Key Points

The Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre has issued a critical warning about widespread online booking scams targeting religious tourists. Fraudsters are creating professional-looking fake websites and social media profiles to trick unsuspecting travelers into making payments for non-existent services. The cyber centre is actively working to disable these fraudulent platforms and protect citizens from financial losses. Travelers are advised to verify website authenticity and only book through official government portals or trusted travel agencies.

Key Points: Centre Warns Pilgrims About Online Booking Cyber Scams

  • Centre exposes sophisticated online booking scams targeting pilgrims
  • Fake websites mimic official travel and religious tour services
  • Cybercrime centre actively tracking and disabling fraudulent platforms
  • 97% reduction in spoofed telecom calls achieved
2 min read

Centre issues alert about online booking scams impersonating pilgrim services

Indian Cyber Crime Centre alerts travelers about fake websites and social media fraud targeting religious tour bookings

"Verify before clicking on 'sponsored' or unknown links - Indian Cybercrime Coordination Centre"

New Delhi, April 19

The Centre on Saturday alerted the public about online booking frauds, especially those targeting pilgrims and tourists across the country.

The Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre (I4C), under the Ministry of Home Affairs, said such frauds are being perpetrated through fake websites, deceptive social media pages, Facebook posts and paid advertisements on search engines like Google.

These scams involve the creation of professional-looking but fake websites and social media profiles and WhatsApp accounts offering services such as: helicopter booking for Kedarnath and Chaar Dhaam; guest house and hotel booking for pilgrims; online cab/taxi service bookings; and holiday packages and religious tours.

"Unsuspecting individuals, upon making payments through these portals, often realise they have been duped when no confirmation or service is received, and the contact numbers go unreachable," said the I4C.

People are advised to exercise extreme caution. Always verify the authenticity of websites before making any payments.

"Verify before clicking on 'sponsored' or unknown links on Google, Facebook, or WhatsApp. Cross-check bookings only through official government portals or trusted travel agencies," said the national cyber centre.

To contain the scams, the Indian Cybercrime Coordination Centre is taking multi-prolonged strategy. Scam Signals are being regularly exchanged with IT intermediaries like Google, WhatsApp and Facebook for proactive detection.

Cybercrime hotspots are being identified and state/UTs are being originated are being sensitised, and fake websites/advertisement and impersonating social media accounts access are being disabled on to protect citizens.

"Suspect checking and Reporting feature on National Cybercrime Reporting Portal is developed to facilitate hassle-free reporting," according to the I4C.

Meanwhile, the prevent the misuse of telecom resources for cyber-crime and financial frauds, the systems deployed by the I4C have reduced almost 97 per cent incoming spoofed calls.

The Department of Telecommunications (DoT) has developed an online, secure Digital Intelligence Platform (DIP) for sharing of information related to misuse of telecom resources among the stakeholders for prevention of misuse of telecom resources for cyber-crime and financial frauds.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rahul K.
This is so important to share! My uncle almost fell for one of these scams last month when booking for Amarnath. The website looked completely legit. Thanks for raising awareness 🙏
P
Priya M.
While the warning is good, I wish the article provided more specific examples of official government portals we should use. A list of verified sites would be more helpful than just general advice.
S
Sanjay T.
Scammers have no shame targeting pilgrims! 😡 Good to see the government taking action with that 97% reduction in spoofed calls. Hope they keep up the pressure on these fraudsters.
A
Anjali P.
Pro tip: Always look for the padlock symbol in the browser address bar before entering payment details. And never book through random WhatsApp messages no matter how tempting the offer seems!
V
Vikram S.
The helicopter booking scams are particularly nasty - people pay huge amounts thinking they're getting convenience for their pilgrimage. Shared this with my family WhatsApp groups immediately.
N
Neha R.
I appreciate that they're working with tech companies to take down these fake accounts. Maybe they could also run some awareness ads on those same platforms? Prevention is better than cure!

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