A video circulating widely on social media captures a Nepali resident confronting two Indian tourists in the Annapurna Conservation Area, reprimanding them for littering and making them clean up the mess they had created. The local resident told the tourists calmly but directly: “This is not India, this is Nepal. Please do not make it dirty,” before making them clean the area themselves as onlookers watched. The clip has drawn widespread attention online, with many praising the Nepali resident for holding tourists accountable in one of South Asia’s most ecologically sensitive destinations.
Indian tourists were publicly confronted by local residents in Nepal’s Annapurna Conservation Area after allegedly littering one of the country's most pristine trekking destinations.
— White News Main (@whitenewsmain) June 2, 2026
According to viral visuals circulating online, the tourists were reprimanded by locals for… pic.twitter.com/rNcii5Mlzu
The Annapurna Conservation Area, covering 7,629 square kilometres across the Himalayas, is Nepal’s largest protected area and among the world’s most visited trekking destinations. Preserving its fragile ecosystem is a matter of community survival for the local residents who live and work within it. Their patience with visitors who treat it as an open dustbin has limits, and that limit was visible in this video.
The incident is part of a documented and growing pattern. People on social media described the confrontation as bringing the highest level of embarrassment for Indians across the globe, with commenters noting that a country of India’s size and ambition is represented abroad by tourists who need to be taught basic civic conduct by the residents of a neighbouring nation
The problem follows Indian tourists well beyond Nepal. Several spas in Vietnam and Thailand have blacklisted Indian visitors for objectionable behaviour, hotels in Switzerland have reportedly put up notices asking Indian tourists to speak softly and respect other guests, and a 2023 viral video showed Indian tourists blasting Bollywood music on a London Underground train as uncomfortable commuters looked away. In 2025, Bali authorities temporarily banned group entries from certain Indian tour agencies after visitors climbed restricted temple statues for social media content. In 2026, a viral incident on a Singapore Airlines flight involving Indian passengers arguing over luggage space accumulated millions of views internationally.
Inside India, the Sissu gram panchayat in Himachal Pradesh banned tourists entirely for 40 days in early 2026, citing noise, littering and disrespectful behaviour toward local communities during religious festivals. The question that keeps surfacing in every one of these incidents is a simple one: would Indian communities welcome this same behaviour from foreign tourists visiting India?
Nepal answered that question for itself in the Annapurna Conservation Area. The residents who confronted those tourists were not being hostile. They were protecting something irreplaceable, and they were right to do it.
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