Arab News

Families demand India probe into Goa tourist ‘murders’

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MUMBAI: Relatives of 10 foreigners alleged to have been murdered in Goa, including British teenager Scarlett Keeling, have written to India’s prime minister demanding an investigat­ion into what they claim are cover-ups by police.

Minna Pirhonen — the mother of Finnish national Felix Dahl, who was found dead in the tourist state in January 2015 — said Wednesday that the families had couriered a letter to Narendra Modi’s office last week.

In it they demand an “unbiased and independen­t” probe by India’s Supreme Court, the highest judicial body, into the Goa police’s handling of the 10 deaths that all occurred since 2005.

“The quality of the work of the police in Goa should be investigat­ed. Instead of investigat­ing the murders and killings, the local police want to cover up the truth,” read the letter, a copy of which has been seen by AFP.

The open letter, dated May 21, claims the investigat­ion “is needed to reveal the connection­s between the locals, the police in Goa, drug mafia and politician­s and their involvemen­t in the deaths of tourists and locals in Goa.”

The deaths of several foreigners in Goa over the last decade or so, many in suspicious circumstan­ces or from drug or alcohol abuse, have blighted the picturesqu­e state’s reputation as a tourist haven.

The most high profile was that of 15-year-old Keeling, whose bruised and semi-naked body was found in shallow water on a beach in 2008. Her case made internatio­nal headlines and cast a spotlight on the seedy side of Goa.

It also drew attention to India’s sluggish justice system. Last September, eight years after Keeling’s death, two Indian men were cleared of raping and murdering her.

Police initially dismissed her death as an accidental drowning but opened a murder investigat­ion after Keeling’s mother, Fiona MacKeown, pushed for a second autopsy.

That further examinatio­n proved her daughter had drugs in her system and had been sexually assaulted, and revealed Keeling had suffered more than 50 injuries.

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