Sunday, 6 March 2011

GOA POLICE ARE THE RICHEST IN THE WORLD by N. Fernandes, London

Goa Police are the richest in the world. Now many will ask how?  It is simple. Though they get paid a measly salary, the have learnt from their Political Masters, how to add value to their salaries.  One method is bribery. If you want the Goa Police to be on your side, you just have to give them a HAFTA. Even if you do not wish to have them on your side, you still have to pay a HAFTA, so that they cannot invent or fabricate Charges against you.
There are several cases coming to Court where the Goa Police have framed unnecessary charges against poorly educated Goans. The are not guardians of the people ,but again pure uniformed and khaki clad terrorists
Also many cases have been so badly investigated, that a lot have been rejected in Courts or plainly acquitted.
In the case of Mahanand, the DUPATTA killer, several cases were against him were raised. This was purely to manipulate the figures for convictions and to demonstrate the Police were doing a good job. This is a stastical manipulation
Many Goa Police personnel have second jobs. Many are into Drug, gambling, excise and prostitution rackets.
IN the death and murder case of Cipriano, the Panjim Police involved, are all denying they were directly involved. The are all looking for a "GET OUT CLAUSE". However every Goan knows this is a plain & simple case of murder and brutality of the First Degree.
I expect if a Police is not convicted in this case, there will be some trouble in Goa and disrespect for authority.
All the evidence is clear in this case. Any thing other than a conviction and jail term is not and will never be acceptable to all Goans.

17 comments:

  1. This case without any doubt in any one's mind is a clear case of murder or aggravated murder of an innocent citizen. The matter is just being dragged to find loop holes in the system and escape routes from the start, WHICH upto date have failed.Every piece of evidence collected and recorded has overwhelmingly pointed to DEATH IN CUSTODY. Only a Totally, mentally retarded person may have no clue of this case.Conviction has to be the ultimate verdict to this case.

    ReplyDelete
  2. HAFTA is become norm of the day for Goa Police. After hearing this news, Police from other countries will coome to Goa to take tuitions from the Goa Police or some even apply for a correspondence course.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Very well written article Mr. Fernandes. The Goa Police are becoming a joke day by day. A murder is argued as natural death. The citizens of Goa are fedup with the way the police system works. innocents are harrased, criminals are protected. There has to be a big overhaul int he police system or we need someone like Kiran Bedi to man the Goa police.

    ReplyDelete
  4. LOL....... Kiran Bedi to man the Gua police. Thats a good one.

    ReplyDelete
  5. BITTER TRUTH

    In Goa the police stations are classified in to two catagories
    1) lucrative and 2) non lucrative
    under lucrative comes Candolim, Canacona, Anjuna, Colva, Mollem, and Mapusa
    this is because in their juridiction there is / are beaches where drug trade is flourishing or there is a entry gate to Goa.
    to get a posting to this police stations there is a fixed rate for example to get a posting to Anjuna a PI has to pay a bribe of Rs. 45 lakhs to the home minister and a hafta of Rs 5 lakhs every month to the SP north which gets distrbuted from SP to IGP to home minister.
    When the PI gives so much like any other business man he wants profit from his investment
    if he goes by the rule book he cant even make one rupee
    So he will protect the law breakers for a sum he knows that bigger the crime bigger is his profit.
    like wise the amount fixed to a particular police station has to be sent to the concerned SP
    at the entry points of Goa single days collection is two to three lakhs to collect so much money the police at the check post have to turn a blind eye to liquor smugglers and all illegal activity
    without bill material comes to Goa from Maharashtra, Karnataka, etc etc per truck charge of the Police is five thousand again there is a system called token for each token you pay 3000/ per month in entire south India no Police or RTO will check this truck
    and i think the editor knows all this things better he himself is an ex Goa police
    Mr editor please share your experiences with us all Goans


    BITTER TRUTH

    ReplyDelete
  6. Salim Khan, Valpoi7 March 2011 at 01:50

    All said in a few words by Fernandes with good description. I am sure many people here in Goa are aware of Goa police brutality. This is not the only incident but many went unreported. the incident at Bicholim police station where a helpless woman Geeta Pednekar was brutally beaten like Cipriano stayed alive to tell her tale. The Bicholim police has stiched her mouth with fear. The goonda raj in Bihar has improved and Goa has overtaken all other states in terms of brutality. Goa police are the richest if one goes and look into their assets, palatial houses, etc. Some of the police officers have huge number of mining trucks including some lower ranking police officials. Corruption in Goa is rampant and part of it is done with the help of police officers. The Home Minister has closed his eyes as himself involved in so much corruption. Being a matka bookie, how will he discipline the police force?

    ReplyDelete
  7. N.Fernandes should write a book titled "How to become the Richesr person in the world by taking up the Poorest profession in Goa"

    ReplyDelete
  8. As long as chacha charas naik is home minister and the toad of Margao DIGANDU KAMAT as chief minister by the blesssings of others illeterate MLAs, there wont be any justice in the land of Goa. The Gua police have taken the advantage of the 40 chors as the 40 chors are involved in smugglings, prostitution, extortion, and drugs, so the politicians has to do favours to the police. The chor police are covering Ravi Naik in the drug trade and the Home Minister is covering the police in the murder of Mr Cipriano. If the Goans dont come on the street the things in Goa will turn from bad to worst.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Salvador Seraulim7 March 2011 at 09:59

    The type of cars the children of police drive you would have thought their parents are lakhpotis. The Goa police are good at demanding money from beggars and poorer people.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Gurudas Lotlikar Margao7 March 2011 at 10:04

    The Goa police pay hafta to get employed, when employed take hafta to get rich. When on duty they look more like the Walking Dead

    ReplyDelete
  11. Shubash Raikar Panjim7 March 2011 at 10:10

    Very true our Goan police get more in Haftas then their salaries. Confiscated drugs find themselves back on the streets sold my their drug dealing Politicians children. Ecsaped prisoners are another source of income. But on active duty they look more like sleeping lampposts, Muggers and thieves out run these police any time.

    ReplyDelete
  12. N.Fernandes-London7 March 2011 at 11:54

    To Bitter Truth:::Your statistics are very accurate.
    Lets us take the case of Police Inspector Jivba Dalvi of Verna Police Station or Chandrakant Salgaonkar. If they were to be investigated by the CBI, it would clearly indicate that they Bank 40-50 times more than what a similar PI in The UK,USA,Australia,NZ or Japan, France , Germany earn and after substracting Living expenses, can Bank in a year. It is shocking and difficult to fathom and understand how someone like PI DALVI can salt away lakhs of Rupees a year.
    If transalated mathemetically...A UK PI could save £8-10,000/= per year living frugally.
    PI DALVI and Chandrakant Salgaonkar are able to save £50,000 to £100,000/= per year or more.
    HOW CAN THEIR SAVINGS BE MORE THAN THEIR EARNINGS.
    BESIDES FREE OMLETTES, THEY ALSO BENEFIT FROM OTHER FREE GOODIES LIKE FREE FOOD IN REATAURANTS,FREE TRAVEL,FREE TRAVEL WARRANTS ETC.
    HOW CAN THIS BE?
    GOA GOVERNMENT ...ANSWERS PLEASE?

    Here are some figures::::
    Inspectors' Pay
    (London salaries in brackets)

    Inspectors' Pay
    (London salaries in brackets)

    £46,788 (£48,840)
    With effect from
    1st September 2010
    For link:::http://www.police-information.co.uk/policepay.htm#inspectors

    ReplyDelete
  13. N.Fernandes-London7 March 2011 at 12:56

    View of a Tourist::::
    Goa - Police, Charas and Baksheesh
    By Roadjunky, Posted Dec 01, 2006

    “With the tourist season already picking up and the looming threat from terrorists and organized crime, our task is clearly cut out. We must prevent them from committing their dastardly acts.

    It may be remembered that every Citizen is a policeman without uniform and every Policeman is a citizen in uniform. Participation of members of public in police working is very important as it does not only help police but ultimately it helps the public only.

    Do not attend dubious parties such as acid parties. They are not authorised by the government and not recommended.” (Director General of the Goa Police)

    The chief of police in Goa pays thousands of dollars to be posted here. Why would someone pay to work? Well, believe us, he makes it back and more during the season. In India, like in much of the third world, laws only exist so that the police can make a living extorting those who break them.

    In Goa there are fortunes to be made off taking bribes from the restaurants and guesthouses that pay the police not to bust them when freaks arrive to smoke charas. They also collect ‘taxes’ from the local shops and businesses and make big money from the trance parties, each of which require a baksheesh of thousands of dollars to be given permission.

    The cops always arrive in groups and try to bust travellers trying to get stoned in peace. They’ll take as much money off you as they can find so don’t be caught carrying around a lot of cash when you’re smoking.

    Better still don’t get caught smoking. Lock your doors when you’re about to light a chillum, empty your ash trays regularly and bury your charas supply somewhere outside the house.

    If you do get caught stay calm and expect the cops to try and frighten you with threats of jail sentences. Bring out your money slowly and stay as aloof as you can without being disrespectful. Indians respect strength and will take no pity but may be a little unsure of themselves if you adopt a superior attitude.

    ReplyDelete
  14. n.FERNANDES-LONDON7 March 2011 at 13:14

    EXCERPTS FROM THE daily telegraph newspaper (UK):::
    IN the early evening of March 20 last year, Alexia Stewart was reading in
    her rented house in the Goan beachside village of Vagator. The air was
    thick and heavy, the temperature reaching over 90°F. Tired from a day
    selling Indonesian clothes at her shop, she and her boyfriend, Gary Carter
    - who was in the process of setting up an Internet cafe near a strip of
    Goa's luxury hotels - had returned to the house for a rest before their
    evening meal.

    There was a knock at the door. Alexia put down her book and answered it to
    find seven men and one woman standing in the porch. They announced they
    were from the Anti-Narcotics Cell (ANC) - a special branch of the Goa
    police force - and they wanted to search the house for drugs. Alexia
    remained calm, knowing that as an asthmatic she couldn't even smoke
    cigarettes, let alone marijuana which is heavier on the lungs. She began to
    explain that there were no drugs in the house when one of the men, who she
    later found out was Sub-Inspector Uday Naik, lodged his foot in the door
    and forced his way in, closely followed by his superior, Inspector Lavu
    Mamledar.

    As the officers searched the house, a member of the police party took
    Alexia to one side, she says, and told her that, for 150,000 rupees (around
    £2,000), he could guarantee a quick, quiet exit. With the profits
    from her clothes shop, Alexia was not short of cash. The money she'd earned
    during her two-month stay in India lay hidden in a suitcase under her bed.
    But unaware of the ramifications, she refused to pay. This was to be her
    first mistake.

    Awoken from his slumber and in a sleepy haze, Gary stumbled into the room.
    The police refused to listen to him and continued to turn the house over.
    Incensed at his own helplessness, Gary lost his temper and a struggle
    followed. Meanwhile, another officer walked into the house clutching a
    black plastic bag which he said he had discovered in the garden. Inside was
    165g of hashish, cut and wrapped into 48 small slabs. This, the couple were
    told, was evidence of both their drug dealing from the house and their own
    cannabis addiction.

    Alexia and Gary were hauled into the back of an ANC jeep and taken to the
    police compound in Panaji, the capital of Goa state. There they were
    impounded in a shared cell and charged with possession of charas, as
    marijuana is called in India. Then, as now, they insisted they had never
    seen the drugs before.

    MORE TO FOLLOW

    ReplyDelete
  15. N.Fernandes-London7 March 2011 at 13:18

    FOR ADDDITIONAL INFO PLEASE VISIT......
    http://www.goa-world.net/magazine/trap.htm.

    ReplyDelete
  16. So, the criminals in uniform make a living by criminalizing others. Why do we need such police personnel, who are not to serve society but to loot in every possible way?
    The whole police dept needs to be overhauled and the bad elements locked away. All their assets must be investigated & seized. So much of corruption, its a way of life for them.
    I hope and pray that GRA takes notice of these things, they should make goans to arise against the terrorist & criminal police, the politicians, the land grab mafia and also the chors in disguise called the navy.

    ReplyDelete
  17. Fernandezjoseph26 March 2011 at 01:23

    How can an illiterate person become an education minister and how he can educate if he himself
    has nothing to offer and the list of ministers and others down the line who were paupers and goondas
    before they entered the so called 'assembly of corruption'. Will anybody or somebody open their
    eyes and bring them to justice or is the judiciary also involved? Goa is raped on every level and
    the rapists go free and are rewarded...

    ReplyDelete

Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.