A thread about how, sixty year ago, Portugal lost a 36-hour war against India.
In 1497, Portuguese explorer Vasco da Gama discovers a maritime route to India via the Cape of Good Hope, providing an alternative to the trade routes to Asia by land controlled by the Ottoman Empire and Italian cities.
The Portuguese establish a number of trade posts in India through a combination of military battles and arrangements with local political leaders
In 1509, the Portuguese win the Battle of Diu against an unlikely alliance: the Sultan of Gujarat, the Mamlûk Sultanate of Egypt, the Zamorin of Calicut, the Republic of Venice and the Ottoman Empire (all eager to keep control of the spice trade via the Mediterranean route)
Goa, Daman and Diu on the Western coast of the subcontinent become part of the Portuguese Asian Empire, along with Macau (now China's Las Vegas) and East Timor (a sovereign state since 2002, after a 25-year occupation by Indonesia)
In 1930, a colonial act curtailing civil liberties in Goa is passed under Antonio Salazar, then minister of colonies
In 1947, India becomes an independent state. Portugal retains control of Goa. India becomes a democracy, Portugal stays an authoritarian regime. Building on local resentment against Portuguese rule, an independence movement gains steam.
Tensions between India and Portugal build up during the 1950s. The enclaves of Dadra and Nagar Haveli become Indian in 1954. India imposes an economic blockade. Nehru says that Goa should rejoin India either with full peace or with full force. journals.library.ualberta.ca/pi/index.php/p…
In December 1961, Indian troops retake Goa. It is a crushing defeat. 3500 Portuguese troops face 45'000 Indian infantry, Vampire fighters, frigates, etc.
The United States regret the use of force, India justifies its action by the obstination of Portugal to refuse any negotiated solution letempsarchives.ch/page/JDG_1961_…
Even if Salazar (who had never set foot in Goa) had ordered the Portuguese to fight to the last man, local authorities surrendered and troops were taken prisoners and sent back. Goa becomes becomes part of India
In Parliament, Salazar presents the annexation of Goa as "one of the biggest disasters of our history". It marks the beginning of the end for Portugal's colonial empire. Tensions are brewing in Angola, Mazambique, Guiné Bissau, starting 13 years of war. debates.parlamento.pt/catalogo/r2/da…
As retaliation after independence, Portugal funds undercover sabotage operations against India in Goa (plan Gralha and plan Namaste), bombing a school in 1964. It fails to stimulate trouble. timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/goa/recor…
Implicated in the operation: the infamous PIDE agent Casimiro Monteiro, who tortured people under Portuguese rule in Goa and is said to have been involved in the assassination of Humberto Delgado and Eduardo Mondlane (leader of the Mozambican independence movement
After the annexation by India, Portugal offered citizenship to Goans born before 1961. Decades later, this allowed many people born in India to gain access to an EU passport and move to Britain (20'000 in Swindon) hindustantimes.com/world/goans-go…
Many British citizens of Indian origin have Portuguese last names due to the Goan-Portuguese connection, such as the disgraced Labour MP Keith Vaz en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keith_Vaz
1961 is also the year when the current Portuguese prime minister Antonio Costa was born. He is of Goan origin: his father was born in Mozambique in a family of Goan extraction, who spent his childhood in Goa
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How Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich became the richest Portuguese man alive, a thread.
In 1496, the King of Portugal Manuel I wanted to marry the daughter of the kings of Spain, Isabella, Princess of Asturias. She died shortly thereafter, in childbirth.
One of the requests of the King of Spain in the marriage negotiations was that Portugal would force Jews to convert to catholicism or be expelled, which Manuel did. Those that continued to practice in secret were burnt, most had to flee.
Interesting differences in naturalisation practices in Switzerland: 1) Man originally from Kosovo is denied citizenship because citizens of the town where he applied say he walks around in tracksuit bottoms. blick.ch/schweiz/basel/…
2) Woman originally from Germany, active on the neonazi scene, organising illegal demonstrations against corona measures and calling for revolution, was granted Swiss citizenship last year in Luzern. 20min.ch/story/corona-d…
3) Man, originally from Cape Verde, is denied Swiss citizenship because he had driven a car with a windshield that had only been *partially* de-iced. Got a fine, sufficient to fail his application. laliberte.ch/info-regionale…
Why are there no secessionist tensions in Switzerland while they are strong in Belgium? A thread in maps.
Here is a map of dominant languages in Switzerland and Belgium, namely French, German, Italian and Rumansh in Switzerland and French, Flemish and German in Belgium.
Now here is a map of average income by municipality in Belgium. As you can see, it doesn't track the language border absolutely perfectly, but there is nevertheless a fairly close correspondence between the two: Flanders is richer than Wallonia 3/
So here's are time series of the percentage of immigrants (% born abroad, except for some countries where I use % non-citizen) in a number of countries since 1850, suing census data, statistical yearbooks and other sources.
So for some countries finding this data is pretty easy, like in Canada.
For others I had to look in the Danish Statistisk Årbog 1896, luckily digitised.
Netherlands: All-time record number of coronavirus cases per day, hospital admissions ‘rising fast’ dutchnews.nl/news/2021/11/r…
This was the Dutch justice minister in July, singing a little song to wave goodbye to face masks forever
Generally the policy of the Dutch government on covid has been baffling, either being way too optimistic when things were looking up, planning to lift restrictions way ahead of time and then lifting them when infections were rising again.
Brexit has cut down EU red tape, so people who have been vaccinated in Spain will be able to enter the UK without quarantine, but not people vaccinated with the same vaccine in France because of the prevalence of the Beta variant in Indian Ocean Islands bbc.com/news/uk-578698…
Slight improvement on people vaccinated through the NHS not having to quarantine but people vaccinated with the same vaccines in another country having to.