
Wedding guests asked to show Aadhar card before entering venue in Uttar Pradesh. Watch video
India Today
At a wedding in Amroha, Uttar Pradesh, wedding guests were asked to show their Aadhar cards before entering the venue. A video of the same has surfaced online.
Nowadays, weddings are not that simple. They are an amalgamation of carefully choreographed dance performances, striking bride-groom entries and much, much more. You must be thinking why we are talking about this all of a sudden. So, in another bizarre move, guests at a wedding in Amroha, Uttar Pardesh were asked to show their Aadhar cards before entering the venue. Yes, you read that right. A video of the same has surfaced online and you should definitely check it out.
The incident happened in Amroha's Hasanpur. After looking at the troop of wedding guests arriving at the venue, the bride's side got a little worried. So, they asked the guests to show their Aadhar cards before entering the venue. The people who were able to show the proof got to enter and the ones who couldn't, recorded the video instead.
The baraat actually came from Dhawarsi village to Hasanpur. After looking at the huge crowd of people, the bride's family asked the guests from the groom's side to show their Aadhar cards before entering. The people who could show could have the food and the ones who couldn't, returned without the feast.
Watch the video here:
According to reports, two baraats arrived on September 21 at the same location. When the food started getting served at one, the other procession's guests also broke in. Amid the chaos, the bride's family got upset and decided to stop serving the food. They put forward the condition of showing Aadhar cards to manage the crowd. However, the real guests of the wedding were also in a fix as they did not have their proof of identity at the time.
The situation created a lot of uproar amongst the guests but some sensible people pacified the people from both sides.
(With inputs from BS Arya)

Oil and gas refineries and hubs are up in flames not just in the Middle East, but also in Russia and the US. Crude oil prices have surged over $100 a barrel. With the energy infrastructure in the Middle East likely to take years to be rebuilt, the world could be set for the biggest oil disruption in history.

Speaking at the White House, Trump said the United States was in contact with "the right people" in Iran and suggested that Tehran was eager to reach an agreement to halt hostilities. "We're in negotiations right now," he told reporters, without offering further details on the scope or format of the talks.











