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Huge response to Indian Eid visa camp for Bangladeshis

Completely different from what @Rain Man was saying as to all the large eyed Bangladesh tourists that do lots of sight-seeing, get all excited and come back again and again to do more shopping (greater selection and less chance of import tax on the goods).

You are free to come to a conclusion based on posts of a troll in an internet forum. :lol:

The original article also paints a different picture. I mean why do so many Bangladeshis return and return whenever they can back to India to spend more and more? As another Bangladeshi poster said in another thread...even the horlicks you buy in Bangladesh is from India. No wonder.

There is nothing in the article about the economic class of the tourists and surely nothing about what you are saying. The Bangladeshi tourists visit India mainly for medical purposes, they don't really "return and return whenever they can back to India to spend more and more". How many Bangladeshis actually drink Horlicks? I doubt the number would be anything significant. GlaxoSmithKline has a factory in Bangladesh though.
 
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Hey, Tagore's family belongs to Jessore, Bangladesh. Mamta's family is also from Jessore. Veteran actress Rakhee Gulzar's father is from Bangladesh. Her and Gulzar's daughter name is Meghna Gulzar. Meghna is a major river in Bangladesh. They named their daughter after Bangladesh's river Meghna. Basically all Bengali 'elites' of India somehow belongs to Bangladesh.

@Rain Man also belongs to Bangladesh.

By your same logic, Bangladesh ultimately belongs to greater India. Meghna derives from a Sanskrit name. Also look at origin of name Bangladesh....and where Bengali language even comes from.

You are free to come to a conclusion based on posts of a troll in an internet forum. :lol:

He has posted extensive evidence and analysis on it. If you lot get cloudy eyes over it, doesn't mean it is not true.

Sure he trolls you guys a lot, what can I say....it seems its pretty fun for him. One guy versus the angry Bangladesh hordes.

There is nothing in the article about the economic class of the tourists and surely nothing about what you are saying. The Bangladeshi tourists visit India mainly for medical purposes, they don't really "return and return whenever they can back to India to spend more and more". How many Bangladeshis actually drink Horlicks? I doubt the number would be anything significant. GlaxoSmithKline has a factory in Bangladesh though.

Almost 1 million Bangladeshis visited India in 2014 (2 years ago)....thats about 9 times the total number of international tourists that visit Bangladesh.

You are telling me 1 million Bangladeshis yearly needed medical treatment thats not available in Bangladesh? No wonder you are a least developed country. Or what percentage is "mainly"?

The horlicks was said in jest by your countryman regarding consumer goods:

https://defence.pk/threads/bangla-migrants-in-india-estimated-at-6-crore.426978/page-2#post-8250139

And that won't be a bad thing. The amount of Indian garbage we consume is beyond measure.

Fair and Lovely, Dabur toothpaste, Brittania cookies, Horlicks - you name it. Everything comes from India.....

And its backed up by the trade numbers between India and Bangladesh. You want me to post that here?
 
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Sigh. Indians are developing an ugly habit of chest thumping at the smallest of things.

Bd people like to enjoy life, experience new things, spend money and chill out, that's how we are. Take our tourism in a positive way and everyone will benefit. But your arrogance is unwarranted and a sign of small mindedness and a small heart.

Most Bdeshis are ambivalent about India, so I don't know why you want to tarnish that with undeserved pride. There's a saying: be nice to people on the way up because you will see them again on the way down.
 
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Any Bangladeshi visiting India becomes a celebrity at home, when they go back (if), their relatives, neighbours and even people from their neighbouring villages come to meet the guy and stand in queues to listen to the wonderful stories of a modern country and their modern cities with amazing things like a functioning transport system, metro rails, escalators, lifts, malls, multiplexes, highways, etc. The area around the 'foreign returned' lucky guy starts looking like a fairground, many small traders gather their and open their shops selling 'cutting tea', fried papad, salted peanuts, jilipi (jalewi), singara (samosa), khaja, goja (types of cheap sweets), bhujia, etc. Some people serve luchi/kochuri-tarkari (puri-bhaji), daal-bhat (lentil soup and rice) etc. to the waiting crowd. Some people sell lemon water, coconut water to the waiting crowd (the weather is hot most of the year), during the rainy season people sell kolapata (banana leafs), kochupata (another plant with big leafs), to waiting crowd to protect them from rain. Some people sell colorful balloons, plastic toys, wooden and clay toys, paper windmills, whistles etc. to the loitering kids coming with their parents, sometimes nagordolas (small Ferris wheels) also come! More than one million Bangladeshis visiting India create more than one million mini carnivals all over Bangladesh, every year!!

@BDforever @Anubis @Doyalbaba @Species @UKBengali @bongbang trolling aside, we are happy to give these little pleasures of life to millions of Bangladeshis every year! :)

Btw, I can give photos of these mini carnivals, but then I have to take permission from each of these individuals appearing in the photos, otherwise it is illegal in my country to use photos of individuals without their consent. :)
 
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He has posted extensive evidence and analysis on it

Okay publish the report and do send me a copy, as I said you are free to trust the trolls. :lol:

You are telling me 1 million Bangladeshis yearly needed medical treatment thats not available in Bangladesh? No wonder you are a least developed country. Or what percentage is "mainly"?

1 million is not a huge number considering our total population of 150 million.

Definition of 'least developed country' doesn't really include the number of outbound medical tourists.

The horlicks was said in jest by your countryman regarding consumer goods:

Heck, I didn't deny horlicks is imported from India but this is not a major product that is consumed by a significant number of Bangladeshis.

And its backed up by the trade numbers between India and Bangladesh. You want me to post that here?

lol, you mean importing horlicks has tilted the bilateral trade in India's favor? I guess most of our imports from India are mainly agricultural products.

Wait, are you preparing for another economic thesis here?
 
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Sigh. Indians are developing an ugly habit of chest thumping at the smallest of things.

Bd people like to enjoy life, experience new things, spend money and chill out, that's how we are. Take our tourism in a positive way and everyone will benefit. But your arrogance is unwarranted and a sign of small mindedness and a small heart.

Most Bdeshis are ambivalent about India, so I don't know why you want to tarnish that with undeserved pride. There's a saying: be nice to people on the way up because you will see them again on the way down.

The reports are from Bangladeshi media, we are innocent! :)
 
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Any Bangladeshi visiting India becomes a celebrity at home, when they go back (if), their relatives, neighbours and even people from their neighbouring villages come to meet the guy and stand in queues to listen to the wonderful stories of a modern country and their modern cities with amazing things like a functioning transport system, metro rails, escalators, lifts, malls, multiplexes, highways, etc. The area around the 'foreign returned' lucky guy starts looking like a fairground, many small traders gather their and open their shops selling 'cutting tea', fried papad, salted peanuts, jilipi (jalewi), singara (samosa), khaja, goja (types of cheap sweets), etc. Some people serve luchi/kochuri-tarkari (puri-bhaji), daal-bhat (lentil soup and rice) etc. to the waiting crowd. Some people sell lemon water, coconut water to the waiting crowd (the weather is hot most of the year), during the rainy season people sell kolapata (banana leafs), kochupata (another plant with big leafs), to waiting crowd to protect them from rain. Some people sell colorful balloons, plastic toys, wooden and clay toys, paper windmills, whistles etc. to the loitering kids coming with their parents, sometimes nagordolas (small Ferris wheels) also come! More than one million Bangladeshi visiting India create more than one million mini carnivals all over Bangladesh, every year!!

@BDforever @Anubis @Doyalbaba @Species @UKBengali @bongbang trolling aside, we are happy to give these little pleasures of life to millions of Bangladeshis every year! :)

Btw, I can give photos of these mini carnivals, but then I have to take permission from each of these individuals appearing in the photos, otherwise it is illegal in my country to use photos of individuals without their consent. :)

Try this, feels good when you are high:

 
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Any Bangladeshi visiting India becomes a celebrity at home, when they go back (if), their relatives, neighbours and even people from their neighbouring villages come to meet the guy and stand in queues to listen to the wonderful stories of a modern country and their modern cities with amazing things like a functioning transport system, metro rails, escalators, lifts, malls, multiplexes, highways, etc. The area around the 'foreign returned' lucky guy starts looking like a fairground, many small traders gather their and open their shops selling 'cutting tea', fried papad, salted peanuts, jilipi (jalewi), singara (samosa), khaja, goja (types of cheap sweets), etc. Some people serve luchi/kochuri-tarkari (puri-bhaji), daal-bhat (lentil soup and rice) etc. to the waiting crowd. Some people sell lemon water, coconut water to the waiting crowd (the weather is hot most of the year), during the rainy season people sell kolapata (banana leafs), kochupata (another plant with big leafs), to waiting crowd to protect them from rain. Some people sell colorful balloons, plastic toys, wooden and clay toys, paper windmills, whistles etc. to the loitering kids coming with their parents, sometimes nagordolas (small Ferris wheels) also come! More than one million Bangladeshi visiting India create more than one million mini carnivals all over Bangladesh, every year!!

@BDforever @Anubis @Doyalbaba @Species @UKBengali @bongbang trolling aside, we are happy to give these little pleasures of life to millions of Bangladeshis every year! :)

Btw, I can give photos of these mini carnivals, but then I have to take permission from each of these individuals appearing in the photos, otherwise it is illegal in my country to use photos of individuals without their consent. :)

Heh. The trickle down effect from India. No wonder Bangladesh economy is growing at a healthy rate :D
 
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And in return how many Indians visit Bangladesh for tourism?
 
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Any Bangladeshi visiting India becomes a celebrity at home, when they go back (if), their relatives, neighbours and even people from their neighbouring villages come to meet the guy and stand in queues to listen to the wonderful stories of a modern country and their modern cities with amazing things like a functioning transport system, metro rails, escalators, lifts, malls, multiplexes, highways, etc. The area around the 'foreign returned' lucky guy starts looking like a fairground, many small traders gather their and open their shops selling 'cutting tea', fried papad, salted peanuts, jilipi (jalewi), singara (samosa), khaja, goja (types of cheap sweets), bhujia, etc. Some people serve luchi/kochuri-tarkari (puri-bhaji), daal-bhat (lentil soup and rice) etc. to the waiting crowd. Some people sell lemon water, coconut water to the waiting crowd (the weather is hot most of the year), during the rainy season people sell kolapata (banana leafs), kochupata (another plant with big leafs), to waiting crowd to protect them from rain. Some people sell colorful balloons, plastic toys, wooden and clay toys, paper windmills, whistles etc. to the loitering kids coming with their parents, sometimes nagordolas (small Ferris wheels) also come! More than one million Bangladeshis visiting India create more than one million mini carnivals all over Bangladesh, every year!!

@BDforever @Anubis @Doyalbaba @Species @UKBengali @bongbang trolling aside, we are happy to give these little pleasures of life to millions of Bangladeshis every year! :)

Btw, I can give photos of these mini carnivals, but then I have to take permission from each of these individuals appearing in the photos, otherwise it is illegal in my country to use photos of individuals without their consent. :)
Holy craaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaap!!! :D :D :D
 
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The reports are from Bangladeshi media, we are innocent! :)

Oh you are innocent of that, no denying the report, but you're guilty of a far more annoying crime.
 
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