President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, has granted executive approval for visa free travel to Ghana by citizens of all African countries.
With this move, Ghana joins 42 other African countries that extend visa-free entry to citizens from at least five other African countries,.
Ghana joins Rwanda, Benin, The Gambia, and Seychelles as countries that have eliminated all visa requirements for citizens of all African countries.
This is in fulfilment of a promise he made last January to international participants, mainly business executives, at the Africa Prosperity Dialogues 2024.
His promise was to allow visa free travel to Ghana for citizens of all other African countries before his term of office expired on January 6, 2025.
This is a major boost for ongoing efforts by the African Union to allow free movement of people, goods and services as the continent works towards the implementation of the world’s largest single market, involving at least 55 nation states.
President Nana Akufo-Addo last Wednesday gave executive approval for the implementation of the visa-free travel policy for all holders of passports issued by other African countries traveling to Ghana.
It will be recalled that President Akufo-Addo, in his keynote address at the Africa Prosperity Dialogues (APD 2024) on Thursday, 25 January 2024, under the theme, “Developing Prosperity in Africa: Produce, Add, Value and Trade,” announced that his administration was committed to the visa-free travel policy for all Africans and that it would implement within the year.
“Many of you had to acquire a visa to come to this event. We made a special arrangement for this conference, reducing the visa acquisition fee by 50%, and we were thus able to receive your visa on arrival,” the president said in his APD 2024 address.
“The government of Ghana is committed to ensuring visa-free for all Africans, for all Africans travelling into our country, and the process has begun to get the policy implemented this year,” Akufo-Addo promised.
The annual 3-day Africa Prosperity Dialogues, which attracts about 2,000 business executives and political leaders and institutional stakeholders from across the continent, is organised in collaboration with the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), the AFDB, BADEA, Afreximbank, ECA, UNDP Africa and others to mobilise business and political leaders on the continent to work together towards the speedy implementation of Africa’s economic integration.
The setting was therefore appropriate for the President of Ghana to pledge a visa-free policy.
In fulfillment of this pledge, the President granted executive approval on Wednesday, 18 December 2024. Senior officers at both the Office of the President and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs have confirmed familiar that the executive approval was subsequently communicated to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration and the Ministry of the Interior on Thursday, 19 December 2024.
Following the executive approval, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration and the Ministry of the Interior have initiated processes for executing the policy. What is outstanding is for the Ghana Immigration Service to announce a definite date for the visa-free policy to take effect. The start date is anticipated to be Wednesday, 1 January 2025.
With this approval and implementation of a visa-free travel policy for all African passport holders to Ghana, the West African nation will become the fifth country on the continent to institute such a policy. Currently, Rwanda, Seychelles, The Gambia, and Benin are the only African countries that provide visa-free entry for all African citizens.
The Nigerian industrialist and the richest African, Aliko Dangote, has spoken about the frustration of travelling across the continent.
“As an investor, as someone who wants to make Africa great, I have to apply for 35 different visas,” Dangote said at a business forum in Rwanda earlier this year.
“I really don’t have the time to go and drop off my passport in embassies to get a visa,” he added.
Ghana is the host nation for the African Continental Free Trade Area Secretariat. Ghana’s first independent leader, Dr Kwame Nkrumah was at the forefront in the campaign to unite Africa into a one borderless nation.
Ethiopia, where the headquarters of the African Union is, has been criticised for its restrictive immigration policy for Africans travelling into the country.
Writing in the Financial Times on 18 December, Aanu Adeoye stated, “Behind closed doors, I have heard many more stories from African businesspeople unable to attend events in neighbouring countries as a result of red tape. The head of a development lender, for example, had difficulty getting hold of a visa to a southern African country despite receiving an invitation from that country’s president.
“To make matters more bizarre, European and US citizens can often travel across the continent more freely than African nationals. There is a booming trade in wealthy Africans seeking second citizenships partly to solve this problem. Citizenship and residency firm Henley & Partners has opened up shop on the continent to take advantage of the situation.”
Adeoye argues, “Simplifying travel is important if the continent is serious about building deeper internal trade and cultural ties.”
The Nigerian journalist and Weet African correspondent for the FT makes the point that after nearly seven decades of independence across much of the continent, modern-day leaders have little excuse for sticking with the status quo.
“Globalisation and the free movement of people may be unfashionable elsewhere but it is essential for Africa’s growth. Regional blocs in east, west and southern Africa already have the structures in place to make visa-free travel a reality. The continent must now expand and implement those plans if it is to open up to itself,” he argues.
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