krishnan1 said:My grant date was Feb 14. There has been no contacts from CGINY after that. I am patiently waiting.
basis said:It was a very casual request and without asking anyone to post their documents. I remember having seen a link for PIO card and it helped me. Because when I received my PIO card - it was not cut very well on border and got solace when I saw an image where it showed the borders were not smooth but cut roughly. When I asked this question to HCI London clerk who handed me this they gave me a blank stare and said if 'you want it replaced there is a fee'. But the online image helped me.
I did not ask anyone to put their personal details on web and would never do. And I would say further that there is nothing called 'active members' who you know etc. If there is anything that you cant publish in public dont sent to anyone whether active / hyperactive or whatever. At least dont send to me.
From the posts of INDIAN4 so far I believe that he is well educated, well versed, intelligent person having common sense to protect his interests. And being an adult who is mature enough I would request him to apply his own judegement in the case - which I think he has already done if you care to see his reply. And also at the same time reiterate that the request was not to someone to post their details but if there was such link.
helper00 said:Hello basis,
I beleive you got a PIO card. Would you please let me know what you get when they issue a PIO card. I heard it is a booklet ( looks like passport ) and some kind of visa in passport. What does it says on visa stamp ?
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mangal969 said:helper00,
I believe you had asked this very same question a couple of posts ago and it was answered.
Everybody,
If you want to see the first OCI card from afar (in colour):
http://images.theglobalindian.com/index.php?page=album.21&PHPSESSID=6ec9703155563107521e0d3a0cbbf0c7
The last picture on Page 2 gives a good view of the OCI card opened and the U visa.
P.S The title names Nivruti Rai as the first dual citizen of India...Pure BS...Ignore that part
Hotdiggety said:So with a PIO card, you don't need a separate visa sticker on your passport, but with a OIC visa you do, thereby making it necessary to carry around your old expired passport with you forever. Since there isn't much substantively different between the two types of visas, I really have to wonder who the geniuses are who come up with this stuff.
boggavarapu said:I wonder if anyone on this forum has actually used their OCI Card so far or known anyone who used it for travel to India etc. and if so what the experiences are?
Would be very interested to hear!
Yes indeed. At a charge of 25USD or its equivalent they will transfer the OCI visa sticker to new passport if you wish at any Indian mission / FRRO / FRO. Else you have an option to carry the passport that has OCI sticker.fitness99 said:It is probably a group of geniuses that work at the GoI. If you do not want to carry your old passport with the OCI visa sticker, they will transfer it to your new passport for a fee of $25 (if you are based in the U.S)
I sent my wife off today with an OCI!boggavarapu said:I wonder if anyone on this forum has actually used their OCI Card so far or known anyone who used it for travel to India etc. and if so what the experiences are?
Would be very interested to hear!
PIO1 said:I sent my wife off today with an OCI!
I told her not to show the card and just show the visa. The OCI is packed away at the bottom of her hand luggage. The Airline checked the visa at the check in counter, and I expected to hear "nice visa" etc, but not even a raised eyebrow. (It's the best visa I've ever seen) I don't think they even know what an Indian visa looks like - they were just following procedures.
She is due to arrive in India in about 10 hours and I will keep you posted.
PS. Just saw basis's post. She is just using the OCI as a visa, so won't need to take it out outside the Airport. I worked in India under a 5 year LTV. Never had to show my passport for anything, except FRRO registration/police. Openning bank accounts etc was never an issue.
Congrats!!!!!!!!!!!boggavarapu said:I will be personally visiting the Indian Consulate (in USA) during the next few days for the collection of our OCI cards (Self and family). I preferred a personal visit to that of mail collection.
I will be handing over our existing PIO Cards to the Consulate as per the rules. Is there anything I need to be particularly aware of while I am in the Consulate while handing over my PIO Cards etc? Ofcourse, I intend to verify the details on the OCI Cards (Particularly name spellings etc.) as I heard that there have been errors on the Cards in some cases!!
The point is that I will only get the OCI Cards after they have actually taken and cancelled my PIO Cards. Is there is anyway that I can first verify our OCI documents and then submit the PIO Cards? In that way, if there are any mistakes found on the OCI Cards, they I can actually request the Consulate to first get them corrected. Once that is done then I can finally submit the PIO Cards. I feel that corrections could take some time (Days or weeks?)
The reason I am mentioning this is because I would hate to wait further for the corrected OCI Cards and hold the cancelled PIO Cards at the same time. That would be quite inconvenient especially as we have already booked our tickets to visit India in the next 8 weeks!
Would appreciate any suggestions/advice. Thanks.
PIO1 said:Congrats!!!!!!!!!!!
BTW did you manage to get a refund for your full fee less PIO discount?
Re OCI/PIO ... Just ask them if you can have a look before they cancel. They probably will not remember the PIOs, and you can offer it back after you collect. It takes a fair time to check - don't rush, you need to check dates, passport numbers etc.
PIO1 said:I sent my wife off today with an OCI!
I told her not to show the card and just show the visa. The OCI is packed away at the bottom of her hand luggage. The Airline checked the visa at the check in counter, and I expected to hear "nice visa" etc, but not even a raised eyebrow. (It's the best visa I've ever seen) I don't think they even know what an Indian visa looks like - they were just following procedures.
She is due to arrive in India in about 10 hours and I will keep you posted.
PS. Just saw basis's post. She is just using the OCI as a visa, so won't need to take it out outside the Airport. I worked in India under a 5 year LTV. Never had to show my passport for anything, except FRRO registration/police. Openning bank accounts etc was never an issue.
mangal969 said:Glad to know the U visa 'works'
BTW Which line did she have to stand in at immigration ? Are Indian nationals/PIO's & OCI's in one queue or is there a seperate queue between the 3 groups ?
Or was it the "foreigner's" queue ?
basis- OCI holders are not allowed into PAP/RAP areas without special permission.OCI's are to be treated on par with NRI's so i believe that you would have to pay NRI fees (unless you pass HSC from India-No one asks for the passport copy.They do want the domicile which basically can be bought.).About the issue of being treated as foreigners well all i can say is most PIO's follow a dont ask dont tell policy.The passport comes out only where it's needed (FRRO,airports).Otherwise behave like an Indian.
Bogga-Forgive my recollection but was your OCI from NY ?