African Business

Why Africa must oppose Covid passports

African travellers already face a plethora of unfair restrictio­ns when they want to visit Western countries. Moves to introduce Covid passports will only make the situation worse, says

- Gyude Moore

Any document displaying Covid-19 status that clears an individual for travel or prevents them from travelling will be inherently inequitabl­e in its applicatio­n since vaccine and testing access are so unequal. I hope that African, Latin American, Caribbean, and Asian nations without large-scale access to vaccines will resist such moves.

Normal times offer societies a cloak of plausible ignorance of underlying inequities and declining social progress. Crisis rips the veil off and force societies to confront themselves, and the Covid-19 pandemic has been no different. Whether it was access to tests, masks, or now vaccines, inherent inequaliti­es within and between societies have emerged. In the US and the UK, communitie­s of colour bore a disproport­ionate brunt of fatalities. When the vaccines arrived, at least in the US, vaccine access rates did not match infection and fatality rates. The inherent inequaliti­es of the US found eloquent expression in how the country responded to the crisis.

These inequities within countries also played out between countries. The richest countries of the world could pass massive stimulus packages to blunt the economic fallout of the vaccines, and they could make billions of dollars of advance market commitment­s to multiple drug manufactur­ers. Poorer countries, especially those in Africa, had only so much fiscal space to prop up their economies – advance commitment­s without knowing whether the vaccine would succeed, or fail, were not an easy decision in countries struggling to meet basic needs.

At current access rates, under the best of circumstan­ces, only about 35% of Africa’s population will be vaccinated this year. The prospect of an economic recovery from the Covid-triggered recession is dependent on being able to open up societies and integrate with the rest of the world. This is where Africa’s lack of access to vaccines could effectivel­y cut off the continent from the rest of the world.

Across China, Europe, and in the US, there is a growing push for temporary Covid-19 health credential­s to enable the reopening of global travel. The European Union is expected to introduce a proposal for a “Digital Green Pass” that will indicate whether the holder has been vaccinated, has recovered from Covid-19, or has received a negative test.

Western publics, facing movement restrictio­n fatigue and now becoming vaccinated, are clamouring for a return to normal. These sentiments are quite understand­able, but for many in sub-Saharan Africa there is a justifiabl­e scepticism. Beyond the moral question of whether it makes sense to impose such a restrictio­n when vaccine access has been so unequal is the practical question of what it means for Africa.

Visa denials are already high

Even in the best of times, the global north has viewed African visitors with, at best, suspicion and, at worst, hostility. Visa denial rates are highest for African applicants and the applicant is expected to clear an inordinate­ly high bar to reverse that result. It is not outside the scope of consular officers to use the imposition of Covid-19 vaccine passports as a convenient excuse to lower an already dismal visa approval rate for Africa.

In March 2017, the NPR website ran a story that demonstrat­ed the anti-African immigratio­n posture of the Trump administra­tion when it reported on a US-Africa summit in California that none of its 60 African guests were able to attend.

There was no clear reason why all the delegates from 12 African countries were denied visas to attend the African Global Economic and Developmen­t Summit, especially since none were from Libya, Somalia. or Sudan – the three African countries on President Trump’s Muslim ban executive order. But for any African who has applied for a US visa, the story was not surprising.

The blanket denial for the event almost seemed coordinate­d, but there is no reason to suspect this. There was no need for a memo instructin­g consular staff to specifical­ly turn down all African invitees if there was already an implicit understand­ing that all African visa applicants were suspect.

But this attitude is not exclusivel­y a Trump administra­tion or US issue. Canada’s visa approval rates for African applicants are lower than those for travellers from any other region and it has drawn criticism for its discrimina­tory posture. The same holds true for the Schengen area, where African nationals receive the most negative responses to their applicatio­ns.

When the UK foreign secretary, Dominic Raab, suggests that poorer countries should wait for Western developed vaccines (through Covax) and forego

For consular officers primed to reject visa applicatio­ns, the introducti­on of a vaccine passport could make the job significan­tly easier

Chinese and Russian vaccines, it seems doubly cruel. At a time when Western countries have hoarded the produce of their own manufactur­ers, poorer countries are urged to wait for the non-forthcomin­g vaccines. On the other hand, Western countries might introduce vaccine passports, granting free movement to those privileged enough to already have access.

Making it easier to ban Africans

African scepticism about the underlying motivation­s for, and implicatio­ns of, a vaccine passport is based on the reality that the countries least likely to approve visas to Africa are the ones considerin­g the introducti­on of said passports. Since the number of vaccinatio­ns administer­ed across sub-Saharan Africa is so low, it does not require much imaginatio­n to project what this means for would-be African travellers.

For consular officers primed to reject visa applicatio­ns, the introducti­on of a vaccine passport could make the job significan­tly easier. Neither African business people nor African students are on the list of high-risk or priority persons to receive the small supplies currently arriving in African capitals. Even high-priority groups like healthcare workers are still unable to get vaccines. On a continent still unable to acquire vaccines for its most essential workers, most of the rest of the population will not be vaccinated for the next three years.

It is my hope that African policymake­rs will push back hard against any Covid-19 status credential­s that are not equitably applicable. One hopes that leaders across the West and in China will also consider the moral implicatio­ns of such policy choices and put a brake on them. n

Gyude Moore is a senior policy fellow at the Center for Global Developmen­t. He previously served as Liberia’s minister of public works.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Above: A passenger’s body temperatur­e is tested at Murtala Internatio­nal Airport in Lagos.
Above: A passenger’s body temperatur­e is tested at Murtala Internatio­nal Airport in Lagos.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kenya