News Brief
Goa CM Pramod Sawant (Pic Via Twitter)
Goa Chief Minister Pramod Sawant on Saturday (13 August) condemned an island village's refusal to allow the Indian Navy to organise a flag-hoisting ceremony on independence day, saying such "anti-India" activities will be dealt with an iron fist.
Sawant also requested the Indian Navy to go ahead with its original plan for flag hoisting at the St. Jacinto island, which is a part of the Defence Ministry's 'Azadi ka Amrit Mahotsav' initiative.
"It is unfortunate and shameful that some individuals at St Jacinto Island have objected to the hoisting of the national flag by the Indian Navy on the occasion of India's independence day. I condemn this and want to state on record that my Government will not tolerate such acts," Sawant tweeted on Saturday.
"I have requested the Indian Navy to go ahead with their original plan and have assured full cooperation from Goa Police. These attempts of anti-India activities shall be dealt with an iron fist. It will always be 'Nation First'," Sawant also said.
On Friday, following public pressure, the Indian Navy had to back down from its plan to conduct a flag-hoisting ceremony on the St. Jacinto island in South Goa, amid accusations from local villagers and politicians, who alleged a government plot for a 'takeover' of the island.
"As part of ‘Azadi ka Amrit Mahotsav’ to commemorate 75 years of Independence, Ministry of Defence has planned unfurling of National Flag in Islands across the nation between 13 and 15 August, 2021. A team from Goa Naval Area visited islands of Goa including Sao Jacinto Island as part of this pan India initiative," the Indian Navy said in a statement, reports Indian Express.
Earlier on Friday (13 August), villagers of St Jacinto island, led by state Nationalist Congress Party president Jose Phillip D'Souza, gathered in the church square on the island to protest against the flag hoisting ceremony planned by the naval authorities.
"Navy officers came here and they said that they will hoist the flag on 15 August. I want to say that whether they are from the Navy, government or any private company, we do not give this right to anyone (to hoist a national flag). The villagers are united against this. If the Navy, state and central government try to capture our island, then local villagers will never allow this," D'Souza said.
Residents of the island located in the Zuari river bay also said that no formal permission had been sought by the naval authorities from the local authorities to conduct the flag-hoisting ceremony.
The villagers were reportedly anxious about the Indian Navy’s presence on the island in the light of their opposition to the Coastal Zone Management Plan in Goa and the Major Ports Authorities Bill, 2020 passed by the Parliament, in which the island is allegedly shown in the jurisdiction of the Mormugao Port Trust (MPT).
"The island has religious structures dating back to 1731 and we said it cannot come under the port limit. Since then, people have become very vigilant and with this heightened vigilance, the Navy’s presence made them more suspicious," Captain Viriato Fernandes of Goencho Avaaz, an NGO turned political party, was quoted by Indian Express as saying.
(With inputs from IANS)