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Bernardo Elvino de Sousa's avatar

Your article is incisive, analytical and I concur with everything you state. There is, however, a point that I allow myself to raise and hope that you will address it in one of your next articles. I am referring to Goans collaborators.

The French love to talk about the “résistance” after the German occupation during the 2nd world war and have produced a number of great movies based on this theme. Like the Goans they were and still are very angry to this day.

The French, however, discuss the “collaborateurs” with reluctance and shame.

What about Goans? Many houses along the coastal belt built additional rooms attached to their houses to rent out to the trash that produced trash in Goa and contributed towards turning Goa into trash. But it has been a very lucrative trash for the homeowners who are not at all angry, far from it. Other Goans remodelled their homes into restaurants or home-stays or whatever and leased them out to non-Goans who run profitable establishments by offering boarding and lodging to frolicking trash during which time the proprietors can put their feet up, enjoy the money from the lease and hold forth about how Goa has become trash. You have rightly mentioned the collaboration of the political establishment belonging to all the main political parties starting with panchayats right up to the highest echelons. There are many other collaborationist sectors, not only the taxi owners. Would they all really be happy to reclaim Goa?

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Meenakshi kkv's avatar

Great honest observations! Loved the end note. This is an opportunity to reclaim the land in a way that doesn’t displace the local inhabitants and their businesses. Wishing Goa a powerful recovery

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