
New Delhi: Francesca Orsini, scholar of Hindi and professor emerita at SOAS, London University, was tonight stopped from entering India even though she has a valid 5 year e-visa and told that she was being deported immediately.
Orsini, author of the highly regarded 2002 book, The Hindi Public Sphere 1920-1940: Language and Literature in the Age of Nationalism, and other academic works, arrived in Delhi on the night of October 21 via Hong Kong after attending an academic conference in China.
Though she was planning to visit friends and had last travelled to India as recently as October 2024, the immigration authorities denied her entry. Speaking to The Wire from Delhi airport, Orsini said that no reason was provided. “I am being deported. That is all I know,” she said.
A resident of London, she would then have to make her own arrangements to return home from there.
An Indian government official, speaking on condition of anonymity, claimed that Orsini was deported because her purpose of travel did not match her visa category. When it was pointed out to the official that she was visiting on a tourist visa to meet friends, the official maintained that a prior pattern of visa violations had been observed and that she had reportedly engaged in research activities during an earlier visit on the same visa.
Orsini is perhaps the fourth foreign scholar with a valid visa to be denied entry in recent years.
In 2021, during the Covid pandemic – when there was hardly any global travel – the Modi government attempted to restrict invitations extended to foreign scholars for online academic seminars and conferences to those given prior political clearance.
In March 2022, the Britain-based anthropologist Filippo Osella was stopped at Thiruvananthapuram airport and deported. The same year, British architecture professor Lindsay Bremner was deported, again without any reason being provided.
In 2024, the UK based Kashmiri academic Nitasha Kaul was denied entry at Bengaluru airport where she had arrived for a conference organised by the Karnataka government. Kaul’s OCI card was subsequently cancelled as well. The government has also cancelled the OCI card of Ashok Swain, a Sweden based academic and social media critic of the Bharatiya Janata Party’s politics. Swain moved the Delhi High Court, where he was able to secure relief.
While the numbers are not high, the randomness and unpredictability of these deportations are likely to have a chilling effect on foreign scholars.
Reacting to the authorities’ decision to deport Orsini, historian Ramachandra Guha said it is a “mark of a government that is insecure, paranoid and even stupid”.
This story was originally published in thewire.in. Read the full story here.




