Off to USA Hong Kong , Macau  and mainland China Hong  Kong  and Macau  are one of the few places in the world that award Indians VISAs on arrival. Even Singapore 
The scale and the impact of this may be small compared to robberies like agricultural subsidies, but I think something needs to be done about this form of apartheid.
The scale and the impact of this may be small compared to robberies like agricultural subsidies, but I think something needs to be done about this form of apartheid.
 
3 comments:
The visa fees and requirements are generally imposed under the rules of the Hague convention. You'll be surprised to hear that a lot of places that charge Indians visa fees and insist on Indians having visas is because India has imposed these requirements on citizens of those countries. At that point, the reciprocity clause kicks in.
Mind you, Indians could travel to lots of European countries without a visa in the 60's. Then the Indian govt imposed visa restrictions on citizens of these countries and they retaliated. So, it's hardly apartheid, but just our own stupidity coming home to roost.
Even today, India lets in nationals of about 2-3 countries without a visa. Even countries that dont require a visa of Indians have to have visas to enter India. So, if anything, its India doing the discrimination. I have for the longest time held that Indians should drop visa requirements for about 30-40 countries unilaterally. In the best case, under Hague reciprocity, they'll do the same for us. If not, we'll still benefit from an upsurge in tourism.
thanks for the comment, reuben...
I didnt have this knowledge...
sure serves us right then...
But please, lets bring purchasing power parity into picture while deciding visa fees...And i don't understand why we Indians are so finicky about national security when it comes to VISAa when our borders are largely open with Bangladesh etc.
I wish we could take purchasing power into account, but no, that's not how Hague convention rules work. If India charges a U.S. citizen $100 for a visa, the U.S. will charge an Indian $100 too. That's just how the reciprocity clause works, unfortunately.
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