After controversy, Goa MLAs say they will pay for trip to Brazil to 'study' World Cup
Panaji: The six Goa legislators, including three ministers, whose proposed trip to watch the football World Cup in Brazil on state funds had kicked off a row, said on Friday that they have decided to themselves foot the bill for the visit without taxing the state exchequer.
The Brazil visit of the six MLAs, including ministers Ramesh Tawadkar (Sports), Avertano Furtado (Fisheries) and Milind Naik (Power), sparked a controversy after the state sports department sanctioned Rs 89 lakh for the tour.
(Read: Study tour? Goa MLAs to go to Brazil on Rs 89 lakh junket)
That prompted the opposition Congress to term the trip a "wasteful expenditure" while seeking Prime Minister Narendra Modi's intervention to "stop the junket".
"The six (of us) legislators met last evening. We decided to go to Brazil on our own without taking money from the state government. We don't want to spend money from the state treasury. We don't want to be a burden on the state coffers," Furtado told PTI on Friday.
He said that the decision was unanimously taken by the six of them, including also the legislators Benjamin Silva (Independent), Glen Ticlo and Carlose Almeida (both BJP), after the media created a "hype" over the tour.
"It was a big hype created that we are going at the cost of the state exchequer. All six of us decided that we will pay from our own pockets and visit Brazil," said Furtado, a former goalkeeper of Salgaocar Football Club.
All six MLAs are expected to meet Chief Minister Manohar Parrikar later in the day to convey their decision.
Defending the decision to send the MLAs on a state-sponsored 10-day trip, Parrikar had on Thursday said that the tour was "an investment by the state government which has declared soccer as a state sport".
"We are looking at this as an investment. Goa has declared football as a state sport. The delegation, which has been approved by the state government, has MLAs who are actually footballers. The government considers this to be an investment," Parrikar had told reporters on Thursday.
"The decision (to send a delegation) has been taken in the interest of the state. Recently, we held the Lusofonia games, which had Brazil as a participating country. The current trip is a continuation of the organisation of Lusofonia games," he had said.
The decision of the state government had not gone down well with the two Goan footballers who were supposed to be a part of the delegation.
Arjuna award winners Bruno Coutinho, a former India captain, and Brahmanand Shankhwalkar had yesterday said they were hurt at not being included in the delegation. Coutinho had voiced his displeasure about his name being deleted from the list at the last minute.
"It is hurting that the name was in the file but later changed with a new list proposed by the sports minister (Ramesh Tawadkar)," he said.
Shankhwalkar said he had expressed his willingness to be a part of the delegation but the request was turned down by the government.