Wary Goa set to usher in Christmas
December 24th, 2009 - 4:40 pm ICT by IANSPanaji, Dec 24 (IANS) On the heels of US based terror suspect David Coleman Headley’s reported visit to the state earlier this year, a wary Goa is all set to usher in Christmas celebrations amid high security.
After planting armed bunkers on its beaches last year amidst a heightened state of alert following the Mumbai terror strikes, the Goa police have initiated a special set of security measures to ensure a safe Christmas in coordination with church authorities in the state.
State Home Minister Ravi Naik had warned about intelligence inputs which suggested that Pakistan based terror groups were planning to indulge in “spectacular violence” in Goa.
“We have asked members of the various church parish committees to help our teams to identify strangers and unknown persons during midnight masses and other festive celebrations,” police spokesperson Atmaram Deshpande told IANS.
Headley’s visit to Anjuna in north Goa, 17 km from here, and his stay near a Jewish prayer house in the coastal village had triggered alarm bells in the state police set-up.
What compounds the security issue is that while Goa sees a sizeable population of Israeli tourists — who were reportedly in Headley’s crosshairs, the state also witnesses a frenzy of rave parties and festive activity around Christmas and New Year.
To add to the security conundrum, last Diwali, two members attached to the Hindu right wing organisation Sanatan Sanstha tried to engineer a crude bomb blast on the eve of the festival.
But the attempt failed after the detonator-rigged gelatine sticks they were intending to plant near a festive gathering accidentally exploded killing them both.
Security near churches and other religious places has been beefed up, with the addition of 400 central paramilitary forces and the 800-odd state reserve police force, apart from some 4,000 police personnel.
“Parish priests and parishioners have also been taken into confidence and sensitised by our beat police officials about what to do and what not to in case of a crisis,” Deshpande said.
Goa, which has a nearly 30 percent Christian population, also sees huge tourist traffic from Dec 25 to Jan 1 and hosts an impressive Christmas soiree annually.
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- Goa all set to usher in Christmas - Dec 24, 2010
- Goa Police 'U' turn: Sanatan Sanstha not involved in blast - Oct 21, 2009
- Jihadi terror and Hindu rightwing terror are different: Goa police - Nov 02, 2009
- Jehadi terror, Hindu rightwing terror different: Goa police (Lead) - Nov 02, 2009
- Now police unsure about Goa blast links to Sadhvi, Purohit - Dec 21, 2009
- Goa Diwali eve blast case handed over to NIA - Dec 17, 2009
- Diwali demon-slaying tradition triggered Goa blast? - May 28, 2010
- Goa blast case team's investigative skills under cloud - Nov 21, 2009
- Our blast probe better than that of federal agency: Goa cops - Jan 19, 2011
- Sanatan Sanstha not invited to top VHP event - Dec 17, 2010
- 'Goa blast accused was an evangelist' - May 24, 2010
- Sanatan Sanstha ashram raided in Goa by NIA - Oct 05, 2011
- We have no inputs on Headley's Goa visit, say cops - Jan 05, 2010
Tags: alarm bells, bomb blast, christmas celebrations, church authorities, coastal village, david coleman, festive celebrations, goa police, home minister, jewish prayer, north goa, paramilitary forces, parish committees, parish priests, police spokesperson, ravi naik, religious places, reserve police, sanatan sanstha, sizeable population