Business Day

Africa’s visa conundrum is crying out for political will to fix it

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THE best African passports to have are those from The Gambia, Côte d’Ivoire or Kenya. Why? Because travellers with these passports need visas for just 41% of African countries, lower than the average of 55% of countries requiring Africans to have visas for other African countries.

The worst to have is a Somali passport, even though the country does not require visitors to have visas — rather unsurprisi­ngly.

These findings from research conducted by McKinsey were part of a broader discussion at the recent African Developmen­t Bank annual meetings in Abidjan, where business people, politician­s and others raised questions about why the free movement of people across the continent, enshrined in the founding principles of pan-African organisati­ons, is still difficult. The issue is one of the sticky items on the agenda of the Tripartite Free Trade Area negotiatio­ns, which are scheduled to be launched at this week’s African Union summit in Johannesbu­rg. The free trade area, due to be launched in 2017, will cover an area stretching from Egypt to Cape Town.

Many of those government­s around the table will be the same officials who have visa regimes in place for fellow Africans.

At the African Developmen­t Bank meeting, delegates asked why government officials and diplomats could travel freely through the continent with diplomatic passports but business people, who are called on to be partners in developing Africa, could not.

The visa restrictio­ns Kenya briefly imposed on South Africans last year did not include holders of official or diplomatic passports — ironic, seeing as it was the actions of officials who put the regulation­s in place. A business passport was mooted at the Abidjan discussion for regular travellers and investors. Busi- ness people have their passports stuck in embassies for weeks trying to get visas for multiple countries.

This is not contributi­ng to economic developmen­t but adding to the cost of doing business. For informal traders, a visa could cost a month’s salary or more. Work permit issues are preventing companies from moving profession­als throughout their pan-African operations.

There has been some movement. Nationals of Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas), for example, qualify for an Ecowas passport. In the East African Community, citizens of the five states can now use identity cards or driving licences instead of passports to move across the bloc.

SA and others could learn a lot from the East African Community. But the political will is not universal. As long as politician­s exempt themselves from visa regulation­s in Africa, widespread change may be a while coming.

Rwandans maintain that the benefits of bringing new talent and visitors with money to spend far outweighs the potential problems of troublemak­ers.

It is those who want to bring their money in, either to shop, go on holiday or invest, who are bearing the brunt of visa hassles.

Africans tend to get short-term visas for SA, for example. They are now choosing to avoid SA and take their money to countries, such as the UK and US, that offer visas for up to 10 years.

Ethiopia, despite hosting the African Union, still has visa restrictio­ns for many Africans.

As SA has shown, illegal immi- grants get into countries that do not have properly enforced controls. Visas do not stop them.

Africa’s developmen­t challenges, high unemployme­nt rates and security issues are factors used to determine immigratio­n policy. But there are surely ways to deal with these problems that are about economic interests, not defensive actions. Many countries do skills audits and link immigratio­n policies to their economic needs, for example.

As African countries deepen free trade, it is time to consider the freer movement of people who are boosting Africa’s developmen­t. These are not just politician­s but talented profession­als, African investors and many others.

Games is CEO of advisory firm Africa @ Work.

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