Fifty years ago, Goans freed themselves from
the clutches of those who shamelessly wanted to turn this land of ours into a
colony of Maharashtra. Yet, vestiges of this slave mentality remained and keep
cropping up regularly by raising the bogey of Marathi as official language,
which it undeservedly nearly is, and by attempting to destroy Goa’s unique
identity and character.
Today, all that we valiantly fought for is steadily
sought to be erased and the verdict indirectly reversed by language fanatics
and crooked politicians and parties who wish to build vote banks and minimize
the influence of the Goan vote. Mopa, Regional Plan and many projects in pipeline,
besides being dangerously oblivious of serious ecological and environmental
damage are aimed at increasing the influx of non-Goans, destroying our
traditional occupations and communities. While the Government boasts that these
are meant to create jobs, there is no improvement in unemployment among locals
and the exodus of Goans is on the rise. We are on the threshold of another
referendum on whether we should allow destruction to continue in the name of
development and whether we should permit our culture, our identity, our very
existence as Goans be diluted or wiped off with anti-Goa and anti-Goans
policies of successive Governments.
Unfortunately, we are left with the choice mostly of tested unreliable
political parties and a multitude of unscrupulous politicians in the fray.
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We face a bigger dilemma than we did last
time when people were swayed by promises of good governance and zero tolerance
to corruption. We learnt our lessons with promises broken, U turns, corruption
and above all despotic and nepotistic governance. This Government has proved
that it does not care for people’s sentiments and interests and that it will go
ahead in doing whatever it wants. Some of their attempts have been stalled by
the Courts, but we cannot afford such costly adventures. If democracy and
people’s will have to prevail, this Govt. has to go.
Major parties and some smaller ones no longer
or never deserved our trust.
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Jose Maria Miranda |
The question today is not who to reject but
who to vote for. Among the undeserving, we may have to choose the least
undeserving. But, in some constituencies, I am afraid, we may have to compromise our principles and
conscience and ignore a good candidate with less chances of winability, solely
to defeat the most unscrupulous: - an unfortunate but helpless situation. We
need to weigh our options and importantly avoid a split that could give an edge
to the most undesirable. We can only pray for enlightenment and guidance and
that we and our Goa be saved from another catastrophe. As a very revered person
recently told me: When things look impossible, God has ways of making them
possible.