'Goans are literate but they litter most'


Panaji, Nov 20 (IANS): Goans are literate, but they litter the tourist state with carefree abandon, Deputy Chief Minister Francis D'Souza has said.

D'Souza has been criticised for a leading a 38-member waste management "junket" to Europe that cost nearly Rs.1 crore.

D'Souza who returned Sunday after the nine-day trip also told the latest edition of "Nave Parva", an official magazine published by the state ministry for information and publicity that since garbage is generated by the people, "therefore they should also take care of it".

"While they keep their houses spic and span, the state is being dirtied. So what is the use of the high level of literacy if our people cannot do the simplest thing of not littering," D'Souza said in the interview to the state government's official magazine.

With tourism in Goa increasing nearly triple-fold in the last decade or so, the state has been unable to handle the cubic tonnes of garbage, which the industry generates every day, so much so that both tourism industry stakeholders as well as foreign tourists have begun complaining about the filth which dots the state's beaches and roads.

What has compounded the issue further has been the inability of the state government to identify a single site big enough, to dispose garbage, both organic and non-organic in face of localised opposition.

The fate of Goa's only large-scale, but mismanaged garbage treatment plant at Sonsodo in south Goa is a grim reminder of how a privately-run government initiative can create havoc for residents in its vicinity with complaints of foul smelling leachate spilling into the open and contamination of ground water.

As a result, it is not unusual to find piles of garbage strewn along the roads as well as near urban hubs in this beach tourism destination, visited by 2.6 million tourists annually.

According to Chief Minister Manohar Parrikar, the key to Goa's garbage solution lies in small, sanitised European towns like Kaiserslautern in Germany, where he personally inspected the garbage management system in place there.

D'Souza, who is also the state's urban development minister, said the Goa government has already approved setting up of two fuel-generating dry plastic treatment plants and that the Parrikar-recommended In-Vessel Treatment (IVT) for mixed garbage plants was next in line.

D'Souza's much criticised 38-member educational tour that included bureaucrats, ministers, panchyat members and journalists, visited Austria, Italy and Germany to examine solid waste management technology in action.

The group visited garbage management sites in these European towns, but a stream of photo updates on social media websites made by members of the delegation posing at picturesque tourist hotspots have irked civil society here, especially after ministers of the Goa government have been complaining about lack of funds for development activities following the ban on mining here.

"The 38-member Goa delegation is back in Goa. Rs.1 crore of our taxpayer money spent. I have no grudge on money spent on site-visits to waste management sites, but why did the delegation also visit Rome, the Vatican, go on romantic boat rides in Venice, the leaning tower of Pisa, the Colosseum and many other museums Was this a holiday? The people of Goa want answers," said Clinton Vaz, a waste management expert himself on his Facebook wall.

  

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Comment on this article

  • Benny, Anjuna Beach

    Wed, Nov 20 2013

    It is a shame, when a responsible representative of the people instead of accepting the horrible reality chooses to spit in the plate he eats from. Trash all over Goa is a failure of corrupt administration for decades. Even if 10% of revenue from mining over the past decade was utilized for infrastructure Goa would have been like Miami Beach.

    DisAgree Agree [1] Reply Report Abuse

  • Antonio D'Silva, Kuwait

    Wed, Nov 20 2013

    Our esteemed Deputy Chief Minister Mr. Francis D'Souza's statement
    'Goans are literate, but they litter the tourist state with carefree abandon' seems to be his carefree abandon.

    I wonder if he knows how many Goans make up the population of Goa and whether or not he is aware of the statehood or the Nationality of those littering Goa with carefree abandon.

    I wonder whether or not my esteemed Deputy Chief Minister knows whether the Goans are capable of painting the stairways and corridors of Goa's administrative offices red with their paan paint.

    I wonder why we miserable Goans/ Indians have to go to Europe at a cost of 1 Crore Rupees to learn waste disposal when we claim to be an aspiring super-power and have sent an orbiter to Mars.

    WHY! WHY! WHY!

    DisAgree Agree [5] Reply Report Abuse

  • Robert George, Mangalore

    Wed, Nov 20 2013

    Far from being a Goan habit, littering is a universal human tendency. This trait needs to be inculcated in children at schools. Arguably, Indians pay little attention to cleanliness beyond their premises.

    DisAgree Agree [5] Reply Report Abuse


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