Left to Right – President of Rwanda, Paul Kagame; President of Chad, Idriss Deby |
This Friday, on the
annual Africa Day, the African Union (AU) commemorates 55 years of
existence. Since its inception, the AU has helped usher in many changes
on the continent, most recently establishing the African Continental
Free Trade Area.
Another of the AU’s achievements is the establishment of the African passport.
Many Africans looking to travel within the continent are faced with
visa fees, which, compounded by prohibitive practices and expensive
airfare, keep them within their national borders.
The introduction of the continent-wide passport hoped to make
visa-free travel a reality and to facilitate the growth of tourism and
trade between African countries.
Launched on July 17, 2016, at the 27th African Union Summit in
Kigali, Rwanda, the red with gold embroidered AU passport is inscribed
in five languages: English, French, Arabic, Portuguese and Swahili, and
has high-security features.
Idriss Deby, President of Chad and Paul Kagame, President of
Rwanda—the immediate former and current chairperson of the African
Union, respectively—were the first to receive their copies of the passport.
The passport is also available to African heads of state, AU officials and select national government personnel.
However, the AU says while there is no definite timeline for
releasing it to ordinary citizens, it will focus on creating “the
conditions for member states to issue the passport to their citizens,
within their national policies, as and when they are ready.”
Though there is much excitement about the Africa passport, there are some concerns.
Some Africans argue that security issues including the free movement
of terrorists through the continent; public health risks like the easier
transmitting of diseases across borders; and migration and employment
concerns such as people overstaying their visits to other countries,
will be heightened.
It remains to be seen when and on what conditions African countries
will authorize the continent-wide passport to their nationals.
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