Hundreds of British citizens forced to cancel India trip due to visa delays

Hundreds of British citizens forced to cancel India trip due to visa delays

Many UK citizens who planned to travel to India had to postpone or cancel their plans. This has happened since local visa agents were informed that they could no longer apply for tourist visas on the applicant’s behalf. Its purpose is to stop travel agents from charging unjustifiable fees to process visas.

There are now lines for Indian visa centres because the Indian High Commission in the UK has started implementing a law requiring British people to go in person.

Prior to this, travel agencies’ brought-in visas were processed in batches, allowing for quicker response times. The in-person visa application requirement, according to the High Commission, was put in place to stop travel agencies from charging illegal fees to expedite visas for visitors visiting India.

British travellers are experiencing the same issue that Indians who want to visit Britain have endured for a long time

According to media reports, the application of this restriction has impacted British visitors’ vacation plans to India. British travellers experiencing a visa wait are experiencing the same issue that Indians who want to visit Britain have endured for a long time.

Alex Ellis, the UK’s high commissioner to India, apologised to Indian nationals for the visa delays and suggested that they wait to purchase airline tickets until they had received their visas.

According to the Indian High Commission, individual applicants have always been required to submit their applications in person at the mission’s contracted VFS Global centres in London. The High Commission rejected suggestions that the change in the visa rules was abrupt.

Travel-related media outlet Skift cited TransIndus as suggesting that a number of visa businesses will enter without an appointment with 20 or 30 passports. They were being dealt with. Someone in authority has just learned that this is against the rules. Therefore, they have stopped it, he told Skift.

“It was a casual arrangement (before) that the visa services carved out for themselves, with the local offices. I don’t think it was a formal arrangement sanctioned by the local High Commission,” Singh told Skift.

The execution of the in-person visa requirement now poses a threat to the vacation plans of many

Some users on social media speculated that the Indian government’s insistence on in-person visa applications may be a response to remarks made by UK home secretary Suella Braverman regarding Indian migrants who “overstay” their visas in the UK.

“I have concerns about having an open borders migration policy with India because I don’t think that’s what people voted for with Brexit,” Braverman said, branding Indians as the “largest group of people who overstay” their visas in the UK.

For hundreds of Britons who have flights booked to India in the upcoming weeks, the execution of the in-person requirement now poses a threat to their vacation plans. These Britons are accustomed to receiving speedy applications. Indians have been dealing with this issue for a number of months.

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