Home - News - Nation - India mulls visa-on-arrival for Malaysians

India mulls visa-on-arrival for Malaysians

Posted on January 25, 2012, Wednesday

PETALING JAYA: Travel to the United States and India is going to be less tedious – in terms of applying for visas.

With both countries being among the top destinations for Malaysians, travel industry officials, visa agents and frequent visitors welcomed the move to make application procedures hassle-free.

The US Administration has announced a new visa pilot programme to simplify and speed up the non-immigrant visa process for certain applicants, including the ability to waive interviews for some “very low-risk applicants” seeking to renew a visa.

A posting in the US Embassy website stated that President Barack Obama had ordered the departments of State and Homeland Security to expand their Visa Waiver Programme, which allowed tourists and businessmen to stay 90 days or less without needing a visa.

Both the United States and India accounted for over 200,000 visa applications from Malaysians last year with the US Embassy issuing 44,000 visas, the second highest in the region.

Malaysian Association of Tour and Travel Agents (MATTA) president Datuk Mohd Khalid Harun gave the thumbs-up to the move to ease visa procedures, saying it would give locals more impetus to visit the two countries.

“It is significant as travellers have to put up with other considerations such as aviation tax, airfare and currency strength,” he said.

Datuk Robert Teo, a member of three international bilateral chambers of commerce and industry, said the US government’s fresh visa initiatives would also boost trade and tourism for them.

“It makes things much easier when you help to facilitate travel. Simplifying procedures makes a lot of sense,” said Teo, who is a frequent visitor to the United States.

India, meanwhile, may soon extend its visa-on-arrival (VoA) facility to Malaysians and citizens of 12 other countries to boost tourism to the South Asian nation.

The decision was made after a review by the Indian prime minister’s office decided that security concerns should not impede foreign tourist arrivals, The Economic Times reported today.

Other countries that could be offered the VoA include Thailand, Brunei, France, Germany, Spain, Sweden, Russia, Ukraine, Kazakhstan, Brazil and South Africa.

At present, VoA is only offered to 11 countries — Finland, Japan, Luxembourg, New Zealand, Singapore, Cambodia, Indonesia, Vietnam, the Philippines, Laos and Myanmar.

The Indian home ministry will work closely with its Asean and EU counterparts to ensure security is not compromised even as New Delhi tries to make travel to India hassle-free.

Tourism is seen as a potentially significant revenue earner by India, which receives only 600,000 foreign visitors a year, out of close to one billion international tourists globally.

The VoA facility will also be extended to four additional airports — Goa, Hyderabad, Kochi and Bangalore. Currently, only Mumbai, Chennai and Kolkata airports have the facility.

Malaysian Indian Travel and Tour Association president K. Thangavelu, in welcoming the Indian government’s move, said there are many Malaysians who want to visit India.

“I urge the Indian Government to also remove the two-month no-entry ruling imposed in 2009 under which visitors can only enter India twice within the 60-day visa period,” he added.

The Indian government had imposed the 60-day rule as a security measure after terrorists killed over 100 people in coordinated attacks in Mumbai on Nov 26, 2008. – Agencies

Print Friendly

Comments are closed.