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Commentary

Goa trapped between 2 identities

nt
Last updated: June 18, 2026 12:50 am
nt
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Goa has always sold a fantasy, and for decades, it worked. It was a fantasy of escape: foreign backpackers sought cheap beach shacks, trance music, and freedom from rigid city life, while Indian tourists arrived dreaming of sunsets, seafood, pollution-free air, and a few carefree days away from family pressures and office routines. Over the years, however, another fantasy has quietly taken over. The flashing lights of floating casinos on the Mandovi River, VIP convoys slicing through Panaji traffic, and gambling vessels glowing like mini-Las Vegas fortresses now dominate Goa’s historical landscape. Riverfronts are being steadily absorbed into an economy that many locals increasingly feel they neither asked for nor control.

Goa, the former hippie paradise of the world, is slowly mutating into the casino capital of India – and perhaps South Asia. A recent controversy captures this shift perfectly. Chief Minister Pramod Sawant announced a threefold increase in licensing fees for new land-based casinos, alongside sharp hikes in transfer fees and license costs. On paper, the government framed this as stronger regulation and economic management under its ‘Viksit Goa 2037’ vision. Politically, however, many believe the move signals that casinos are no longer treated as an awkward tourism compromise; they are now an established part of Goa’s formal economic architecture.

Yet, even as the government speaks of tighter control, Goa is battling one of its fiercest public backlashes against casino expansion in years. The immediate trigger is a massive proposed offshore casino vessel allegedly linked to Delta Corp. According to activists, this new vessel is not merely a replacement ship but a floating escalation of staggering proportions. The proposed casino ship reportedly stretches around 112 meters and could host nearly 2,000 guests, replacing a much smaller licensed vessel originally designed for only around 70 passengers.

The Bombay High Court’s Goa bench eventually halted the vessel’s entry into the Mandovi River after activists challenged the move. But this conflict was never merely about one ship; it reflects a growing fear among many Goans that the state is losing control over its own identity. The most striking part of this resistance movement is its leadership. This is not simple political opposition or routine NGO activism. Respected public figures such as freedom fighter Libia Lobo Sardesai and noted writer Uday Bhembre have joined the movement. When such figures enter the public arena, it signals something deeper than policy disagreement. For many Goans, casinos no longer symbolise tourism alone; they symbolise the feeling that Goa is slowly being sold in pieces.

The state government insists that casinos generate employment, tourism and tax revenue – an argument that is not entirely false. Offshore casinos reportedly pay enormous annual licence fees running into millions of rupees. Tourism-linked business interests continue to lobby for expansion, arguing that wealthy tourists are essential for the economy. Some industry figures even openly dream of turning Goa into the “casino capital of South Asia,” especially as political instability clouds Nepal’s gambling industry. Economically, casinos undeniably bring money. But money changes places, sometimes irreversibly.

The Mandovi River is not just a waterway; it is a vital part of Goa’s emotional geography. Those who visited Goa in the 1990s will remember Panaji’s riverfront, which represented the quieter charm that separated the state from the over-commercialised tourism chaos seen elsewhere in India. Today, residents complain that the skyline increasingly resembles a floating entertainment district dominated by neon-lit vessels, private jetties and high-security commercial zones. Sitting literally in the middle of the river, these towering, illuminated and politically protected casinos are impossible to ignore, acting as visual reminders of who increasingly shapes Goa’s economy and its politics.

What angers Goans most is the culture of endless extensions. For years, successive governments promised that offshore casinos would eventually be relocated out of the Mandovi. Deadline after deadline passed, followed by extension after extension. The Sawant government’s recent decision allowing offshore casinos to continue operating until March 2027 was officially presented as a “final extension”. Many Goans, however, react to that phrase with sarcasm and laughter because they have heard versions of it for over a decade. This is how temporary arrangements become permanent political settlements – not through one big declaration, but through repetition, where each extension normalises the next.

Meanwhile, another anxiety quietly grows beneath the surface: Land. In Goa, land is not just real estate; it is memory, inheritance and identity. This is why allegations around denotification, zoning changes and tourism-commercial expansion provoke such emotional reactions. Then comes the environmental question, perhaps the most uncomfortable part of the entire debate. Goa already struggles under immense ecological pressure from tourism, mining, construction and coastal expansion. Yet critics argue that casino-linked projects repeatedly receive remarkable administrative flexibility. The tragedy is that Goa’s original appeal rested precisely on balance, where tourism existed alongside local culture rather than swallowing it whole. Foreign travellers came looking for Goa’s distinctiveness, not a Singapore-style entertainment corridor floating on a river.

Yet modern tourism economics increasingly rewards spectacle over subtlety. Casinos fit perfectly into this model: they are visible, revenue-generating, politically connected and financially powerful, which explains why governments struggle to imagine life without them once the industry embeds itself deeply enough.

Some residents argue casinos are necessary economic engines in a competitive tourism market. Others fear moral decline, organised crime, prostitution and social damage. The result is a state trapped between two identities. One Goa still exists in memory, defined by riverfront charm, old neighbourhoods and a relaxed atmosphere. Another Goa is emerging in real time – a high-value tourism economy driven by gaming, nightlife, luxury real estate and spectacle.

(Syed Zubair Ahmed is a
London-based journalist.)

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The Navhind Times, the first and largest circulated English Daily from Goa, has earned the trust, respect and loyalty of the Goans by virtue of its objective reporting, commentaries, features and breaking goa news. It was launched by the House of Dempos, a pioneer in the industrial development of Goa, on February 18, 1963 soon after Goa was liberated from the Portuguese rule.

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