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Ahead of polls, Bhutan issues no entry notice to Indians

Bhutan gate

A view of the Bhutan gate at Samdrup Jongkhar. Image - Northeast Now 

Ahead of the Bhutan elections, the Himalayan nation has issued a notification stating that Indians, who wish to visit the neighbouring country, will have to carry either voter ID cards or passports for entry permits from January 1.

The office of the Indian consulate-general in Bhutan’s Phuentsholing has issued a notification, saying from January 1, it will stop giving identification certificates to Indians to visit the Himalayan nation and they will have to carry either voter ID cards or passports for entry permits, The Telegraph reported.

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Presently, Indians with documents like driving licences, Aadhaar and ration cards —are accepted at Phuentsholing on the Bengal border for entering in the country.

Based on those papers, the consular authorities would issue identification certificates to the Indians who would then approach the immigration office of Bhutan for entry permits.

The notification was issued by Rahul Yadav, a consul at the consulate general of India’s office, on October 5.

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“From January 1 next year, every Indian has to carry either a voter ID card or a passport to prove they are Indian citizens. We are stopping the practice of issuing identification certificates. They can go to the immigration office of Bhutan and obtain entry permits,” Telegraph quoted Yadav as saying.

Sources in the consulate general’s office said the decision had been taken as there was no system in place to check the authenticity of some documents submitted for the identification certificates.

“On many occasions, applicants are asked to stay back for a couple of days to confirm if their identity documents are original. But they insist on the immediate delivery of identification certificates, saying they have hotel reservations in Bhutan,” said a source.

From October 15 till Diwali, sources said, at least 5,000 tourists from India would visit Bhutan every day. The decision has, however, left stakeholders of the tourism industry worried.

 

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