Shanghai Daily

Indian partying hotspot Go

- Vineeta Deepak

THE sun’s golden rays fall on Goa’s smooth, sandy beaches every evening, magical as ever but strangely quiet and lonely. This holiday season, few visitors are enjoying the celebrated sunsets in the Indian party hotspot.

The unspoken fear of the coronaviru­s is sapping Goa’s vibrant beach shacks and noisy bars of their lifeblood.

A Portuguese colony until 1961, this western Indian state usually comes alive in December and January, its tourism-led economy booming with foreign travelers and chartered flights bringing in hordes of vacationer­s.

Over the past decade, Goa had been transformi­ng from a seasonal mecca for both hippy backpacker­s and rich vacationer­s to a second home destinatio­n for India’s middle class. Constructi­on was booming, raising worries over the impact on fragile environmen­ts. Apartments overlookin­g the sea, on river fronts or surrounded by forests have been in great demand.

The pandemic and the ensuing travel restrictio­ns have changed everything, possibly forever.

Along the popular beaches in North Goa from Candolim to Calangute to Morjim, many landmark coffee shops, tattoo parlors and shack bars with sunbeds have shut permanentl­y. Nightlife in popular party hubs has died.

Seema Rajgarh, 37, is a lonely figure on nearly deserted Utorda beach in South Goa, her blue sari set against the expanse of the Arabian sea as she hawks jewelry made of beads and stones. None of the handful of domestic tourists is interested in buying them.

On good days during the holiday season, the mother of three girls, the youngest not yet two years old, said she used to make 2,000 rupees (US$27). Now, times are bleak.

“Some days, I make barely 200 rupees (US$2.7), not enough to even buy milk and food for my children,” she said.

Rajgahr’s husband, a cook, lost his job during the nationwide lockdown imposed in March to contain the spread of the coronaviru­s infections. He remains unemployed.

School fees for the children are long overdue. Rent is three months behind.

“This virus has devastated our lives,” Rajgarh said.

In 2019, more than 8 million tourists visited Goa, including more than 930,000 foreign tourists. Some 800 chartered flights arrived from Russia, Ukraine, the UK and Japan among other countries, according to the state tourism department.

As of August, only 1.1 million had visited, including just over 280,000 foreign tourists.

An official report on the impact of

 ??  ?? A man wearing a mask walks past a mural near the Candolim beach on the Arabian Sea coast in Goa. The unspoken fear of the coronaviru­s is sapping Goa’s vibrant beach shacks and noisy bars of their lifeblood. — Ti Gong
A man wearing a mask walks past a mural near the Candolim beach on the Arabian Sea coast in Goa. The unspoken fear of the coronaviru­s is sapping Goa’s vibrant beach shacks and noisy bars of their lifeblood. — Ti Gong

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