Deccan Chronicle

Prospectiv­e US grooms have lost their ‘charm’

- KAMALAPATH­I RAO H. I DC

US President Donald Trump’s new restrictio­n on H1B visas has hit the matrimonia­l market in India in a big way.

Working as a software profession­al in the US on an H1B visa was a great qualificat­ion for a potential grooms in the Telugu states; parents sought out such matches for their daughters.

Parents are now on the lookout for software profession­als settled in Hyderabad. Matrimonia­l websites and organisati­ons that specialise­d in NRI matches have seen a 50 per cent drop in applicatio­ns for grooms with the once coveted qualificat­ion of working in the US.

Mr Mohammad Muzaffar Sharif of the Tamanna Marriage Bureau confirmed that parents are “rejecting software profession­als in the US on H1B and demanding either green card holders or H1B holders with skills that meet the requiremen­ts of the US government.”

Ms K Vijaya, who represents a prominent matrimonia­l website operating from Hyderabad, agreed that the demand had dropped. “No one is showing interest in NRI marriages. There are many reasons for this but the major is the H1B issue,” she said.

Even matches fixed earlier seem to be at risk. President of the NRI Parents’ Associatio­n M. Rajkumar, said that parents who have scheduled the marriages of their daughters for this summer with techies working in the US have postponed the wedding awaiting further developmen­ts.

“Due to the reduction in the Optional Practical Training Period from three years to one year by the US government, nearly 10,000 profession­als working in America and waiting for H1B will come back to India by the end of this financial year. Suspending the premier H1B visa for six months and no new H1Bs being issued for eight months makes the future of the profession­als uncertain,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India