Summary
- The number of Kenyans who acquired passports rose by 85.4 percent last year as the State moved to open up more issuance centres locally and abroad.
- Data published by the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics (KNBS) shows that the number of travel documents issued rose to 446,954 last year from 241,095 in 2018.
- While the KNBS data does not give a breakdown in terms of how many Kenyans abroad or locally acquired the travel passes, analysts reckon that strict deadline for the issuance of e-passports could have also led to the surge in the numbers.
The number of Kenyans who acquired passports rose by 85.4
percent last year as the State moved to open up more issuance centres
locally and abroad.
Data published by the Kenya
National Bureau of Statistics (KNBS) shows that the number of travel
documents issued rose to 446,954 last year from 241,095 in 2018.
While
the KNBS data does not give a breakdown in terms of how many Kenyans
abroad or locally acquired the travel passes, analysts reckon that
strict deadline for the issuance of e-passports could have also led to
the surge in the numbers.
“The long lines that used to
be outside Nyayo House as the state moved to set stiff deadlines for
Kenyans to acquire the new generation passport could have also led to
the rise in the number passport issued last year,” said Ken Gichinga,
chief economist at Mentoria Economics.
In February, the government extended the deadline for migration to the new e-passport to March 2021.
This was the second time that the deadline for the new passports
was extended after President Uhuru Kenyatta last year ordered the
extension to March 2020.
In a bid to ensure swift
service delivery, the State also set up more control centres to
facilitate faster issuance of the travel document done within a day of
application ahead of the July deadline.
Locally, the
new centres were set up in Nakuru, Kisii, Eldoret and Embu while in
Europe, the centres were established in Berlin, Paris and London. Others
abroad are in Washington DC, Dubai and Johannesburg.
As of last May, 800,000 e-passports had been issued three months to the August 31 deadline amid a rush at the issuing centres.
Former
Immigration PS Gordon Kihalangwa told Parliament last May that the
department was serving an average of 4,000 passport applicants daily.
The
new-generation e-passports feature a microchip containing data about
the holder, which also matches the information in the passport booklet.
The e-passport allows information stored on the chip to be verified with the information visually displayed on the booklet.
Due to its secure nature, the e-passport curbs reproduction and tampering. It also enhances imposter detection.
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