African Development Bank launched the first Africa Visa Openness Index in May 2016 |
The African Union (AU)
has announced they will be launching an electronic passport, or e-passport, at
the next AU Summit tabled to take place in Kigali, Rwanda, in July 2016.
News
Agency of Nigeria report continues:
This
flagship project, first agreed upon in 2014, “falls squarely within the
framework of Africa’s Agenda 2063 and has the specific aim of facilitating free
movement of persons, goods and services around the continent,” the AU said in
an official statement in June this year.
This
in order to foster intra-Africa trade, integration and socio-economic
development, the union says.
The
Chairperson of the AU Commission, South Africa’s Dr Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma, has
described this initiative as both symbolic and significant, calling it a
“steady step toward the objective of creating a strong, prosperous and
integrated Africa, driven by its own citizens and capable of taking its
rightful place on the world stage.”
The
move also fits well into the African Development Bank’s (ADB) plans to abolish
visa requirements for all Africans by 2018 – a move which would aid business
and overall travel on the African continent.
The
ADB launched the first Africa Visa Openness Index in May this year, which
showed that the African continent remains largely closed off for African
travellers – a fatal but easily avoided roadblock for business travel on the
continent.
Moono
Mupotola for Regional Integration and Trade at the African Development Bank
said at the time that in order for Africans to capitalize on this growth and
potential, “Africa’s leaders and policymakers have to move freely in support of
Agenda 2063’s call to abolish visa requirements for all Africans by 2018,”
Forum
of Immigration Practitioners of South Africa (FIPSA) chairperson Gershon
Mosiane, however, says the project is a ‘pie in the sky’, and would be a
challenge to implement across the continent.
Speaking
to CapeTalk on Monday, 4 July, Mosiane said the AU’s e-passport ambitions might
be admirable, but that “security threats like terrorism” have made implementing
the passport more complicated.
“Would
we in South Africa allow someone with a terrorist history be allowed to come
into the country” using the all-access e-passport, Mosiane asked.
You
can listen to the full interview with Gershon Mosiane about the AU e-passports’
roll-out here:
Nonetheless,
the AU Commission will launch the e-passport at the AU Summit in Rwanda soon.
The
first group of beneficiaries will include AU Heads of State and Government,
Ministers of Foreign Affairs and the Permanent Representatives of AU Member
States based at the AU Headquarters in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
The
AU e-Passports will be issued to them in July 2016, at the 27th AU Summit in
Kigali. In order for all the recipients to acquire the passports, they are
“strongly encouraged to comply with the needed paperwork required to accelerate
the processing lead time,” the AU warned.
“Issuance
of the AU e-passport, is expected to pave the way for the Member States to
adopt and ratify the necessary Protocols and Legislation with the view to begin
issuing the much expected African passport,” the official statement reads.
The
concept of unrestricted movement of persons, goods and services across regions
and the continent is not a new one. And countries such as Seychelles,
Mauritius, Rwanda, and Ghana have taken the lead in ensuring easier
intra-Africa travel by relaxing visa restrictions and in some cases lifting
visa requirements altogether.
South
Africa currently sits in the 35th position on the Africa Visa Openness Index,
and has been slow to adopt easy visa systems for all travellers.
SA’s
implementation of new visa regulations for minors also saw negative effects on
visitor numbers to the country.
But
early in 2016, significant changes was made visa policies – especially for
African travellers.
SA’s
Minister of Home Affairs Malusi Gigaba in January this year approved the
granting of 10-year multiple entry visas to frequent business and academic
travellers from Africa.
More
recently, discussions held between Kenya’s Joseph Nkaissery and Gigaba also
promised for travel regulations to be eased between the two countries’ borders.
One
of the main adjustments to the visa regulations between SA and Kenya will see
an issuing of a three-year multiple entry visa for frequent travellers. These
visa service fees have also been decreased by more than R300.
Because
of this and other progress made to ease travel in Africa, “the scene seems to
be set to realize the dream of visa-free travel for African citizens within
their own continent by 2020,” the AU says.
“Aspirations 2 and 7 of Agenda 2063, respectively, envision an Africa that is ‘integrated’ and ‘united’, and the introduction of the Common African Passport as an effort towards realizing integration and unity on the continent.”
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