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Why Is It So Hard For Africans To Visit Other African Countries? by shakespere: 9:33am On Apr 07, 2021
Why is it so hard for Africans to visit other African countries?
By Larry Madowo
BBC Africa Business EditorAfrica's richest man Aliko Dangote has said he needs 38 visas to travel within the continent on his Nigerian passport. Many European nationals, meanwhile, waltz into most Africans countries visa-free.

African nations were supposed to scrap visa requirements for all African citizens by 2018.

It was a key part of the African Union (AU) "vision and roadmap for the next 50 years" that was adopted by all members states in 2013.

But to date, the Seychelles is the only nation where visa-free travel is open to all Africans - as well as to citizens of every nation - as it always has been.

A recent AU report found that Africans can travel without a visa to just 22% of other African countries.

It is a sensitive topic, provoking xenophobic attitudes in some of Africa's wealthier nations despite policymakers from Cape to Cairo insisting that the free movement of people is key for economic transformation.


media captionKatchie Nzama travelled solo to 30 African countries
"Our leaders seem to go to ridiculous lengths to preserve and protect the colonial borders," says South African travel blogger Katchie Nzama, who has visited 35 of Africa's 55 countries.

The AU may want a borderless continent where its 1.2 billion people can move freely between nations, similar to the European Union, but it seems there is no shortage of obstacles.

Whether it is immigration officials in Burkina Faso charging an arbitrary $200 (£155) for a visa on arrival, or Tanzania arresting and deporting other East Africans who enter illegally, or Tunisia refusing visas to stranded African passengers after a cancelled flight, intra-African travel is fraught with suspicion.

Double standards?
South Africa appears to be the most visible representative of the continent's visa double standard, remaining largely closed to other Africans but more welcoming to the wider world.

Citizens of only 15 African nations can travel to South Africa without a visa, yet holders of 28 different European passports can enter the country freely.

A graph showing the percentages of African nationalities which require visas in order to enter South Africa, Nigeria, Mauritius, Ghana, Rwanda, Kenya and the Seychelles.
The country's Department of Home Affairs spokesman Thabo Mokgola defends its policy.

"This is an unfair assertion - visa-waiver agreements are premised on reciprocity and we are finalising such with a number of African countries," he told the BBC.

Just how that reciprocity is applied is unclear.

Kenya, for example, gives South African citizens a visa on arrival for free. But Kenyans must apply for a visa, then pay a service fee and wait for at least five working days before travelling to South Africa.

In 2015, two years after the African Union asked members to commit to abolishing visa requirements for all Africans by 2018, South Africa did the opposite and announced stricter regulations that were widely criticised.

Hit by a recession and a drop in tourist numbers, the country caved in and recently announced that it was relaxing travel rules in the hope of reviving its struggling economy.

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African passport
Namibia, Mauritius, Ghana, Rwanda, Benin and Kenya have all loosened travel restrictions for other African nationals, and now either grant a visa on arrival or allow for visits of up to 90 days with just a passport.

But citizens of African countries still need a visa to travel to more than half of the continent's 54 countries, protecting borders drawn up by European colonisers more than a century ago.

"Somebody like me, despite the size of our group, I need 38 visas to move around Africa," complained Nigerian billionaire Aliko Dangote in an interview in 2016.

He is reportedly one of the first in line to receive the African passport which was launched in 2016. The travel document is supposed to eventually replace individual nations' passports, but is currently only available to some heads of state, senior diplomats and top AU officials.

A composite image of Rwanda's President Paul Kagame and former African Union Chairman Idriss Déby, and a close shot of an AU passport
IMAGE COPYRIGHTAFP/BBC
image captionRwanda's President Paul Kagame and former African Union Chairman Idriss Déby were given the first AU passports in 2016
It is easy enough to travel within regional blocs such as the East African Community, the Economic Community of West African States, the Southern African Development Community, the Maghreb, as well as the Central African Economic and Monetary Community. But it is rarely possible to travel from one region to another without restrictions.

Extortionate prices
Another impediment to African travel is that there are very few commercial flights from one region to another and when they do exist, they are prohibitively expensive.

"Flying from Kenya to Namibia is the same price as flying to Thailand, and the cost to Dubai from Nairobi is way cheaper than flying to Morocco," says Kenyan travel blogger Winnie Rioba.

And this is on top of the visa fees.

Ms Rioba was charged $90 for a visa for Djibouti, more than the $75 she paid for a Schengen visa, which gave her access to 26 European states.

"I've spent more money applying for visas than transport costs in my travels across the continent," agrees Ms Nzama.

"This is not just money paid to embassies. It's the time and money wasted going back and forth to embassies, and preparing the required documents, which in most cases I felt were not necessary," the South African travel blogger says.

To help her fellow Nigerians find their way through the maze of requirements, entrepreneur Funmi Oyatogun created a colour-coded map outlining which African countries were easiest to travel to:


The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
View original tweet on Twitter
"Our focus is to simplify travel for Africans across Africa," she says of her start-up TVP Adventures.

She believes these efforts are a necessary part of what she calls the "African travel spring".

"We are breaking through the barriers that made it difficult in the past - lack of information, poor flight connections, and incorrect perceptions of other African countries."

There is widespread support for scrapping the visa requirements for Africans travelling within the continent.

But as the 2018 deadline slips by, few believe it is likely to happen soon.

And while we wait, it might remain more attractive to leave the continent.

"How will I convince an African traveller to go with me to Angola if the trip will cost as much as travel to five countries in Europe?" asks Ms Rioba.

Even a dollar billionaire like Mr Dangote has problems visiting his many investments across his home continent.

"They give you visas as if it is a favour," he says.

Re: Why Is It So Hard For Africans To Visit Other African Countries? by donbachi(m): 9:41am On Apr 07, 2021
Says who?
Re: Why Is It So Hard For Africans To Visit Other African Countries? by Nobody: 10:05am On Apr 07, 2021
It's not difficult. Africans are just too poor to travel around. When they make little dough, they prefer vacationing abroad

3 Likes

Re: Why Is It So Hard For Africans To Visit Other African Countries? by neonly: 10:45am On Apr 07, 2021
Keshinr0:
It's not difficult. Africans are just too poor to travel around. When they make little dough, they prefer vacationing abroad


I disagree on dat
Africans problems are africans
Simple they don't like each other

1 Like

Re: Why Is It So Hard For Africans To Visit Other African Countries? by Nobody: 10:56am On Apr 07, 2021
neonly:



I disagree on dat
Africans problems are africans
Simple they don't like each other

lol, that's your opinion
I believe the same way an American will chose to ignore Canada and visit Europe, is the same reason a Nigerian will ignore Ghana or Ivory coast and sight see Dubai.
it has noting to do with hate.
You appreciate what you can't get easily.

7 Likes

Re: Why Is It So Hard For Africans To Visit Other African Countries? by DaddyYankee: 1:20pm On Apr 07, 2021
Poverty and underdevelopment, most African countries are poor and underdeveloped.

2 Likes

Re: Why Is It So Hard For Africans To Visit Other African Countries? by Stephenmoka4(m): 2:00pm On Apr 07, 2021
Probably cuz some Africans thinks other African countries will look similar to theirs

3 Likes

Re: Why Is It So Hard For Africans To Visit Other African Countries? by meobizy(f): 2:54pm On Apr 07, 2021
I don’t remember needing visas to enter other West African territories. Why should I visit other African nations when all I watch on TV are the winters of the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom? A place like Ghana offers me the same skin-darkening heat and homogenous faces I’m inundated with here.
Re: Why Is It So Hard For Africans To Visit Other African Countries? by walkwithgod(m): 3:02pm On Apr 07, 2021
You also forgot to add that it's fucking expensive.

Africans are poor and most do not really have the resources to visit other african countries.


As a Nigerian, how many states have you visited ?

your answer lies therein.

Thanks for coming to my TED talk, one love.

1 Like

Re: Why Is It So Hard For Africans To Visit Other African Countries? by TMKsouth: 3:06pm On Apr 07, 2021
meobizy:
I don’t remember needing visas to enter other West African territories. Why should I visit other African nations when all I watch on TV are the winters of the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom? A place like Ghana offers me the same skin-darkening heat and homogenous faces I’m inundated with here.

There's fine snow-filled winters in North and Southern Africa.

As for skin, Whites don't mind looking at each other all over Europe, so it's a matter of self-love really.

2 Likes

Re: Why Is It So Hard For Africans To Visit Other African Countries? by Coquinoqui: 3:40pm On Apr 07, 2021
Atleast I Don visit 4 African countries other than Nigeria and based in Dakar. My brother make una try to dey travel

1 Like

Re: Why Is It So Hard For Africans To Visit Other African Countries? by MkenyaMatata(m): 4:42pm On Apr 07, 2021
Am glad that the Kenyan passport is among the strongest passports in Africa. Sixth's stongest in fact. Strength of passports is ranked by the number of countries a person of a particular nationality can enter into; a) Visa-free and b)With issuance of visa on arrival. But it also saddens me that most of the countries with prohibiting restrictions for a Kenyan are right here in the motherland.

Also the attitude and treatment by authorities and citizens too, of Africans from other nationalities from right here in Africa, is very wanting. Although Kenyans most of the times have relatively stress-free experiences, in most countries around the world and in Africa too. I personally have witnessed alot of my fellow Africans having a hard time. Most of the times it has been West African and I have never really understood why they are always singled out.

1 Like

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