Showing posts with label governments. Show all posts
Showing posts with label governments. Show all posts

Goa Church


The Church has hit out at the Goa government for promoting 'questionable values' by holding events like the International Film Festival of India (IFFI) compared to religious events that promote 'love peace and harmony'.
The criticism comes ahead of the Nov 22-Dec 2 IIFI, which coincides with a popular saint's feast in Goa.
Fr Savio Barreto, the Rector of the Basilica of Bom Jesus, said the Goa government was dragging its feet over resolving the clash of dates of the feast of St Francis Xavier, Goa's patron saint, and IFFI.
'I personally feel this is a clash of values. Here we are trying to promote love, peace and unity, whereas the government is supporting events that promote questionable values,' Fr Barreto said.
'It is this clash of values that is destroying our religious heritage and is trivialising it. Why can't the government see this and change the dates?' Fr Barreto said.
IFFI is by far the biggest government organised event in Goa.
The Novena of the Spanish saint's feast begins Nov 24 in preparation for the feast Dec 3. The feast is by far Goa's single largest congregation of people with more than three lakh people congregating over a 10-day event, in memory of the saint who brought Christianity to Goa.
Fr Barreto claims he had first written to the government in 2006 seeking a change of dates saying the 'energy of the government' was directed towards IFFI whereas the energy of the people was on the feast.
He said that because of the film festival, the state runs out of metal detectors, forcing police to put up fewer gates open at the Basilica of Bom Jesus, the venue of the feast, leading to further crowds.
Goa has been the venue of IFFI since 2004. Since then, IFFI has been organised on the same dates as that of the novena of the feast of St Francis Xavier.
What has peeved the church authorities more is that prior to Goa being made the venue, IFFI in New Delhi was organised during the final week of October.
In a statement to the media, director of Information and Publicity Menino Peres said the dates were decided at the 'international level' and there was little the state government could do about it.

Consumer, tech stocks

The technology-heavy Nasdaq led U.S. stocks lower on Thursday as investors continued to fret about weakness in the global economy and Wall Street looked set to limp to its worst quarter in three years.
A vote by German lawmakers to beef up the crisis-hit euro zone's bailout package as well as better-than-expected data from the U.S. labor market did little to boost confidence beyond an early lift that eroded throughout the day.
The S&P consumer discretionary sector index led losses with sharp falls in luxury goods names Tiffany & Co, down 8 percent at $63.91, and Coach down 7 percent at $53.46 as investors worried about a slowdown in China. On Thursday, China's benchmark stock index ended at a 15-month low.
"The general sentiment is that things are not all said and done," said Joseph Greco, managing director at Meridian Equity Partners in New York. "There are still big concerns about the consumer, about the housing market and labor market, about Europe."
Chinese Internet search engine Baidu, down 10.8 at $108.30, and other U.S.-listed Chinese companies were among the biggest losers after a securities regulator said the U.S.
Justice Department was investigating accounting irregularities at Chinese companies listed on U.S. exchanges.
The Dow Jones industrial average slipped 24.63 points, or 0.22 percent, to 10,986.27. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index shed 8.77 points, or 0.76 percent, to 1,142.29. The Nasdaq Composite Index lost 49.94 points, or 2.00 percent, to 2,441.64.
Tech names pressured the Nasdaq, with Amazon.com Inc off 4.4 percent at $219.54 following a sharp rally in Wednesday's session. Advanced Micro Devices sank 16.2 percent to $5.15 after cutting its third-quarter revenue outlook, prompting many analysts to downgrade their views on the stock.
Other big-cap Internet names were also down. Netflix Inc sank 12.9 percent to $110.75 while Yahoo Inc lost 6.6 percent to $13.26.
Market volatility is likely to remain high as traders react to European headlines and attempt to gauge the commitment of governments and institutions as they work to prevent a Greek default. End-of-quarter repositioning will also influence market movement.
The benchmark S&P 500 index is expected to finish the year down for the first time in three years as an escalating European debt crisis and stalled U.S. economy led strategists to slash forecasts in the latest Reuters poll.