After the war, Monteiro moved to the United Kingdom, where he worked for a butcher whose daughter he married[4] and had a son; although he abandoned his family after the Carnation Revolution when he lost the protection of the Portuguese government and was forced to flee Portugal to avoid prosecution and extradition to India.[7]
Goa-Portuguese Colonial Era
In the 1950s, Monteiro joined the Portuguese Colonial Police in Goa, where he interrogated Goan liberation movement activists.[10][3] Much of the brutal torture during interrogations took place at Valpoi Police Station and, eventually, Monteiro became infamous and feared throughout Portuguese India;[7] by the closing years of Portuguese rule in India there were even several local theatre songs of the feared Agent Monteiro.[10]
PIDE agent
After Goa's annexation by the Indian Army in 1961, Monteiro was recruited by the Polícia Internacional e de Defesa do Estado (PIDE), the dreaded Portuguese Secret Service.[6] Initially, he participated in a campaign to organise an anti-Indian resistance among Goans code named Plan Gralha. PIDE agents used the Emissona Nacional, radio station which continued to broadcast after 1961, to broadcast stories of Goan non-cooperation with Indian authorities. Plans were made to sabotage port facilities at Mormugao and Bombay. In 1962, a bomb was planted at Vasco Municipal School in March 1962, and another at a different location in October.[3] Casimiro was implicated in bomb blasts on June 20, 1964.[11] The Portuguese government, in an official statement to the UN, later claimed that the attacks were acts of revolt against Indian rule.[12]
In 1965, he assassinated General Humberto Delgado in Spain.[13][14] General Delgado was the Opposition Leader against the Salazar government.[15] Monteiro, who had shot Delgado and strangled his secretary, was found guilty by the Spanish courts and was sentenced to 19 years in absentia.[11][14]
In the late 1960s, Monteiro went to Portuguese Mozambique (as a PIDE agent) to fight FRELIMO (Frente de Libertação de Moçambique), a movement fighting for independence against the internationally recognized Portuguese Government. Most of the Frelimo fighters were based in Tanzania.[16] Monteiro crossed into Tanzania, and using a parcel bomb assassinated Eduardo Mondlane, the founding leader of FRELIMO.[7][1]
Later life
He returned to Portugal, but after the 1974 Carnation Revolution, which overthrew the Estado Novo, Monteiro took refuge in the South African Embassy. He later moved to South Africa, where he spent the remainder of his life under the alias 'José Fernandez'. Almost blind and destitute (helped by the South African police), he died in 1993 at Richards Bay, South Africa.[7]
Citations
^ abcdeVarela Gomes, P.; Castro, Paul (2016). Harmalkar, Sanjay; Dessa, Pundalik Raut (eds.). "My name is Casimiro Monteiro". Govapuri. 10 (4). Translated by Paul Castro. Goa, India: Institute Menezes Braganza: 61–65.
^Simões, Ana Maria (24 April 2021). Ramires, Mário; Rainho, Vítor; Cabrita Saraiva, José; Reis, Marta F.; Saraiva, José António; de Melo, Afonso; Cabrita, Felícia; Peres Pinto, Sónia; Andrade, Joana; Ramires, Laura (eds.). "Angoche, o maior mistério da guerra colonial". Nascer do SOL (in Portuguese). Porto Salvo, Oeiras, Portugal: Editor Newsplex, S.A./Impressão Sogapal Distribuição VASP. Archived from the original on 8 May 2021. Retrieved 7 September 2021.
^ abcCabral e Sá, Mário (28 January 2012). Revankar, Pramod; Sinha, Arun (eds.). "The case of the CM's bungalow". The Navhind Times. Goa, India: Navhind Papers & Publications (Dempo Group/Dempo Industries Pvt. Ltd.). Archived from the original on 18 February 2013. Retrieved 29 August 2021.
^Sardesai, Sanjeev V. (29 June 2019). Revankar, Pramod; Sinha, Arun (eds.). "The lost gem of Goan freedom -Mohan Ranade". The Navhind Times. Goa, India: Navhind Papers & Publications (Dempo Group/Dempo Industries Pvt. Ltd.). Retrieved 7 September 2021.
^ abDelgado Rosa, Frederico (3 May 2008). de Andradem, Domingos; Tecedeiro, Helen; Sequeira, Pedro; Ferro, Carlos; Cassiano, Artur; Rocha, Elsa; Nogueira, Carlos; Molinos, Manuel; Leite, Marcelo (eds.). "A terceira morte do Gen. Delgado". Diário de Notícias (in Portuguese). Lisbon, Portugal: Global Media Group (Global Noticias, Media Group, S.A.). Retrieved 29 August 2021.