Kottayam (Kerala): With Kerala on high alert for coronavirus, foreign tourists visiting God's Own Country are finding it difficult to get accommodation and move around, prompting the government to disapprove of such acts and ask people not to see every foreigner as a COVID-19 carrier.
With two people, including a UK national, testing positive for coronavirus on Sunday, the number of those affected in the state has risen to 21 as the government began a "break the chain" initiative to prevent the spread of the virus.
It has also launched intensified medical check-up at border areas for people entering the state by rail and road.
Amid the stepped-up preventive measures, several cases of foreigners being 'denied' travel in public transport systems and stay in hotels have been reported in the past few days from various parts of the state, a major attraction for travellers with its picturesque locales and enchanting backwaters.
Cautioning against such acts, Kerala Tourism Minister Kadakampally Surendran described overseas visitors as "our friends" and 'guests" and called for a change of mindset of some people who allegedly treat them as carriers of coronavirus.
On Sunday, authorities were forced to shift two foreign nationals to a quarantine facility at a government hospital in nearby Pala after their co-passengers in a state-owned transport corporation bus raised an alarm.
The two from Spain were travelling in the bus when police stopped it at Kuravilangad in Kottayam district after co-passengers said they could not travel with them due to the coronavirus threat, according to official sources.
ALSO READ:COVID-19: Case against 79 people for gathering at Cochin airport
The tourists were then taken to a government hospital for a check-up by the police.
Though the two were advised to remain in quarantine for 14 days, they were allegedly denied a stay in a hotel or lodge in the area.