Sholto Ramsay has every reason to be irritated. He has been through it all. Sholto, who hails from Edinburgh and who has an office in Kerala, is a frequent visitor to India. But last time, it all went wrong; he couldn’t get his visa on time. He couldn’t make it to the Kerala Travel Mart, for which he had made plans and preparations. He’s now in India, making his team in Kerala work, salsa dance in between busy work schedules and to try to make them look at work from a different perspective. He wants his writers to make the most of their lives, he wants his tech team to learn from him and teach him in return, he wants his travel team to beat the heat and work wonders as they were wont to do. He walks along, munching a sandwich or drinking his favourite black coffee and keeping an eye on his team members here, most of whom are happy sitting glued to their seats and with eyes fixed on their monitors, typing out things as if in a trance.

Ask Sholto about visa and India, and he waxes indignant, “You can visit Sri Lanka, you can visit Pakistan, you can visit Ethiopia, you can visit anywhere in the Emirates, It’s so simple. You can get a tourist visa very easily: you get it delivered to you on arrival. But with India, it’s not so! With India, you have to pay 50 pounds for a tourist visa, wait for one week after sending in the application and you even must attach photos that are non-standard size ones”. He wonders whether all this is happening in the name of combating terrorism or some such thing, all of which can be done in a different way perhaps.

Says Sholto, “The Indian government should start to think about how this impacts tourism and to do something about it!. The Indian tourism industry is not as big as is usually thought, in fact it’s a relatively small one. For example more people visit Edinburgh, a city of 500,000, than visit the whole of India in a year! There is no question of people from Britain coming here and staying here, without ever thinking of going back. It’s not at all like that. The process should be made easy, so that you just need to spend less money and not go through all these tedious procedures”.

Anger justified indeed! Let’s hope people don’t tick off India from their itinerary due to such issues and opt to go visit countries with easier visa procedures, thereby incurring for India big losses.

Mark Scott, Sholto’s partner and a frequent India visitor himself, says, “The tourist visa costs India more money in lost revenue than it gains in visa revenue!! Sholto told me they actually send back visa requests because the standard passport photo is the wrong size. How crazy is that!!! So people go to other countries instead where we don’t need a visa. The hotels should put pressure on the government to get rid of the visa application thing. Places like Thailand and Sri Lanka don’t need them. So if you had to choose where would you go? Somewhere where you have to send your passport off and pay to get a visa? Or to a country who says we love tourist just come here and spend your money?”

Points to ponder indeed! And it’s high time India found answers to these questions and many more that visitors to India stop to ask. It’s high time something is done…

India is a fantastic tourist destination and year on year has seen growth, now that the global recession has hit and terrorism bombing, tourism is down for the first time.  It is now imperative in today’s climate to reduce any barriers for tourist choosing another country over India.

Please follow this link to support our India Visitor Campaign

The main issue is the tourist / visitor visa that’s required, which seems incredibly outdated and unnecessary in today’s global market.  For example travellers from the UK can go to 100′s of countries with out the need of filling out time consuming forms and paying for a Visa.  When people decide on where to go, they will more likely choose a country where there is no need to get a visa before travelling.  In today’s busy world people just don’t have the time or the will to waste a day for the sake of bureaucracy fill out forms / sit in embassies or worry about sending their passport in the post.

We have heard nightmare stories from potential travellers, both leisure and business about the difficulties of getting a visa, due to forms being incorrectly filled out, wrong payments, etc.  If you have any stories please follow the link below and we will post them on this site.

Our goal now is to rally support form tourism businesses and travellers, to help put pressure on the Indian Government to change the way they demand a Visa and do it how most countries around the world do it.  When you arrive in a country you fill out a card, the passport control stamps your passport and you have to leave the country within 120 to 180 days.  See nice and simple, no need to fill out forms and pay money to get into a country that you are going to spend money in anyway.

The real negatives we have found with the visa system is:

  • Hotels find it difficult to get last minute deals sold to potential customers if they do not have a visa.
  • Travellers will choose other countries over India who do not demand a visa.
  • Visitors are put off by the cost and hassle of getting a visa

It’s very difficult on the real cost of how much business is being lost because of the visa, but one thing is for sure India is loosing out on tourism busniess whether its, leisure, business or medical.

Please follow this link to support our India Visitor Campaign

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