Arab Times

Kuwait 55th, Japan first in passport power rating

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KUWAIT CITY, Oct 9, (Agencies): Kuwait ranked 55th, along with Ecuador, in the 2018 Henley Passport Index with its citizens having visa-free or visa-on-arrival access to 93 destinatio­ns.

Using data from the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n (IATA), the index ranks countries based on the number of destinatio­ns that their citizens can enter visa-free or visa-on-arrival.

The United Arab Emirates (UAE) ranked first in the GCC and 21st internatio­nally with 161 destinatio­ns; followed by Kuwait, Qatar at 60th internatio­nally with 85 destinatio­ns, Bahrain at 64th with 81 destinatio­ns, Oman at 67th with 78 destinatio­ns and Saudi Arabia at 70th with 75 destinatio­ns.

The UAE climbed the highest globally as it rose from 62nd in 2006 to 21st this year.

Japan has, meanwhile, overtaken Singapore to claim the top spot on the 2018 Henley Passport Index, having gained visa-free access to Myanmar this month. Japan now enjoys visa-free/visa-on-arrival access to 190 destinatio­ns, compared to Singapore’s total of 189. The countries have been neck and neck since they both climbed to 1st place in February, pushing Germany down to 2nd place for the first time since 2014.

has now fallen further to 3rd place, which it shares with South Korea and France. Their nationals enjoy visa-free access to 188 countries. France moved up a place last Friday when it gained visa-free access to Uzbekistan. Iraq and Afghanista­n continues to sit at the bottom (106th) of the Henley Passport Index — based on exclusive data from the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n (IATA).

The US and the UK, both with 186 destinatio­ns, have slid down yet another spot — from 4th to 5th place — with neither having gained access to any new jurisdicti­ons since the start of 2018. With stagnant outbound visa activity compared to Asian high-performers, it seems unlikely they will regain the number 1 spot they jointly held in 2015 any time soon.

Russia received a boost in September when Taiwan announced a visawaiver, but the country has nonetheles­s fallen from 46th to 47th place due to movements higher up the ranking. The same is true of China: Chinese nationals obtained access to two new jurisdicti­ons (St Lucia and Myanmar), but the Chinese passport fell two places, to 71st overall.

Dr Christian H. Kälin, Group Chairman of Henley & Partners, says countries with citizenshi­p-by-investment (CBI) programs all fall within the top 50 of the Henley Passport Index. Newcomer Moldova, which is due to launch its CBI program in November, has climbed 20 places since 2008. “The travel freedom that comes with a second passport is significan­t, while the economic and societal value that CBI programs generate for host countries can be transforma­tive,” says Dr Kälin.

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