Mar 19, 2010
Lindsay Lohan Faces Banishment From India
They don't want her either

In January we got our first look at a new documentary that seeks to highlight the horrors of child trafficking — which features Lindsay Lohan in India as the celebrity spokesperson — after she traveled abroad late last year to film her portions of the doc. You may recall that Lindsay falsely claimed that she personally helped save the lives of 40 children “in one day”, which sparked ire among the organizations that are truly trying to save children from trafficking because they felt she was trivializing the situation by making bold-faced lies about her involvement. Now the Indian government is taking note of Lindsay‘s illegal actions in their country … and they are considering banning her from ever entering their country again:

Hollywood actress and model Lindsay Lohan could be blacklisted by the Indian government following her trip to the country last December when she falsely claimed she had rescued 40 child workers. Her comments, which highlighted the plight of child labourers, ruffled feathers in India and alerted officials who discovered she had broken the country’s visa rules by travelling as a tourist while working on a BBC documentary. The Mean Girls star had arrived in India to film an expose of child labour and trafficking of women which was later broadcast on BBC3, but she provoked a row when she claimed to have personally rescued 40 children. In a series of updates on the social networking site Twitter, she boasted of her role in a daring raid on a child labour sweatshop and claimed the experience had changed her life. “Over 40 children saved so far … Within one day’s work … This is what life is about … Doing THIS is a life worth living!!!” she said. She later contrasted the superficiality of celebrity life with the satisfaction of social activism. “Focusing on celebrities and lies is so disconcerting, when we can be changing the world one child at a time … hope everyone can see that,” she said. But according to activists leading the raids, Ms Lohan did not arrive in India until after the raids had been completed and the children had been rescued. Some of them had been ‘sold’ by their parents for £25 and were working 17 hours per day for as little as £3 a month. Activists involved in the raids criticised her comments and accused her of trivialising the issue of child trafficking. Now she may not be able to visit India again after officials looked at her case and found she had failed to apply for a work visa for her trip. Senior civil servants in New Delhi are now studying the case and will rule on whether her name will be added to an immigration blacklist.

While I feel that Lindsay‘s heart is in the right place, I think it would be for the best if she stays away from involving herself in this kind of very important work. I can appreciate that she wants to help but her very nature seems to only serve to endanger and ruin the good work being done here. There is no way she is educated enough on the facts to really speak with any sort of authority and by involving herself illegally, she is seriously undermining the good work being done by the real heroes. To be honest … it’s prolly for the best if she is never allowed near India again. She really should stick with what does best … tho, I’m not really sure that is, honestly. In any event, Lindsay Lohan should deffo leave the life-saving to other, more qualified, folks.

[Source]

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4 Comments. Add Yours

  1. theycallmev says:

    I absolutely agree with you Trent. How can she expect to save others when she can’t even save herself from drugs and alcohol. Oo yeah and her “hoarding”.

  2. Diane says:

    Can’t the US banish her, too? Please?

  3. VV says:

    40? Why not say that she saved a billion children? Just as believable. Note to LiLo: if you’re going to claim stuff, at least try and make it plausible. Try one or two. And give them names.

  4. Kristy says:

    It’s a really important issue. I feel like her involvement, while it was probably done with good intentions, really trivializes it.

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