Nigeria might be Africa’s largest economy but it is
increasingly home to one of the continent’s weakest passports.
Over the past decade, the Nigerian passport has suffered the
worst decline in rankings on the annual Henley Passport Index with a 19-place
drop. The decline in passport power now sees Africa’s most populous country
rank 95th—firmly etched in the bottom quarter of the rankings. The drop in
rankings also means Nigerian passport holders can visit two countries fewer now
than they could in 2010 without first obtaining a visa.
Regionally, Africa accounts for four of the seven biggest
drops in ranking on the index since 2010. Keeping with the historical trends,
the region also dominates the bottom quarter of the rankings with only two
countries—Seychelles and Mauritius—in the top 50.
In some cases, passport power is affected by local conflict
and security fears as seen in the cases of Libya which has dropped 16 places
since 2010 and Mali which has dropped 13 places. But, generally, the decline in
the power of African countries is largely because countries in other regions
are easing travel with reciprocity and boosting the strength of their passports
at a much faster pace.
While Henley & Partners, the residence and citizenship
consultancy that collates the index, notes a “substantial increase in the
number of countries an average individual can visit without needing to get a
visa in advance,” it also admits much of the progress on this front is firmly
skewed towards holders of passports of developing countries. As such, the firm
says the current global mobility gap is the “starkest” ever since the inception
of the index.
Without the luxury of visa-free travel or even receiving
visas on arrival, traveling abroad comes with the hurdle of expensive,
paperwork-intensive visa application processes for a majority of holders of
African passports. But most applications are likely to be met with
rejection—sometimes without just cause: a joint All-Party Parliamentary Group
report from British lawmakers in August showed Africans are being unfairly denied
UK visas.
The real-life implications of difficult visa processes for
Africans range from being unable to visit family members abroad to scuttling
higher education plans. Up to 75% of African students who applied for study
permits in Canada between January and May 2019 were rejected— far higher than
the global rejection rate of 39%.
One easy way for African countries to boost the strength of
their passports is by easing visa regimes on the continent. Yet, progress in
easing travel between African countries remains slow-moving: 49% of countries
on the continent offer neither visa on arrival nor visa-free travel to other
African visitors.
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