The man suspected of raping Scarlett Keeling, a 15-year-old British teenager found dead on Goa’s Anjuna beach on February 18, appeared in the local Goa court wearing a police hood. But Scarlett’s mother says she is not at all convinced that Samson D’Souza, the 26-year-old barman who worked at Lui’s Bar and was seen with Scarlett on the day she died, is the right man. She wants the country’s premier investigating agency to take over the case.
Read that story here.
The case has rocked Indian and British media, following allegations of a police cover-up by Scarlett’s mother, Fiona MacKeown who refused to accept an initial post-mortem report that concluded that her daughter had drowned. Fiona has maintained all along that her daughter had been raped and murdered, pointing to the bruises and cuts on her body.
A second post mortem was ordered and found that Scarlett had indeed died of drowning. Significantly, it didn’t rule out homicide.
Meanwhile, media attention has also focused on Fiona MacKeown who left her 15-year-old daughter behind with the family of the local tour guide she had befriended. Fiona, her boyfriend and six other children headed off to a beach in the neighbouring state of Karnataka, leaving Scarlett behind in Goa. In the Daily Mail, Tom Rawstorne reports that Fiona is clear that she is not to blame
It was meant to be great family adventure – then 15-year-old Scarlett MacKeown was left alone by her mother in Goa. Days later she was dead. Murder… or a drunken accident? Here, her mother insists SHE wasn’t at fault.
As she tearfully retraced her teenage daughter’s last steps, Fiona MacKeown’s eye was caught by an object lying on the edge of the dusty track. It was a leather sandal — nothing special — but its discovery started a chain of events that has sent shockwaves through a part of the world still regarded by some as a corner of paradise.
Fiona knew at once that the shoe belonged to her daughter, 15-year-old Scarlett Keeling, whose body had been found on a nearby beach three days earlier.
And is time running out for ‘tourist paradise’ Goa? Andrew Buncombe in The Morung Express reports from Anjuna
From his vantage point on a cushion in Anjuna’s German Bakery and Café, Thomas Keller smiled nostalgically as he recalled first coming to Goa more than three decades ago. “It was 1974,” said the wiry 53-year-old from Denmark. “[Then] it was serious hard-core hippies. Now everybody can come and go.” And that may be the problem for Goa. When people like Mr Keller first arrived, they came overland, down the hippy trail that wound from Turkey through Iran and Afghanistan to this tiny former Portuguese enclave on India’s western coast. They were few enough in number to blend in among the coastal villages, and if they were in a blissed-out haze on marijuana or hash a lot of the time, nobody minded too much.
Finally, local Goa newspaper Navhind Times pays tribute to Fiona MacKeown in an editorial:
Goa police have started investigations along a new line into the death of the 15-year-old British girl Scarlett Keeling, but the loss that the state government and police – and collectively all of us Goans – have suffered during the three weeks in terms of image cannot be made up, no matter what we do. The adverse publicity we have got has not only damaged tourism but also our reputation as a state that can take up a case in the right earnest – without hiding or suppressing or manipulating facts – and go straight after the accused. How great a gratitude we owe to the mother of Scarlett, Fiona Mackeown! It was her tireless and determined fight for bringing the guilty to book that rocked the international and Indian media and forced the state government to take immediate steps to ensure fair play and justice to the deceased girl and her family.


March 9, 2008 at 3:20 |
They should stay away from India. The most corrupted country in the world.
March 11, 2008 at 3:20 |
The incidence is ugly and regretful, however, this doesn’t call for a corruption test on India. The country still is amongst the better ones.
Alex: get some sense and perpective.
March 17, 2008 at 3:20 |
Goan police have begun a campaign of intimidation and harassment against Fiona Mackeown
March 20, 2008 at 3:20 |
I have visited Goa many times. The police there is corrupt as any place where there are drugs. The local and Indians overall are not bad as we Brits portrait them. Any drunken woman is a prey in Britain. Take the case of Norwegian millionaire lady got murdered few days ago in London as she returned from night club to her apartment. But let me say that Indians are defending Scralett’s mother in media and in parliament, that would not happen in Britain for she is a Gypsy living in caravan. I am sure she will not be charged for negligence in India. The mother has allowed her daughter to have sex with her boy friends in Devon and Goa but this also is upto British police and social workers. The innocent life has been lost and the guilty must be punished. However the mother has to shoulder some blame but Goan police will not charge her, for Indians feel sorry for the mother and Indian public opinion matters a lot.
May 17, 2008 at 3:20 |
This is a shitty thing what happened, but God bless her soul..
The Government also is at fault.. bcoz.. the organs from the body should have
been removed only on consent from the family member.
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