Nigeria has
decided to start issuing visas on arrival for all Africans, the African Union
said Friday, in a major step toward the goal of free movement on the continent.
The continental body’s deputy
chairman Kwesi Quartey praised the action as a “laudable move towards Africa’s
integration agenda” in a Facebook post.
The AU has advocated for a
“single African passport” that aims to improve intra-African trade and has
called for “the abolishment of visa requirements for all African citizens in
all African countries by 2018.”
A spokeswoman for the AU chairperson,
Ebba Kalondo, told The Associated Press they were waiting for details from
Nigeria as the news was “announced verbally with no formal communication.”
Africans need visas to travel to
55 percent of the continent, according to AU figures.
According to the African
Development Bank’s 2017 Africa Visa Openness Report , Africans can get a visa
on arrival in just 24 percent of other African countries, while North
Americans, for example, have easier travel access on the continent.
Ghana, Rwanda, Mauritius and the
Seychelles already issue visas on arrival to all African passport holders, the
AU’s Quartey has said.
In 2016, the electronic African
Union Passport was launched and issued to heads of state and governments, with
the goal of expanding it to citizens.
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