They also reflect a divided house in line with the wider knife-edge divide in the referendum campaign so far, though a majority are expected to vote against Brexit.
A recent British Election study, ahead of the referendum to decide the UK's future relationship with the European Union (EU), had found that 51.7 per cent of Indian-origin voters are against Brexit, compared to 27.74 per cent in favour of leaving the economic bloc.
The figures are similar across the board among South Asians, with Pakistani-origin voters backing remain 56 to 26 per cent and Bangladeshis 42 to 17.
High-profile Indian-origin politicians in theUK echoed this divide, with UKemployment minister Priti Patel and Infosys chief Narayan Murthy's son-in-law Rishi Sunak batting for Brexit, while other senior MPs like Keith Vaz and Virendra Sharma firmly for Remain.
On the other end of the political spectrum, Alok Sharma, Conservative party MP and British Prime Minister David Cameron's Infrastructure Envoy to India, set up a cross-party "British Indians for IN" group to ensure the undecided votes went in favour of Remain.
"A vote to remain guarantees us continued unfettered access to Europe's free trade single market of 500 million consumers, meaning lower prices, more jobs,increased investment and financial security.
On the Brexit end, Priti Patel -- Cameron's Indian Diaspora Champion -- shifted focus to a curry clash as her key weapon against what she described as "unfair immigration rules" that favour EU migrants over non-EU ones from countries like India.
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Broadening this to appeal to the wider Indian-origin community based in the UK, Priti said: "Temples and gurdwaras have difficulties bringing priests in. Our communities struggle to get visas for kabbadi players to come and share their phenomenal sporting talents in this country".
The curry clash went on to become a central feature of the campaign, with Vaz strongly countering Patel's argument: "I was furious to seePritiPatelclaiming that leaving the EU and shutting the door on immigrants from Poland and elsewhere would save Britain'scurryhouses. This is divide and rule politics of the worst kind".
However, in the last few days of the campaign, it was the Remain camp that seemed to have the momentum behind it.
The average of those registering to vote in Britain stood at 78 per cent in the 2015 General Election, against a national UK average of 90 per cent.
With repeated appeals for potential voters to register by the deadline in early June, this figure is expected to register a significant rise with this referendum.
"Any Commonwealth citizen here in the UK can vote and every vote counts equally. It is purely a numbers game," said Hugo Swire, UK Foreign Office minister in charge of India.
He said: "This is all based on imagination, rather than reality. Our membership of the EU does not prevent us from allowing people in from Commonwealth countries. It is not a binary decision, either EU or Commonwealth."
And, in an attempt to cash in on Prime Minister Narendra Modi's popularity among the Gujarati-origin diaspora, he added: "Prime Minister Modi himself said during his visit to the UK last year that India sees the UK as an entry point to the EU. So where would Indian companies look to if the UK were to leave, these are the unknowns to consider."
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