On Tue, Oct 26, 2010 at 2:10 PM, Suresh Ramasubramanian
<[email protected]> wrote:
> On Tue, October 26, 2010 2:05 pm, Eugen Leitl wrote:
>> Somehow he doesn't sound too happy... ;)
>
> And clearly hasn't applied for a US visa. Or maybe one from Argentina
> (which, for indian citizens at least, needs an affidavit sealed by a
> notary public)
>
> I just suppose he's lucky that someone in the Indian embassy didn't google
> for "Dr.Crippen", find the first hit on Google and deny the application
> outright.
>
> -srs
>
>
>

I agree with Suresh. This has nothing to do with being "Indian". All
embassies are this way - or atleast the ones you have intentions to
visit anyways. This para had me laughing though:

"So whatever
passes for the Immigration service in India is on the lookout for a
bunch of foreigners congregating in a city all of a sudden, then
looks to see what's going on. If they start sniffing around and find
out these people are going to a meeting and only have tourist visas,
they cancel the visas and these guys cannot get out of the country
until they pony up for a business visa, which could take days and
lots of new service/penalty fees."

Sounds like an awesome plotline for Rajini's next movie :)


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