Fifty-three Nigerians were
arrested after an irate mob of nearly 200 Nigerians held Goa’s lifeline,
National Highway-17, ransom for nearly four hours, protesting the murder of
their compatriot. The Opposition in the state as well as civil society groups said
Goa Police had failed to maintain law and order, and were cowering in the face
of the onslaught from the Africans. The incident
forced Goa Chief Minister Manohar Parrikar to start a special drive to identify
all foreigners illegally staying in Goa, with a view to deporting them.
The
bare-torsoed Nigerian nationals, who had blocked the highway, were demanding
that the Nigerian ambassador in India be flown to Goa, claiming that Nigerian
nationals were being targeted and even murdered with police complicity. The
blockade occurred hours after Obina Paul Obiwesi was founded stabbed to death
in Parra, a village adjoining the beach village of Calangute, notorious for
being Goa’s narco-tourism industry’s capital. Chief Minister Parrikar said that
the murder was a possible fallout of an inter-drug mafia rivalry. “It is
assumed that the murder was a result of drug dealing. Police are investigating
that angle,” Parrikar told a press conference Thursday evening. Earlier in the
day, in a dramatic fashion, 50 Nigerians on two-wheelers intercepted a police
van carrying the deceased Obina and smashed the vehicle’s windows. They then
dragged the body of their compatriot to the highway, where it was dumped to
stop traffic on the busy route. The number of Nigerians engaged in the blockade
of the highway soon rose to more than 200, and scuffles broke out between local
people and police. The police took more than a couple of hours to clear the
road, and the situation worsened as residents of the area brutally beat up two
Nigerians, who were admitted to the Goa Medical College Hospital with serious
injuries. Parrikar said the episode came as a reminder of the action that needs
to be taken against foreigners staying illegally in Goa. “Everyone who is staying
here illegally will be deported without fail. These are my clear directions to
the police,” Parrikar said. “Anyone who operates a dance floor, discos, pubs or
(any other) joints and gives support to foreigners illegally staying here
without a visa will be acted against,” Parrikar said. State Congress president
Subhash Shirodkar said: “The police were like dolls in front of the Nigerians.
It is a matter of shame. The government needs to pull up its socks.” Social
media went into a tizzy over the incident, and celebrities as well as common
people vented their ire on Facebook. “The police should cancel all their visas
and throw them out of India. Disgraceful abuse of a visa. And they have guns
too, against our lathi-only police. Make Goa a family destination. Stop all
these drug, raves and other adult events in our state,” said ace Goan fashion
designer Wendell Rodricks. Sudeep Dalvi says on Ami Niz Goenkar, a popular
Facebook group, that the inability of the police to clear the highway by taking
on the rampaging Nigerians exposed the “cordial relations between the police,
the politicians, the drug dealers, smugglers” in the tourism-oriented northern
parts of Goa
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