Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)
Visa U-turn boost for tourism
Cabinet approves concessions on travel requirements for visitors
regulations introduced by Gigaba’s department, joined Minister in the Presidency for Planning, Monitoring and Evaluation Jeff Radebe for a media briefing in Pretoria, where the new regime was announced.
Among concessions were that visa applications in countries where there are no South African missions would be accepted by post – lifting the requirement that all applications be made in person, and that accredited tourism firms would be allowed to accept visa applications from their clients in China, India and Russia, before forwarding them to South African authorities.
This had been considered a major obstacle, especially for would-be tourists from countries like China, where vast travel distances and costs were involved in some cases just to lodge an application.
The requirement for people travelling with children to carry original birth certificates and letters of consent from absent parents was also relaxed for countries from which visas are not required – including key traditional tourism markets in Europe and North America.
Hanekom said these had been the major factors affecting decisions on whether or not to travel to the country, and that he was satisfied the new measures would “deal fully with the issues”.
However, South Africans taking children out of the country will still have to produce parental consent affidavits and birth certificates “containing parental details” – a shift from the unabridged birth certificates that had been required – to help prevent child trafficking.
Radebe said in future the details of parents would be printed in the child’s passport to save them having to carry a birth certificate.
Children coming from countries where visas are required would also still have to provide original birth certificates or certified copies.
Gigaba said the changes satisfied the country’s security concerns and commitments to help stem child trafficking, while also addressing concerns of the tourism sector.
Since the in-person application requirements were introduced in the third quarter of last year, tourist arrivals fell, especially from China (46.9 percent), and dropped by a further overall 13 percent in June, when the child travel regulations came into effect, according to the Southern African Tourism Services Association.
Hanekom said the drop in visitor numbers had prompted the establishment of the interministerial committee whose recommendations informed the announcements made yesterday.
Mosue said the priority was to address uncertainty around the travel requirements and to restore tourist confidence.
“As we study the finer details, we will be looking to see how far the concessions address these two concerns,” she said.
The establishment of a tourism stakeholder forum would help to work through the implications of the revisions, and “pave the way for improved trading conditions”.