India provide an wonderful experience for the travellers however there are numbers of scams are also done by handful of people which ruins up travellers enjoyment. To avoid the scams and alert people, I am inviting people to share any bad experience if you have while travelling to India so other fellow travellors can be alerted.
Tuesday, September 26, 2006
Health and safety tip when travelling to India
More serious problem is the risk of contacting AIDS, Hepatitis B and other sexually transmitted diseases.
For climbers and mountaineers: look out for symptoms of altitude sickness/acute mountain sickness. If you ascend above 3500meters too fast you might feel nauseous, sleepless, and your head may ache. Also carry sunscreen with minimum SPF 20 to escape sunburn.
The quality of health services is very uneven . Urban cities, particularly metros, have good hospitals, well stocked late night/all night chemists, highly competent doctors and top of the line medical services. Conversely, rural and semi-rural areas have very limited facilities. Stick to the larger cities if you are anticipating trouble. Medicines are fairly cheap in India.
Travellers from yellow fever areas are required to have an inoculation certificate. Prior inoculation for poliomyelitis is recommended.
Safety
Areas that may be avoided are Bihar,Jammu & Kashmir and parts of the Northeast, which in any case have restricted tourist activity. Cases of mugging, theft and worse are frequent.
Few precaution you may consider:
Keep several photocopies of your passport, insurance, travellers’ cheques etc. scattered through your luggage,
Do not put all your money in one place,
Be extremely alert in the dark.
Many women travellers wear the long tunic and loose pyjama dress of Indian women called the salwar-kameez and find that it substantially dissuades unwanted male attention.
If you are travelling alone, do not tell others.
If you lose your passport lodge a First Information Report at the local police station and contact your embassy.If local police people misbehave or does not listen best is to talk higher officer or contact your embassy and then action happen fast.
Monday, September 25, 2006
Belgian embassy official murdered in Delhi
Dessoy was a secretary at the Belgian embassy, according to the diplomatic mission's website. Police said Dessoy may have been killed after a party on Saturday night at her home in the Vasant Vihar neighbourhood in south New Delhi which is home to several foreign embassies and staff. Five people, including Dessoy's driver, were held in connection with the murder.
Monday, August 07, 2006
Dutch woman tourist found dead on Indian train
New Delhi - A 25-year-old Dutch woman tourist died Thursday on a train while coming to New Delhi.
According to police, Janine Corina was part of a group of tourists that had come to India on July 15. ‘The group was returning from Gorakhpur in Uttar Pradesh during that time, she complained of uneasiness and became unconscious ,’ said a senior Government Railway Police official.
Corina’s sister, Dayenne Peternella, was also part of the group that had come from Holland, police said.