NEW DELHI: Two British nationals have been ordered to leave India after their visas were canceled for pasting Palestine stickers in a popular temple town in the western state of Rajasthan.
Ajmer district police, who oversee Pushkar, one of the oldest Hindu pilgrimage sites, issued on Feb. 2 “leave India” notices to a British man and woman for violating tourist visa regulations “by pasting stickers against another country.”
Photos of the stickers, which were shared by the local media, read: “Free Palestine,” “Boycott Israel,” and featured the Palestinian flag.
According to the police, they were plastered at “two or three locations” in Pushkar, and on Jan. 21 a complaint was filed with the local police.
“In Pushkar lives an Israeli religious guru, and they have a prayer house. Pushkar is a tourist place and if people start indulging in such activities, then the message goes wrong,” Additional Superintendent of Police Rajesh Meena, who issued the “leave India” notice, told Arab News on Thursday.
The couple were still in Pushkar, but the police had given them a deadline to leave the country.
“They have one and a half months’ time, they have booked their return tickets, and they will leave,” Meena said.
Abhishek, a journalist in Pushkar who documented the stickers, said that the town had gained in popularity among Israeli tourists over the past few years.
“They prefer this place because of the cost-effective hostels and accommodation. In 2019, they opened a religious place for themselves, and they worship there,” he said.
“In 2019-20, they played loud music and there was resistance from the locals initially, but later on the locals adjusted.”











