Pubdate: Tue, 21 Sept 1999 Source: Express, Express on Sunday (UK) Contact: www.expressnewspapers.co.uk Author: Topaz Amoore CORRUPT POLICE HAVE MADE PARADISE HELL FROM her cockroach-infested prison cell in Goa, Alexia Stewart can't see the Western tourists who flock to Fort Aguada in Goa, one of the coastal states of India. But they're up there, strolling the 17th-century ramparts, gazing at the white beaches, congratulating themselves on finding palm-fringed paradise just 11 hours by package flight from Gatwick Airport. Under their feet, in the squalid, fetid jail built beneath the Fort, Alexia is living in hellish conditions. The 28-year-old daughter of an Oxford don is serving a 10-year jail sentence for possessing 165g of cannabis. She insists the drugs were planted by corrupt local police. Her father Philip, who teaches human sciences, says the case was based on "shoddy evidence". He has flown to Goa in the latest stage of a battle to free Alexia and her boyfriend Gary Carter from jail. Their appeal against conviction began yesterday. Given the tortuous Indian legal system, a quick outcome looks unlikely. The happy go lucky, hippy-dippy reputation Goa has enjoyed since the Sixties has been soured by stories similar to Alexia's. Many tourists have claimed they are framed by police if they refuse to pay hefty bribes. About ?2,000, in Alexia's case. "The police have done this because we refused to pay them," she said earlier this year. "How can they live with their consciences? "I know all this could have been avoided if we had just paid up, but we felt the injustice there and then." Now, Alexia would pay anything in exchange for her freedom. She advises fellow travellers who fall foul of the police to pay up without a murmur. "I would say to anyone, 'just give them the money' because it seems you can't beat them." Each year, around 100,000 Britons travel to Goa, the former Portuguese colony. It earned its hedonistic reputation in the Sixties when it was "discovered" by Westerners following the so-called Kathmandu Trail. Thirty years on, Goa still offers nine months of sunshine every year, very cheap food and drink - and very cheap drugs. The rave scene is blossoming on its beaches. Monthly "Full Moon" parties are organised by Westerners who have settled in the region; these have even spawned a form of dance music known as "Goa Trance". Goa "charas", as marijuana is known, is so readily available, so nonchalantly smoked in clubs and restaurants, that tourists might be forgiven for thinking the authorities were prepared to turn a blind eye. They would be wrong. The charity Prisoners Abroad has 20 years' experience of working in India, helping visitors who fall foul of local laws, despite Foreign Office warnings of "severe penalties" for drug abuse. Its director Carlo Laurenzi says: "Tourists and backpackers are particularly vulnerable due to the confusion over the legality of cannabis possession." In fact, the Indian government has clamped down, making little distinction between soft and hard drugs. Anyone charged with illegal possession risks a mandatory 10-year jail sentence and, under Indian law, you are guilty until proved innocent. The Footprint guidebook to Goa warns that in 18 months since November 1995, 21 foreigners have been imprisoned for drug offences. The local police deny that bribery is rife, but many more foreigners who have been caught smoking joints admit they have bought their way out of trouble. "It's well known that this is a nice little earner for the Goan police," says Rachel, a fundraiser who regularly travels to Goa. "We were warned that the police try to catch you all the time. Sometimes, they want to make an example of you but mostly they want money. Friends of mine got caught on the beach. The police took them back to the place they were staying in and hid outside while they got all the cash they had in the house. These weren't official fines. There was no paperwork. The cash just disappeared into police pockets." The organisers of raves are said to pay hefty bribes for "permission" to hold an event. Even so, they expect every festival to be interrupted by officers demanding even more money. "They pay up because they want to carry on until dawn and be left alone," says Rachel. But in this corrupt culture, the innocent can find themselves implicated along with the guilty. In Alexia and Gary's case, police burst into the house they had rented by the beach in Vagator, northern Goa. Alexia, who speaks five languages, had been a teacher and Gary worked for a charity in Milton Keynes. Attracted by the easy going lifestyle of Goa, she had begun selling clothing from a small shop and Gary was setting up an Internet cafe. They planned to stay for six months each year. When the police raided their house, Alexia was not unduly concerned. An asthmatic who didn't smoke, she was confident there were no drugs in the house. But as policemen combed their belongings, one officer told her that for about ?2,000 they would go quietly. On principle, she refused to pay. Later, another officer came into the house with a black plastic bag he said he'd found in the garden. Inside was 165g of hashish wrapped into 48 small slabs - evidence, the police said, of both dealing and possession. The couple insist they had never seen the drugs before. Alexia and Gary are not alone. In 1990, Nicholas Brown from Oxfordshire was arrested in Goa. He, too, ended up in Aguada jail accused of possessing hashish which he claims he never had. "My only crime was not to bribe the police," he said in a 1992 interview from his cell. Nicholas spent 18 months in jail awaiting trial and was then sentenced to 10 years. He served 23 months before being freed after his mother mounted a vigorous campaign for an appeal which he won. The episode cost the family an estimated ?30,000. Another tourist, Claire Blatchford and her boyfriend Stuart Kanauros were arrested in Goa in 1996 after a plain clothes policeman pulled a package out of her bag while she was swimming. Claire and Stuart were told they'd have to pay ?650 or Stuart would be jailed for 10 years. But when Claire returned to the police station with all the money they had, the police said it wasn't enough. Stuart had to promise to return with more money. He was made to sign a "confession" and the police kept his passport. The officer threatened to plant more drugs if they didn't stump up more money. Instead, they fled to the British Deputy High Commission in Bombay and were given emergency documents and a flight home. The commission sent Claire and Stuart photographs of likely suspects and the couple picked out an inspector and two other officers who were suspended. In this case, the policemen were punished. Alexia and Gary, however, were less fortunate. Yesterday, the Stewart family sent this message to the media, carefully worded so as not to cause offence in Goa: "We are out here in hope and with an unshakable faith in justice." They can only pray their faith is rewarded. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea