Famous Punjabi singer and Bollywood actor Diljit Dosanjh is in the news for his big concerts to be held in 10 places in India. Which has been named Dil-Luminati Tour. The biggest show among all the concerts is going to be held at Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium in Delhi. But now a controversy has arisen regarding the rate of concert tickets.
Fans sent legal notice
Let us tell you that Diljit's show was full in a few hours. In such a situation, one of his fans has sent him a legal notice regarding the sudden jump in the ticket rate. Apart from Diljit, this notice has also been sent to Zomato, HDFC Bank and Saregama Private Limited.
Notice for price manipulation and not being able to buy
Diljit's first concert is on 26 October in Delhi. A female fan Riddhima Kapoor has sent a legal notice to the singer due to the show tickets being sold at higher rates and not being able to buy tickets. In the notice, Kapoor has said that the prices of tickets have been manipulated before the tour, which is an unfair trade practice. He has also accused the company of violating customer rights.
The notice sent by Kapoor states that the time for ticket booking was announced on September 12 at 1 pm. But the tickets were made available at 12:59 pm. Due to which hundreds of fans booked tickets within a minute and later people did not get the tickets.
Pass was not received despite money being deducted from the account
She had made her HDFC credit card to get the early-bird pass. However, despite money being deducted from her account, she did not get the pass and later the amount was refunded. In such a situation, she could not get the ticket due to the tickets going live before time.
Kapoor said that by doing this, black marketing of tickets has been promoted because suddenly the tickets going live a minute before time leads to a big jump in prices. In such a situation, there is a big level of manipulation in their prices.
The tickets are sold later for a higher price.
This is a wrong practice under the Customer Protection Act 2019, which leads to hoarding. Later, the hoarders sell the tickets for a higher price.