close
Thursday, December 16, 2021

Nigeria ranks 7th place on Africa’s Visa Openness Index report

Benin, Gambia, and Seychelles were 2021’s top performers, as all three countries offered visa-free access to all African visitors.

• December 16, 2021
Jean-Guy Afrika
Jean-Guy Afrika

Nigeria ranked 7th place on the Africa Visa Openness Index Report jointly released by the African Development Bank and the African Union Commission on Monday.

Nigeria came in 7th place with a score of 0.864 points ahead of Uganda, Guinea-Bissau, Cabo Verde, Togo, Mauritania, Mauritius, Mozambique, and others.

The report measures the ease of travel between African countries, noting what countries are open to visitors from other African countries.

The report checks each country’s visa requirements to show which countries on the continent facilitate travel to their territory.

The data for the report was collected between June and July 2021, relying on the International Air Transport Association and countries’ official websites.

The Index shows that 36 countries have improved or maintained their Visa Openness Index score since 2016.

Benin, Gambia, and Seychelles were 2021’s top performers, according to the report, as all three countries offered visa-free access to all African visitors, as they did in 2020.

“Despite the lockdowns necessitated by the COVID-19 pandemic, many African countries continue to signal visa openness to the citizens of other countries on the continent: The top 10 countries’ average score on the Africa Visa Openness Index rose to 0.904 from 0.902 in 2020,” the report said.

The report states its intentions in line with the African Union’s Agenda 2063, the Protocol on the Free Movement of People and encourages the implementation of the African Continental Free Trade Area, with a market of 1.3 billion people.

It notes that over half of the top 20 performers

have ratified the AfCFTA Agreement, signed up to the Single African Air Transport Market, and signed the Protocol on the Free Movement of Persons. Only Rwanda has ratified the Protocol on the Free Movement of Persons.

“By supporting the free movement of people, we make it easier for Africans to do business in Africa. Free movement of people, especially workers, could help plug skills gaps, while enabling countries to fix skills mismatches in their labour markets,” said Jean-Guy Afrika, the Officer-In-Charge of the Regional Integration Coordination Office at the African Development Bank.

More from Peoples Gazette

Wike, Safe home

NationWide

Rivers opens “safe home” for victims of gender-based violence

Rivers State Governor Nyesom Wike said the home is also open to abused males.

Bauchi gov. Bala Mohammed and Omicron

States

Bauchi gets 350,000 COVID-19 doses for booster jabs

The concern over the Omicron coronavirus variant has led some countries, Nigeria inclusive, to expand their booster programmes.

Siren and CP Nnamdi Omoni

Port Harcourt

Rivers police ban unauthorised use of siren by banks, firms, others

The police in Rivers have banned the unauthorised use of sirens, revolving lights, spy and covered plate numbers in the state.

National Judicial Council

Anti-Corruption

NJC sanctions 3 judges over ex parte orders in Secondus-PDP suit

Three judges involved in granting ex parte orders in the matter between former National Chairman Uche Secondus and the PDP were barred from promotion.

AfDB building

Africa

AfDB provides €70 million facility for West African businesses

The African Development Bank (AfDB) has approved a €70 million worth line of credit to support businesses in the West African Economic and Monetary Union.

Ebola outbreak

Africa

Ebola outbreak declared over in DR Congo

The Democratic Republic of Congo on Thursday declared the country ebola free, after clearing out the 13th outbreak of the Ebola Virus Disease in the country.