TravTalk - India

Smoothen domestic, int'l travel

- Hazel Jain

There has to be some kind of mechanism that is proof of vaccinatio­n and which can be easily verified

TAAI has appealed to MoCA and the MOT to set up protocols right away and issue certificat­es for vaccinated travellers – both domestic and inbound – in order to ensure that inter-state and cross-border travel is smooth when the time comes.

Astitch in time can save nine. And keeping in tune with this age-old proverb is the Travel Agents Associatio­n of India (TAAI) that recently urged the Ministry of Civil Aviation (MoCA) and the Ministry of Tourism (MOT) to pay attention to an issue that might flare up later. Sharing this informatio­n in an exclusive interview is Jay Bhatia, Vice President, TAAI, who says, “We have written to MoCA and MOT about urgently setting up protocols for travellers who have been vaccinated

against COVID-19 and issuing certificat­es to them.”

This move, he says, will eliminate the need for travellers to get their RT-PCR tests done and quarantine themselves every time they have to fly or cross internatio­nal or domestic borders. “The first thing everyone – whether it is the hotel, the airline or the state bodies – asks travellers to do is get these tests, which is greatly hampering tourism. So there has to be some kind of mechanism that is proof of vaccinatio­n and which can be easily verified that the holder of the certificat­e is vaccinated,” he says. TAAI has a meeting with Rupinder Brar, ADG, MOT, this month on the matter.

Bhatia however points to another problem that can crop up. “Internatio­nal travellers have already started showing interest to visit India. Certain countries have already set up some sort of protocols for their citizens who are vaccinated. But these Apps are in their local languages which cannot be verified in India. That is why we need to set some sort of precedence and have a universal certificat­ion for our inbound travellers so they don’t have to undergo the process of testing and quarantine,” he underlines. What TAAI has also proposed is the need to have a mandate on health and travel insurance for all travellers coming into India. “We need to figure whether we allow them to take insurance in India through travel agents and tour operators making their arrangemen­ts or let them use their country’s travel insurance policies. While we still have some time before the tourist movement can start in full swing, we should have these policies and norms in place,” Bhatia asserts.

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Vice President, TAAI
Jay Bhatia Vice President, TAAI
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