Conversations with fellow Africans about travelling abroad
always end in how tough it is to get visas to travel to Western
countries. Many who have applied have experienced moments of feeling
humiliated or being treated with suspicion.
Of course,
some Western embassies handle applicants with due sensitivity. You go
there, you are looked over by security, and then you walk right in. For
others, however, it’s like going to heaven through the eye of a needle.
But
then again, the suspicion with which applicants for visas are treated
is not entirely without good reason either. Large numbers of Africans
are dying to go to the West and remain there, even illegally.
One
thing that rarely features in these conversations is what Africans
experience applying for visas to travel in Africa. Perhaps it’s because
more Africans travel or seek to travel outside Africa than within it.
But even limited intra-Africa travelling opens up avenues for learning
about the visa regimes of certain countries.
Applying
for visas to go to some African countries can be as nightmarish as
applying for a visa to go elsewhere. I have had five experiences that
typify what the average traveller goes through.
One
entailed getting a visa to go to Niger. I had to apply via its embassy
in Paris. Had I not known someone in Paris who carried my passport to
the embassy and thereafter sent it back by courier service, I probably
would have given up.
On another occasion, to visit
Cameroon, my prospective host applied for a visa two weeks before I was
supposed to travel. It was too late. The process required at least one
month. I gave up, but I had learnt my lesson.
The next
time I had to go, we applied two months in advance. Intrigued, when I
landed in Douala, I felt compelled to ask an immigration officer why on
earth an African needed to apply two months in advance for a visa to
visit another African country. For security reasons, he said.
However,
my worst experiences have been with one particular country in this
region, but whose name I shall keep to myself. One morning, having
failed to find the information I needed on their website, I called the
embassy to ask about applying and about the visa fees. I was given the
information I needed.
I then asked if it was admissible
to apply from another country rather than Uganda where I was ordinarily
resident. It was. Upon going to apply in the third country, the
required visa fee was twice the amount I had been told in Kampala.
I
then learnt that I could also apply on arrival. I asked someone there
to confirm this. Yes, I was told, I could get a visa on arrival, but for
three times the amount I had been told in Kampala. So there it was:
three different amounts for the same category of visa to visit the same
country. I gave up. The next time I wanted to go there, I applied at the
embassy.
I did get my visa in the end, but after
spending much time going back and forth and being told to “wait” with no
explanation as to why I had to wait.
At one point I
asked why. I got the same response: “Wait.” Meanwhile, during one of my
waiting episodes, a group of Chinese came in, applied, and got their
visas quite quickly, leaving me there to continue waiting. And when the
passport with the visa was handed back to me, no explanation was given
for keeping me waiting for as long as I had done.
And then one day I had to go back to apply again. This time I had an easier time of it. Don’t ask me what happened.
These
experiences came to mind last week when the government of Rwanda
announced a new visa regime. In furtherance of its open-door policy with
regard to African travellers carrying African passports, it released a
momentous statement.
For some years now, no one
carrying an African passport has needed to apply for a visa in advance
to enter Rwanda for whatever reason. And now, beginning in 2018, no one
visiting Rwanda, from whichever corner of the world, will need to apply
for a visa in advance.
All visitors needing visas will
get them on arrival. And for travellers from several countries, visa
fees have been waived altogether.
There are many things
this decision proves about President Paul Kagame and the government of
Rwanda. For Kagame, who has been advocating the removal of travel
restrictions that interfere with freedom of movement and trade and
exchange across the continent, it proves that he is a leader who puts
his money where his mouth is.
About his government, it
proves that when Rwandans say they aspire to work towards deepening
African integration and to turn their country into a tourism and
services hub, they are not talking for the sake of talking; they mean
it.
Clearly, when it comes to promoting free movement,
Rwanda is providing some much-needed leadership. The question is
whether or when the rest of Africa will follow.
Frederick Golooba-Mutebi is a Kampala- and Kigali-based researcher and writer on politics and public affairs. E-mail: fgmutebi@yahoo.com
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