Ask Centre to issue e-visas to UK citizens: Tourism industry to CM
Times of India | 2 weeks ago | 15-06-2022 | 02:40 am
Times of India
2 weeks ago | 15-06-2022 | 02:40 am
Panaji: Apprehensive tourism stakeholders, led by the Travel and Tourism Association of Goa (TTAG), have petitioned chief minister Pramod Sawant to take up with the Centre the matter of issuing e-visas to citizens of the UK and other nations that have been excluded so far. Goa did not receive charter tourists last season, while another category of travellers — free, independent travellers (FITs) — largely avoided visiting India after the UK was excluded from the list of countries eligible for Indian e-visas. “We want the chief minister to take up the issue with the Centre. If UK citizens continue to be ineligible for e-visas, footfalls from the country will be negligible for yet another season,” said TTAG president Nilesh Shah. After Russia, the UK has been the biggest market for the state and receives repeat tourists. However, the Covid-19 pandemic has drastically changed the scene. “While growth in the domestic segment has been overwhelming, we are concerned about foreign arrivals. Last season, after receiving a schedule of UK charters, it was cancelled when the country figured in the list of at-risk nations,” a tour operator said. With most of the repeat UK guests being senior citizens, hotelier Savio Messias said they find it troublesome to travel to the Indian embassy in London for visa formalities. Recently, a couple that was on the cusp of booking a trip to India cancelled after realising the arduous process involved in obtaining a visa. “A trip to London involves an overnight stay for them and would cost almost as much as one of their flights to India,” he said. A tour operator said British visitors are the second-most numerous non-SAARC travellers to India and that it is sad to lose so many guests because British passport holders are no longer eligible for e-visas. Shah said that besides this issue, tourism stakeholders also requested the CM to stop harassment of tourists by the police. “We also complained about the prevalence of touts. You find them at beaches, outside casinos, and at other tourists areas badgering tourists. This has to be stopped,” he said. The issue of security of tourists was also discussed as even a small incident can affect the image of the state, he said.