



Poetry, public transport and slow travel in Iran
Subscribe to enjoy similar stories.Iran had just opened up e-visas for Indian travellers, but ours quickly got rejected. I read on forums that it was common to get an e-visa rejection, no reasons given. So we set about charting the archaic, long-winded route to get a physical visa at the embassy: get a visa code through an Iranian travel agency, file an application with travel documents at the Iranian consulate in Mumbai and submit medical test results for TB and HIV.
The good news, considering the tense relations between Iran and the West, was that the visa wasn’t stamped on our passports. It was issued as a separate physical document and instead of the passport, that paper was stamped upon entry into Iran.It soon dawned on us that the long-winded process to obtain an Iranian visa was only the beginning of our travails. During our research, we learnt that travel aggregator websites like Expedia, Skyscanner and Goibibo didn’t list flights to Iran.
Nor did accommodation websites like Airbnb and Booking.com work there. Most travel companies, including World Nomads and BajajAllianz, didn’t provide coverage for the country. Visa and Mastercard didn’t work there either; no withdrawing from ATMs, no paying with international debit or credit cards.
And, as is well known, websites like Facebook, X (formerly Twitter) and BBC were banned. Instagram and Gmail worked though, small mercy! (As of 2019) And so, navigating the many obstacles, we finally took the short connecting flight from Delhi to Iran via Dubai, just a few days before my thirty-first birthday. We had scrambled together a wad of cash that would hopefully last us an entire month in the country….In Iran… we wanted to be in no hurry and had no ‘must-see’ list we needed
. Read on livemint.com