<p>Paan spitting stains on the streets of India are a common sight, but the menace has reached UK as well.</p><p>A video has been doing the rounds on social media that showed red stains from paan spitting on the roads, dustbins and pavements of London. </p><p>With paan spitting being a common thing in India, Indians in UK are being blamed for the issue. Authorities have also installed bi-lingual signboards, in English and Gujarati, across London, warning people against paan spitting.</p>. <p>"When a UK city has to put up signs in Gujarati saying ‘Don’t spit paan on the streets’, you know some of our Gujarati folks (especially men) have turned it into a daily embarrassment," a person commented on social media.</p><p>"We don't need other people to destroy the image of India. Our people is already doing their best work across whole world," said another.</p><p>"One of the reasons Indian passport is losing its dignity," one more comment read.</p> .<p>However, the issue of paan-spitting is not new in UK. Reportedly, authorities there had put up signboards earlier in 2019 as well, that read, "Spitting paan on the street is unhygienic and anti-social. You could be fined."</p>
<p>Paan spitting stains on the streets of India are a common sight, but the menace has reached UK as well.</p><p>A video has been doing the rounds on social media that showed red stains from paan spitting on the roads, dustbins and pavements of London. </p><p>With paan spitting being a common thing in India, Indians in UK are being blamed for the issue. Authorities have also installed bi-lingual signboards, in English and Gujarati, across London, warning people against paan spitting.</p>. <p>"When a UK city has to put up signs in Gujarati saying ‘Don’t spit paan on the streets’, you know some of our Gujarati folks (especially men) have turned it into a daily embarrassment," a person commented on social media.</p><p>"We don't need other people to destroy the image of India. Our people is already doing their best work across whole world," said another.</p><p>"One of the reasons Indian passport is losing its dignity," one more comment read.</p> .<p>However, the issue of paan-spitting is not new in UK. Reportedly, authorities there had put up signboards earlier in 2019 as well, that read, "Spitting paan on the street is unhygienic and anti-social. You could be fined."</p>