Travel Guides & Articles
From Swiss-Style Meadows to Mediterranean Seas: Top 7 Destinations In India That Feel Like Exotic International Locations

Top 7 Destinations that Feels Like Crossed Borders | Image:
Freepik
Many people desire to travel abroad for various reasons, including cultural immersion, adventure, and personal growth. However, India has several places that offer a unique landscape, architectural styles and cultural vibes that exactly evoke the feeling that you are just in a foreign country.
From Swiss-style meadows to Mediterranean beaches and mini-Tibets to Parisian boulevards. Here are the top 7 destinations that’ll make you feel like you’ve crossed the borders.
Khajjiar, Himachal Pradesh: Switzerland
Khajjiar is often called the “Mini Switzerland of India” for its striking resemblances to the Swiss Alps, with its rolling green meadows, pine forests, and serene lake.
Auli, Uttarakhand: Austria
Auli in Uttarakhand is often compared to Austria for its stunning snowy landscape, which makes it feel like a foreign trip. Its ski slopes, coniferous forests, and views of the Himalayas create a picture-perfect setting reminiscent of European ski resorts.
Coorg, Karnataka: Scotland
Coorg is known as Kodagu, which is often compared with Scotland due to its geography, terrain, climate and atmosphere. Both regions feature misty hills, lush greenery and cool climate.
Rann of Kutch, Gujarat: South America
Rann of Kutch is located in Gujarat. The endless desert under the moonlight looks eerily like Bolivia’s salt flats. You can visit this place during the Rann Utsav, where you will get a crossover setting like South America.
Puducherry: France
Puducherry is often called “Little France” due to its strong French colonial heritage, which is still visible in its architecture, street names, and cultural influences. The city retains a distinct French ambience, particularly in the French Quarter, also known as “White Town”.
Andaman & Nicobar Islands: Maldives
Andaman and Nicobar Islands are often compared to being “like abroad” due to their stunning natural beauty, such as turquoise water, coral reefs, and white sand beaches. With scuba diving in the Andamans rivalling the feels of the Maldives.
READ MORE: These 7 Destinations From Delhi Are Just 6 Hours Away, Perfect For A Quick, Dreamy Escape
Chitrakoot Falls: Niagara Falls
Chitrakoot is often hailed as the Niagara Falls of India, which offers a majestic spectacle. While slightly smaller than its international counterpart, the falls, when visited during the monsoons, reveal their full glory, creating an awe-inspiring experience.
Travel Guides & Articles
Breaking News Live Updates: IndiGo airline issues travel advisory for Leh, asks passengers to rebook or claim refunds

Orange weather warning for NCR
The India Meteorological Department (IMD) upgraded its weather warning to orange across Delhi and the National Capital Region, urging residents to prepare for heavy showers. Officials said the rainfall was being driven by the monsoon in combination with an unusually active western disturbance, which has also brought downpours to Himalayan states.
Temperatures dropped to 24–25 degrees Celsius, but the fall in mercury did little to ease the problems caused by clogged roads and flooding. Commuters were seen navigating waist-deep water in parts of the city, while pedestrians struggled to move through submerged streets.
Gurugram faces intense rainfall
Gurugram was hit hardest. Between 3 pm and 7 pm, the city received over 100 mm of rain. Stretches near Hero Honda Chowk, Patel Nagar and Signature Bridge were completely inundated. The service lane of the Dwarka Expressway had to be shut as water levels rose sharply, and the expressway’s drainage system collapsed under pressure.
By 6 pm, more than 90 mm of rainfall had been recorded, leaving vehicles stranded and traffic backed up at the Delhi-Gurugram border along National Highway-8. The downpour, which lasted for hours, paralysed key roads connecting Dwarka to Kherki Daula and several sectors of Gurugram.
Work from home and online classes advised
The District Disaster Management Authority (DDMA) asked private offices and institutions to shift to remote work on Tuesday. It also directed schools to move to online classes. In its advisory, the Gurgaon deputy commissioner said the order aimed to reduce traffic jams, ensure public safety, and minimise disruption after the city received over 100 mm of rain in just five hours.
The circular, sent late on Monday to the District Information and Public Relations Office, also tasked education officers with ensuring full compliance by both government and private schools.
Officials urged residents to stay indoors as much as possible and avoid unnecessary travel. They advised those who needed to step out to follow weather updates closely. Emergency services were placed on standby while authorities continued to assess the situation.
Rain impact across Delhi
Several parts of Delhi, including Akbar Road near India Gate, were pounded by rain. While waterlogging was less severe than in Gurugram, traffic slowed to a crawl during the evening rush as people left their offices.
Authorities confirmed that traffic restrictions on Loha Pul were necessary to prevent risks from the swelling Yamuna.
Travel Guides & Articles
Which Indian Cities Are The Most Dangerous for Road Travel? Check Top 5 in 2023 Report | India News

India’s Most Dangerous Cities for Road Travel: Top 2 Cities Saw a Combined 1,731 Deaths in Just One Year (representational)
India’s roads continue to claim hundreds of lives every year, with certain cities standing out for the sheer scale of fatalities. Delhi, Bengaluru, Jaipur, and Ahmedabad have emerged as the deadliest for motorists, with speeding and reckless driving cited as the leading causes.
In 2023, Ahmedabad recorded 535 deaths due to road accidents, placing it among India’s most dangerous cities for motorists, according to a TOI report. Alarmingly, 462 of these fatalities—nearly 86%—occurred on straight roads, highlighting a disturbing trend. Officials say this is due to the city’s long, open stretches and relatively fewer blind curves, which encourage drivers to overspeed. SG Highway, dotted with bridges, has been identified as a significant contributor to the high toll.
“Speeding over the limit and reckless driving are cited as the main culprits,” officials noted.
Accidents on bridges formed the next major category, with 77 crashes claiming 41 lives—around 7% of the city’s total road deaths. The tragic Iskcon flyover accident, which killed nine people and injured 13, was the most high-profile case. Other unusual fatalities included one person falling into a pothole and two deaths on an under-construction road.
Controlled vs Uncontrolled Roads
The report also sheds light on where fatalities occur: 21 deaths were recorded on roads with traffic lights, 32 on stretches managed by police, and a staggering 205 on uncontrolled roads. This ranking puts Ahmedabad fifth nationwide in deaths on uncontrolled roads, behind Mumbai (336), Indore (258), Delhi (241), and Bengaluru (241).
Delhi tops the list with 938 fatalities, followed by Bengaluru with 793, and Jaipur with 718 deaths. Ahmedabad, with 535 road deaths, underscores the need for stricter enforcement and public awareness campaigns to curb reckless driving.
Travel Guides & Articles
When Digital Systems Don’t Travel

By Poorvi Yerrapureddy and Aditi Shah
The Karnataka Platform-Based Gig Work (Social Security and Welfare) Bill, 2025 has prompted fresh debates around the architecture of social protection in India. The legislation is historic in its recognition of platform labour, but the scope of the Bill remains narrow as India’s wider unorganised sector remains outside its ambit.
It is a step in the right direction, but its selective coverage exposes a larger systemic gap – India continues to lack a comprehensive framework that recognises mobility and precarity across the unorganised sector as a whole.
For decades, India’s social security provisions have excluded various groups of citizens. Today, however, the Government appears to commit to a more inclusive disbursement of such benefits. The e-Shram portal was launched in an effort to build a national database of unorganised workers, linking them to welfare entitlements via a unique ID. But in its current form, it functions more as a registry than an integrated delivery platform, with little capacity to link registrations to state-specific benefits. Unorganised workers in various parts of the country are being encouraged to register themselves on the online portal, which is touted as a one-stop shop for workers’ welfare entitlements.
Historically, the portability of social security benefits has not been a policy priority. These benefits are afforded to citizens in ways that assume that they are stationary. As a result, migrants who constitute 30% of India’s population – moving within, into, or out of states – are left out or find themselves lost in a bureaucratic maze.
Systems for welfare provision, housed across Central and State Governments, must account for the movement citizens engage in for a host of reasons, including for work or marriage. Advancing social security portability ensures that such movement is more easily facilitated, without citizens having to go to great lengths to procure benefits or giving up entirely. While the question of portability is picking up steam, targeted and intentional interventions must be realised for it to become a meaningful reality of our welfare systems.
Centre-State Coordination Is A Priority
In theory, portability is purported as the unparalleled promise of digital welfare reform – seamless, borderless, citizen-centric. Yet for India’s internal migrants, this promise often disintegrates at the very first point of contact. Structural challenges embedded within both the design and implementation of digital welfare systems render portability not just difficult, but implausible. When mobility is treated as an exception rather than a norm, entire populations fall through the cracks.
At the heart of the issue is the fragmented coordination between Central and State Governments. India’s welfare architecture resembles a federation of fiefdoms, each state retaining autonomy over eligibility norms, entitlements, and implementation protocols. Welfare schemes like One Nation One Ration Card (ONORC) and e-Shram rely on the assumption that a centrally maintained database will be adopted and operationalised uniformly across India. Migrants thus move through a patchwork of systems that interpret central schemes through local bureaucratic lenses.
Take e-Shram for instance: while the portal facilitates centralised registration of unorganised workers, it does not guarantee access to any specific benefit. Whether this data translates into actual entitlements depends on state agencies – many of which lack clear protocols or incentives to operationalise the registry.
In the context of the PDS, as well, migrants have historically had trouble receiving food security benefits, owing to linkages with Fair Price Shops that are closest to one’s home address. In the absence of shared benchmarks or portability safeguards, registration becomes symbolic rather than functional. What results is not true portability, but a form of welfare roulette – where access is governed by how a state chooses to act on the Centre’s promise rather than on citizen need.
Both within and across state boundaries, there need to be provisions for rendering welfare governance systems interoperable. Instead of submitting to extremes of total centralisation or irreconcilable fragmentation, states must securely share data with one another to the extent necessary.
A key bottleneck is the absence of common data standards or protocols that allow databases to communicate. But this is not merely a technical failure, as states often resist integration to retain autonomy over eligibility and entitlement delivery. Only when that changes are migrant populations likely to move without fear of losing access to the welfare services provided by government systems.
For interoperable systems to become a reality, it is important to look at how citizen data will be governed, and where the decision-making power will reside. Strict boundaries around the State and Central Governments’ duties and contributions must be recorded. Although State realisations of Central schemes speak better to localised citizen realities, they leave little room for transferability when citizens migrate.
Establishing a shared accountability framework that defines a common minimum core of entitlements across the country, while allowing states the flexibility to layer additional, context-specific benefits will be more pragmatic. Such a model ensures that migrant workers retain access to foundational welfare guarantees regardless of mobility, while respecting the political and economic autonomy of states. For portability to function meaningfully, clarity around what is Centrally guaranteed and how it is locally administered must be embedded in both data governance and policy design.
Redefining The Intermediary
Intermediaries have historically served as bridges between citizens and the state. ASHAs and Anganwadi workers have long translated opaque public healthcare and food schemes into navigable realities.
However, for India’s migrants this bridge is ephemeral: moulded and marauded through repeated movement. Intermediaries are rooted in place and bound by familiar community ties, whereas migrants are not. As people move, they detach from these relational anchors. What emerges is a double-bind: the state’s digital infrastructure lacks continuity, and the human layer that might compensate for it lacks mobility.
To continue aiding its adoption and trustworthiness for large groups of the Indian population, including internal migrants, human touchpoints remain crucial. While the management of moving intermediaries is a bureaucratic nightmare that is likely to yield sparse benefits for all stakeholders, there is merit in considering the employment of individuals across cities, towns, and villages that cater specifically to the needs of migrants.
Specialised training can be provided to these intermediaries who can then be stationed at Jan Seva Kendras (Public Service Centres) across the country. The power of having a person help another out is not to be underestimated, especially in a country like India, where even the migrant, in many ways isolated in their experience, is never too distanced from friendly faces.
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Technical Barriers Breed Distrust
Issues of access and agency on the citizens’ end are further compounded by the difficulty of using government websites and other digital interfaces through which welfare-related information is provided or entitlements disbursed.
Technical barriers reveal flaws in how accessibility has been conceptualised; this includes biometric failures, inconsistencies in Aadhar linkages, and mobile-unfriendly interfaces which create additional layers of exclusion for citizens who may not possess adequate digital literacy.
Over time, repeated points of friction erode the faith that citizens have in the digital systems, creating trust fractures. A system built for efficiency ends up offloading its complexity to those least equipped to navigate it. When a migrant is denied rations because a fingerprint authentication is lagging, the issue is not technological, but existential.
Beyond being a design failure, this is a deeper mismatch between how state systems imagine the citizen and how a citizen actually moves through the state. Migrants challenge the very logic of place-based service delivery, yet our digital welfare infrastructure remains territorially tethered.
Government welfare platforms must be overhauled at various levels – from functioning in low-network areas to building comfort and safety through their visual design. For example, allowing multiple users to log in from the same device, or using reassuring language to communicate network-related delays can help build citizens’ trust in these platforms.
However, to build trust, we need more than technical fixes, we need a reimagination of digital systems as mobile and responsive to the temporality of migration. Until then, the idea of portability will remain a policy ideal more than a lived reality; an infrastructure that excludes precisely because it does not move with the people it was built for.
Welfare Systems Must Align With Migrant Realities
For too long, digital welfare has been built around administrative ease rather than citizen experience. The result is a disconnect between governance and the urgent, unpredictable realities of internal migration. A digital welfare system that moves with migrants cannot simply replicate static structures in digital form – it must be fundamentally reoriented to reflect the fluidity of migrant life.
Closing this gap means designing systems that are not just technically integrated, but also procedurally adaptable. They must address coordination failures, missing documentation and evolving identities over time. Digital welfare requires a shift in perspective: from building systems for people, to building systems with people on the move. Systems must evolve from asking “Do you qualify?” to “How do we keep you in?”.
One promising direction lies in reimagining verification not as a one-time gatekeeping mechanism, but as a continuum of trust-building. Building digital feedback loops, enabling grievance redressal in mobile contexts, and allowing migrants to track or contest decisions in real time can begin to close the accountability gap.
Some non-state actors, such as Haqdarshak, have attempted to bridge this gap by creating unified application layers for welfare access. Their success points to what government platforms can also achieve when designed with interoperability and mobility at the core.
Ultimately, aligning technology with migrant realities is not only about patching broken pipes in welfare delivery. It demands re-engineering the state’s digital infrastructure to remember movement not as an aberration, but as a central fact of life. Only then can digital welfare fulfil its inclusive mandate, not in principle, but in practice.
Also Read:
Aditi Shah works as the Manager at Aapti Institute: a research institution that aims to highlight Global South perspectives and challenges, while calibrating research to evolve stakeholders’ priorities.
Poorvi Yerrapureddy is a Senior Analyst at Aapti Institute.
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