The Indian Visa

Print pagePDF pageEmail page

We’re fairly seasoned travellers and have made a lot of stop overs between France and Australia in our time so aren’t too worried about getting our Indian visas for our forthcoming visit to Delhi on the way to and from Australia. We know that we have to apply within 30 days of our departure date. We leave on 11th February.

Jean Michel says he’ll look after it and soon discovers that as we live in France, we have to go through an agent call VFS.

With a lot of difficulty, he manages to log onto the correct site and start filling in an on-line form in English. He has a French pdf put out by VFS which explains what to do. He has a lot of questions so I decide to have a look at the form myself. The whole thing is so frustrating that we decide to go and have lunch.

When we come back, we discover the form has disappeared and Jean Michel forgot to copy down the temporary reference number immediately so has to start again. I manage to lose my form too before recording the reference number. After that, it’s the first thing we do!

We argue about whether he should put AVRIL Jean as his father’s name or Jean AVRIL. The French pdf says AVRIL Jean but I’m worried it might complicate matters if the names are reversed. Then we discover too major problems that are going to prevent us from applying on-line : I have two passports and the Indian government wants to see them both, and we are enter India twice at an interval of less than the stipulated two months.

There is a pay-for help line so we try phoning. I don’t understand what’s being said in English and the woman obviously doesn’t know what I’m asking so I hang up and Jean Michel tries to get a French help line. It’s much better.

The order of the names doesn’t matter, we are told. Yes, I have to submit both passports. The two-month interval may or may not be a problem. We’ll have to go to Paris to submit our applications.

Before we go, we pay a little visit to a local photography shop to have our special SQUARE photos taken. They don’t do them, of course, and send us off to another shop out on the other side of town. We pay 13 euro each to have 4 photos taken although we only need 2.

I suddenly realise that I will need to apply to have my visa in my Australian passport because I am not allowed to enter Australia on my French passport. I phone the help line again and they explain how to do it, though it takes a while for me to really understand what I’m supposed to do.

On an old VSF website it says I have to fill out a special form if I have two passports but the only form I can find is for people applying in France who aren’t French. I print it out anyway.

Rainy streets of Paris at sunrise
Rainy streets of Paris at sunrise

The Indian Consulate in the 10th arrondissement in Paris is only open in the morning so we get up at 6 am on Wednesday 27th February (it’s still nighttime here are that hour)  and arrive at the Consulate just after nine in the rain. First we go to the nearby post office which is just next to a very suave pigeon house to buy the two Chronopost envelopes (26 euro a time) that we are told we will need.

The pigeon house
The pigeon house

By 10.30 am, our mission is accomplished. It turns out that I do indeed have to fill out the “non-French” form. Who am I to argue ? The 2-month interval between visits is no longer relevant. They’re changed the rules. We have to ask for a multiple-entry, 3 month-visa. Fortunately we are paying our 164 euro (gulp) by Visa Card because it shortens the queue considerably. There are, in fact, an amazing number of people in the room, but I guess India is very populated.

The man at the desk does not want our Chronopost envelopes (that goodness Jean Michel only filled out one of them) because they use their own. We are asked to put our name and address on an ordinary envelope instead. We are told that Jean Michel’s visa will take about 4 days and mine will take 6.

L'Atelier du Sourcil - The Eyebrow Workshop
L’Atelier du Sourcil – The Eyebrow Workshop

By the time we leave the consultate, we are feeling somewhat frazzled. We decide to walk around for awhile until lunchtime. I’m chasing after green hand towels green is not the fashionable colour at the moment (except lime green) so I don’t find any. We do see an Eyebrow Workshop though.

P'tite Bougnate
P’tite Bougnate

We then eat in a bougnat before driving back to Blois. I have never heard of a bougnat but Jean Michel explains it means coal merchant. It was traditional in Paris for coal and firewood merchants to run cafés as a sideline. They usually came from the Massif Central in the centre of France.

Inside teh bougnat
Inside teh bougnat

We both receive an SMS next day saying our visas are being processed. Well, that’s a relief. I receive an SMS and an email on the following Wednesday (whole week later) saying that VSF has received my visa and their postal service is looking after it. It should arrive in 2 to 3 days.

Jean Michel receives nothing. The next day, the Chronopost man delivers my two passports and visa. Jean Michel is getting increasingly worried about his so  phones the VSF oay-for hotline again but is told that they can do nothing. It’s in the hands of the Indian consulate. Great!

The next day, Jean Michel finally gets an email to say that VFS has now received his visa too and it’s being processed by their postal department. The next day is Saturday of course so there is no sign of the Chronopost man.

On Monday, at 9.30 am, Jean Michel sees a van outside the gate and dashes out. The letter’s in the box, he’s told. And there it is. Exactly 12 days after we submitted the visa application we have both our visas with a whole 3 days to spare. Yay! Delhi and the Taj Mahal, here we come!

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

16 thoughts on “The Indian Visa”

    1. Yes, I’ve been looking at the weather. At least for the first week, it should be fine! We are going to Armidale after Sydney and I see it can be quite chilly at night.

  1. You and Jean Michel are sure to have a fabulous time in India, Rosemary. No way it would balance out otherwise, with all the work you’ve had to do on this end to get there! Plus, you got to dine at a bougnat, too! (You didn’t mention, but hope the meal was tasty enough to “de-frazzle” the two of you.) Bon Voyage!

  2. I loath situations where no one can explain what I am supposed to do clearly. It is such a pain when government departments leave you to guess how to proceed and which category you fall into, with no idea of what the consequences of getting it wrong might be. Why do the people setting this up not have the wit to cover all situations and be able to create systems that enable a smooth flow of work? Aaarrgh!

  3. After that lot you deserve a holiday. On a serious note though, the involved paperwork, and you can get there face to face, is a nightmare. Why is this ? Does the Indian Govt. not want visitors? Do they think that you are likely to stay in the country forever?
    Next point! Le café but the fascia in the photo says P’tite Bougnate.
    Have a great time.

    1. I don’t know why it’s so complicated. In Asia, we’ve been to Hong Kong, Bangkok, Singapore and Kuala Lumpur and just been able to get visas at the border. On the previous occasion that I went to India, it was on a university mission so I just handed over my passport to the government agency that was paying.
      Bougnat is masculine. Bougnate would no doubt be the bougnat’s wife and P’tite Bougnate is probably the daughter! I couldn’t find a website to check. It’s on Boulevard Magenta.

  4. What a nightmare! I hate it when I have to go out of my way to accommodate the stupid requirements of some governments. What exactly do the Indians fear? That people from all over the world would start to barge in and settle there? Hope you at least have a good time there.

Leave a Reply to Rosemary Kneipp Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *