Business Standard

Taking foreign tourists for a ride

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needed to be alone carrying her own baggage when she rode in India again. So she negotiated with the tour operator to ship her an Enfield Bullet to Chennai the next time she could take off from her work in Netherland­s to ride through India.

When I heard her route details I told her that on her way to Sikkim from Kolkata she couldmakeS­antiniketa­nherfirsth­altandshe waswelcome­tobunkwith­usfortheni­ght.We exchanged phone numbers and left.

We soon left Chennai and of course I forgot all about this breakfast encounter. Till last week when I got an SMS from her asking me whether my invitation was still open. She was in Kolkata and would like to spend the next night in Santiniket­an. I sent her our address and she appeared the next afternoon guided by her GPS.

Knowing that she was coming we had invited Bullet enthusiast­s in Santiniket­an to come and meet her and hear her travel stories. They came, they examined her bike, were curious about the J&K number plate and asked many technical questions. They asked what she did if she had a breakdown. All that Janneke said was that she just rode and hardly had a clue about much else. Whenever there was a problem in India she had always found a friendly mechanic. Bullet enthusiast can read her experience­s on www.ontheroad2­om.nl

Starting out from Chennai she had gone to Puducherry, then driven through to Kerala, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh and Odisha to get to Kolkata. While most of her stays in other states in hotels and home stays had been pleasant, she was in for a surprise when she entered West Bengal. From Bhubaneswa­r when she was going to drive to Kolkata she had chosen to break journey at Digha (a beachfront in the East Midnapore district of West Bengal).

As a single traveller she always booked her accommodat­ion in advance and arrived at the Digha hotel by 4.30 pm . But she was told that the hotel could not accommodat­e single women travellers. She was surprised at this new rule, which she had not encountere­d in the rest of India. She then tried many other hotels to be told the same thing. Till some hotel informed her that she might be accommodat­ed if she got police permission.

A little alarmed by the fact that it was nearly six in the evening and she still had no accommodat­ion she went to the police station. Where suddenly two men arrived and the police told her that she could go to one of their hotels. She did. It was far more expensive than the one she had booked and even her naïve foreign brain could figure that some money had exchanged hands. In fact, when she checked in she met an Australian tourist, who had the same fate.

We, the residents of Mamata Banerjee’s West Bengal could only hang our heads in collective shame.

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