Indian police investigate ticket resales for Coldplay Mumbai gigs

Indian police investigate ticket resales for Coldplay Mumbai gigs

After tickets quickly sold out, some began to reappear on unauthorised third-party websites for more than £750

Indian police have opened an investigation after touts bought up tickets for Coldplay’s upcoming Mumbai shows and

put them back on sale for more than £750 each.

India is often missed off global tours by popular western artists and news that Coldplay would be coming to India for

the first time in January to perform two nights of their world tour in Mumbai had been greeted with wild excitement by music fans.

Coldplay concert for $11,000? Uproar in India after tickets sold out in  minutes on BookMyShow and resold | CNN

However, as more than 700,000 people logged on to BookMyShow in an attempt to buy tickets, the website quickly

crashed. Large numbers were disappointed as the tickets sold out in minutes, and many were outraged when tickets

began to reappear on unauthorised third-party websites, selling for up to 85,000 rupees [£760, US$1,015].

Local media reports said police questioned the chief operating officer of BookMyShow on Monday after receiving a

complaint from a Mumbai lawyer, Amit Vyas, who alleged that the vendor was working with “black marketeers” to

make an extra windfall on ticket sales.

Mumbai Police summons BookMyShow CEO over re-sale of Coldplay concert ticket  in black - BusinessToday

“I checked with nearly 100 people who I know are regulars at concerts, none of them had gotten a ticket,” Vyas said,

according to the Indian Express newspaper. “This made me suspicious. I then decided to approach the police as I

knew that something was amiss.”

BookMyShow issued a statement after the public backlash began last week saying it had “no association” with

unauthorised ticket selling. “Scalping and black marketing of tickets is strictly condemned and punishable by law in

India and BookMyShow vehemently opposes this practice,” the company said.

While reselling tickets on unauthorised or hidden-market channels in India is illegal, the practice is largely

unchecked.

The issue of ticket scalping and unauthorised reselling for inflated prices has become a major problem for the music

industry globally. Fans in the UK were recently outraged when tickets for the upcoming Oasis reunion sold out in

minutes and then reappeared on secondary sites for thousands of pounds, prompting an inquiry by a regulator.

The ticket website Ticketmaster also faced criticism and political scrutiny over alleged mishandling and unfair

practices relating to the sale of tickets for Taylor Swift’s Eras tour.

AFP contributed to this report

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