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While I sympathise with your case, the travel woes of people with Pakistani backgrounds is only on the increase. An office colleague of mine has been refused a visa for the USA, Singapore, Australia, etc. only because he has a Pakistani background. And it's not only the Pakistani related people who are in trouble. A young Indian (Christian) boy with an Indian passport who was born in the U.A.E. (Dubai) travelled to the US on a student visa recently. He was much hassled at the airport and finally deported because he was born in the UAE - remember Mohammad Atta and another terrorist from the 9/11 bombings were UAE passport holders.

So it is very easy when talking to an Indian official to say :

Unfortunately this bureaucratic obscurantism, if I might call it so,
diminishes India�s reputation as being a secular progressive
democracy and reduces it to the equivalency of some third world
countries that often subscribe to the theory that whatever the
circumstances bureaucratic supremacy can never be breached -- an
unfortunate but true analogy .
But the same could be applied to almost every Western country and some very affluent Eastern countries like Singapore. In fact, with a hope of getting a visa to India after four months inspite of being a Pakistani resident earlier, India is to be admired keeping in mind the terrible history and current relations and the daily hostilities from Pakistan. India has shown itself to be far more secular and progressive and democratic. Many other countries have thrown such morals to the dogs.

So yes, I am sorry your visa is delayed and that is really very sad keeping in mind your connection to Goa, but keep the abuse for Pakistan which definitely is one of the major parties responsible for the suspicious and scary circumstances of the world today.

Sunila






From: "Ives Pereira" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [GOANET] No visa to visit home...
Date: Tue, 14 Jan 2003 14:23:09 +0530

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From: joseph sequeira <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

The High Commissioner for India
December 8, 2002
Ottawa

Dear Sir,

My wife and I, who incidentally are both over 70 years of age and
who emigrated from Pakistan 36 years ago, look forward to spending
the winter months in Goa -- both to escape the Canadian cold as well
as to make our annual pilgrimage to the shrine of St. Francis Xavier
in Old Goa.

We normally apply for our Indian visa a couple of weeks before our
departure and every year so far have been granted our visas on the
same day as we submitted our applications.

You can imagine our surprise this year when we were told by the
Indian Consular staff in Toronto that the visa rules have now
changed and that because of our previous Pakistan residence our visa
applications would take a minimum of four months to process.

We were truly shocked and disappointed and attempted to explain to
the Consular staff that not only have we been travelling to Goa
every year for the past 10 years, but that our age and our long
residency in Canada as Canadian citizens should exempt us from this
four month condition; needless to say our pleas fell on deaf years
and left us with no other option than to cancel all our travel plans.

I accept that a visa is a privilege and not a right and that every
country has the sovereign right to prescribe conditions that apply
to its granting of visas. I also accept that in India�s case the
potential terrorist threat has enhanced its security concerns and
rightly so; but what I fail to understand is the inability of the
Consular staff to differentiate between a potential terrorist and a
genuine visitor.

As an example - from the many mujahedeen �that have either been
killed or arrested in Indian how many have been 70 year old Roman
Catholic Goans? Isn�t it therefore absurd to make the assumption
that because of circumstances beyond our control that found us in
Pakistan at the time of partition we should all be considered as
security threats and subjected to a vigorous four month
investigation?

Both my wife and I have always had a close affinity and love for
India which accounts for our annual visits and it is precisely this
that makes the hurt of the disappointment to exempt us from new
requirements more poignant.

Unfortunately this bureaucratic obscurantism, if I might call it so,
diminishes India�s reputation as being a secular progressive
democracy and reduces it to the equivalency of some third world
countries that often subscribe to the theory that whatever the
circumstances bureaucratic supremacy can never be breached -- an
unfortunate but true analogy .

I hope you will read this letter in the spirit in which it is being
written --- a spirit of disappointment, yes, but also in a spirit of
anticipation hoping that some day soon the Indian bureaucracy will
abandon its petty-mindedness and allow the country to fulfil its
aspiration of being counted as part of the democratic first world.

I wish you and yours a very happy New Year. Thank you. God Bless you.

J.E Sequeira
2180 Marine Drive, Apt. 1904
Oakville, Ontario.
L6L 5V2
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