as deputy chief minister in the mineral-rich
state of Jharkhand, according to several media reports.

Such public scrutiny is more common than ever in India, given the
proliferation of newspapers and television news shows across the
country. Despite the attention, though, public outrage with
malfeasance has been relatively mild.

On Wednesday, under a headline screaming "Shame," the Hindustan Times
published a survey that found that 63 percent of those interviewed did
not think the recent allegations of corruption would worsen the
reputation of politicians.

Few dispute that corruption has stalled development in India. Bribery
has made it all the more difficult to bolster a flagging
infrastructure and feed a country with more malnourished children than
any other in the world. Reports surfaced this week that politicians
had allegedly siphoned off hundreds of thousands of dollars from a $2
billion program to feed schoolchildren.

Many ordinary Indians feel forced to follow suit with small-scale
corruption of their own: paying bribes to guarantee their children
admission to elite private schools, paying off traffic police to avoid
fines, paying government officials to get a job.

A 2007 survey by Transparency International India found that the
nation's poor had paid about $206 million for public services.

Still, for all the expectations of corruption, Tuesday's developments
were shocking.

"What happened in Parliament is a utter disgrace," said R.H.
Tahiliani, chairman of the New Delhi branch of Transparency
International. "But here the citizen is the victim. He pays to gain
services that he is entitled to. The parliamentary dignitaries should
set far better examples."

On Wednesday, several political parties announced an alliance to
oppose the government. At a meeting, Mayawati, the chief minister of
Uttar Pradesh state -- she is also under investigation for corruption
-- accused the government of "murdering democracy."

L.K. Advani, the leader of the main opposition party, the Bharatiya
Janata Party, told reporters the government will soon fall after such
public skulduggery.

"The whole thing is so scandalous. It reeks of muck. The scam will
affect India's robust image as a democracy," Advani said. "The common
people will soon want to give the government a holiday.

The accusations have served to blemish the once-unsoiled reputation of
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. Singh, an economist, acknowledged that
he is "extremely sad" at the allegations. He has sworn that his
Congress party will cooperate in any inquiry into the allegations.

In New Delhi cafes, Indians gathered around televisions said in
interviews that they enjoyed the political spectacle -- it was sheer
soap opera, after all. Still, they were starting to notice that, with
inflation at record highs here, all the political bickering may well
be a poor use of time.

Achar Thirumala Chari, 46, a manager of a hotel, had had enough.

"I wish they used the same passion to actually solve poverty," Chari
said as he watched the news on a hot afternoon. "Meanwhile, we waste
time and, in this case, more and more money."

Special correspondent Ria Sen contributed to this report.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/07/23/AR2008072303390.html

-- 
DEV BOREM KORUM.

Gabe Menezes.
London.
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                    Tri Continental Film Festival 2008
                           July 25 - 30, 2008
                               Goa, India

              http://www.moviesgoa.org/page/tri_continental/
            http://www.moviesgoa.org/tricon/schedule_2008.pdf
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