The Citizen (Gauteng)

Visa changes ‘not enough’

- Simnikiwe Hlatshanen­i

The Tourism Business Council of South Africa (TBCSA) says government has not done enough to encourage internatio­nal tourism, and new visa requiremen­ts meant to boost visitor number don’t really make it easier for tourists to travel with minors.

The council was reacting to a range of changes to immigratio­n regulation­s announced by Home Affairs Minister Malusi Gigaba yesterday.

The changes were made in line with Cabinet recommenda­tions on immigratio­n laws in order to boost tourism.

“The key changes will be that rather than requiring all foreign nationals who are minors to carry documentat­ion which proves parental consent and certificat­es of birth, we will rather strongly recommend that the parents of these minors carry the documentat­ion,” Gigaba announced.

Minors were still required to prove parental consent when travelling outside the country.

This was meant to be seen as easing the fears of travellers who wanted to bring their young into the country. But according to Tshifhiwa Tshivhengw­a, chief executive at TBCSA, government was failing to see the point.

“When you say that you will no longer require these documents, but you will strongly advise that travellers carry them, then you are not making things easier,” he said. “It is like a doctor saying that he strongly advises you to take a medication. When a tourist arrives in this country, is he going to have to explain why he is travelling without them?

“To say you will no longer require, but strongly advise, means nothing. You are not changing anything and it is not good enough.

“They need to simply do away with this thing. In the first place we didn’t need it. One could argue that it prevents human traffickin­g but let’s first get that informatio­n. Get the figures on how many children are trafficked through our airports.”

Tshivhengw­a said the council wished to sit down with the minister and settle this matter “once and for all”.

The council welcomed the other announced changes, such as the introducti­on of e-visas and e-gates which, Tshivhengw­a said, were long overdue.

By April next year, Gigaba’s department plans to start piloting electronic visas for tourists and businesspe­ople travelling from New Zealand.

According to the DA’s shadow tourism minister, James Vos, failure to implement electronic visas would continue to cost the tourism sector by making it more difficult to attract visitors to South Africa.

Figures provided since the “rigorous and ludicrous” visa regulation­s introduced four years ago were proof of the devastatin­g impact it has on the South African economy, he said.

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