Indian worker tells his bosses he can't come to the office because he's the the 10th incarnation of Vishnu

An Indian engineer who repeatedly skipped work told his employers he was too busy being the 10th incarnation of the god Vishnu.

Rameschandra Fefar made the claim after being served with an official notice asking why he had only attended his office in Gujarat for 16 days over eight months.

“I am Lord Vishnu’s 10th incarnation as Kalki,” he responded in writing. “I am doing penance at home by entering into the fifth dimension to change the global conscience.

“This work I cannot do in the office. Thus I don’t remain physically present in the office.”

The engineer repeated his claim that he is an avatar of the Hindu god, usually depicted as having four arms and blue skin, when questioned on Indian TV on Saturday.

“Even if you don’t believe, I am indeed the tenth incarnation of Lord Vishnu and I will prove it in coming days,” he told reporters.

“I realised that I am Kalki avatar when I was in my office in March 2010. Since then, I am having divine powers.

“Just like everybody laughed at me at the time of Mahabharata, you guys are doing the same because you’re unable to see God in me”.

He also claimed he was saving the country from drought, adding: “Just because I am Kalki avatar, India got good rains.”

Fefar was appointed superintending engineer with the Sardar Sarovar dam project on the Narmadar river near Navagam in Gujarat in September 2017.

This month his employers at the Sardar Sarovar Punah-Vasvat Agency sent him an official notice warning him he faced disciplinary action.

“You have remained highly erratic ever since you joined duty on September 22, 2017,” the notice read.

“You have remained absent without any authorisation. This kind of conduct is not befitting a government official.

“Your absence from duty has adversely impacted the working of rehabilitation which is in its final stages as you are not available for providing guidance to the subordinates.”

Mr Fefar was ordered to provide an explanation within seven days.

“We have received the report and our administrative department is processing it,” a spokesman Sardar Sarovar Punah-Vasvat Agency told the Times of India.

“The file will be put up before the commissioner in a day or two and the matter will be taken up with the officer’s parent department — the water resources department.”