Saturday, May 4, 2024
ADVT 
India

Drinking will be banned on Goa beaches not bikinis: Parrikar

Darpan News Desk IANS, 02 Jul, 2014 01:32 PM

    Bikinis will not be banned from Goa's beaches, but drinking alcohol in public and on the state's popular beaches will not be tolerated, Chief Minister Manohar Parrikar said Wednesday, while defending a cabinet minister who has demanded a ban on revealing clothes in pubs.

    "You cannot ban bikinis on beaches. But we will have to crack down on drinking in open areas, especially beaches," Parrikar told a press conference Wednesday.

    The chief minister defended Public Works Department (PWD) Minister Sudin Dhavalikar, who triggered a nationwide controversy after he demanded a ban on mini-skirts and bikinis in Goa's nightclubs and beaches because they were against "Goan culture" and encouraged crime.

    Backing his cabinet minister, Parrikar said several accounts of Dhavalikar's comments had appeared in the media.

    "Whatever he told me during his meeting with me is not objectionable. I am OK with it," Parrikar said.

    The chief minister said Dhavalikar's opinion was personal and that in a private meeting with him, the minister had explained his part of the story.

    Dhavalikar, during an interaction with reporters recently, had said: "Young girls wearing short skirts in nightclubs are a threat to the Goan culture. This habit of young girls wearing short dresses everywhere does not fit the Goan culture. What will happen to it if this continues? We should not allow this. It should be stopped."

    He also advised women to stop drinking, "because it is not good for their health".

    The Congress, which had earlier in the day demanded Dhavalikar's resignation for his allegedly misogynist comments, later said the chief minister was being hypocritical.

    "On one part, he is supporting Sudin Dhavalikar, and on other, he says these are personal views of Sudin. The chief minister should not forget that Sudin is part of his government," Congress spokesperson Durgadas Kamat said in a statement issued here.

    Dhavalikar's comments also attracted flak from his cabinet colleague, Tourism Minister Dilip Parulekar, who was not willing to buy his logic of banning bikinis on beaches.

    "We cannot ban mini-skirts and bikinis in beaches and nightclubs. It is not possible," Parulekar said on the sidelines of a tourism event in Panaji Wednesday.

    Dhavalikar's comments sparked controversy in the national media and online, with social forums abuzz with accusations of moral policing against the minister.

     

    MORE India ARTICLES

    With government change, how Badal changed tone on MSP

    With government change, how Badal changed tone on MSP
    Is Rs.50 greater than Rs.60? Or for that matter can it be greater than even Rs.170? Yes, if you go by Punjab Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal and his son and Deputy Chief Minister Sukhbir Singh Badal.

    With government change, how Badal changed tone on MSP

    Anonymous donor pledges $1.6M to 40 Grade 8 students

    Anonymous donor pledges $1.6M to 40 Grade 8 students
    An anonymous donor has pledged $1.6 million to 40 Grade 8 students in Leamington, Ont. 

    Anonymous donor pledges $1.6M to 40 Grade 8 students

    India launches Five Foreign Satellites, Modi wants one for SAARC

    India launches Five Foreign Satellites, Modi wants one for SAARC
    India Monday placed in orbit five foreign satellites, prompting a call from Prime Minister Narendra Modi to develop a SAARC satellite to be "dedicated to our neighbourhood as a gift from India".

    India launches Five Foreign Satellites, Modi wants one for SAARC

    Our Mars mission cost less than Hollywood film 'Gravity': Modi

    Our Mars mission cost less than Hollywood film 'Gravity': Modi
    The Indian space programmes are most cost effective and the cost incurred for the Mars mission was less than the money invested to make the Hollywood movie "Gravity", Prime Minister Narendra Modi said here Monday.

    Our Mars mission cost less than Hollywood film 'Gravity': Modi

    India to help 600 nationals return from Iraq this week

    India to help 600 nationals return from Iraq this week
    The government Monday said it will facilitate the return of over 600 Indians from non-conflict areas of Iraq this week, as efforts continued to secure the safe release of Indians in captivity in war-torn areas of the Gulf nation.

    India to help 600 nationals return from Iraq this week

    Harsh Vardhan clarifies on sex education, slams UPA's 'crudity'

    Harsh Vardhan clarifies on sex education, slams UPA's 'crudity'
    Seeking to end an "unseemly controversy" kicked up by his views on sex education, Union Health Minister Harsh Vardhan Friday denied that he proposes a ban on sex education in schools, saying he supports "pedagogy that is scientific and culturally acceptable".

    Harsh Vardhan clarifies on sex education, slams UPA's 'crudity'

    PrevNext