Kenya moved six places up on visa openness progress in 2018 helped by government’s recent move to allow citizens from African States to obtain visa on arrival, the AU-AfDB report said.
The report indicates that nationals from 18 African countries do not require visa to enter Kenya, 33 require visa on arrival while only two countries need to obtain visa before arrival.
In East Africa, Rwanda was position three, having moved from number nine last year, coming behind Seychelles and Benin.
Rwanda: Rwanda moved up in the top 10 countries in the Index. It scored position three this year up from number nine in 2017.
Africans enjoy liberal access to Rwanda, with no visa required for 15 countries and visa on arrival for 38 countries. A top 10 performer on the Index since 2016, the country’s open visa policy has inspired countries Africa-wide, including Benin, and soon Ethiopia to liberalise their visa regimes.
Kenya: The country moved into the top 10 countries in the Index. The country’s improved score follows its new visa-on-arrival policy for all Africans, which was highlighted in President Kenyatta’s inauguration speech in November, 2017.
The liberalised visa regime was set up to promote more open borders across the continent and to boost trade, security and Africa-wide integration. It has been widely publicised, with the African Union Commission voicing the need for countries to follow Kenya’s example.
The move supports Kenya’s efforts to drive growth in travel by providing a straightforward process for short-term visas, offering eVisas for travellers. Total travel and tourism contributed 9.7 per cent to Kenya’s GDP in 2017 and is forecast to rise by 5.5 per cent in 2018, according to the World Travel and Tourism Council Economic Impact 2018 report.
Kenya’s open visa policy will, in turn, support the country’s strong air transport sector. The sector facilitates over $10 billion in exports, around $4.4 billion in foreign direct investment, and around $800,000 in inbound leisure and business tourism for Kenya.
At the same time, Kenya is driving integration within the East African Community, with the announcement that citizens from Burundi, Rwanda, South Sudan, Tanzania and Uganda can move freely with their identity cards, work, do business and own property on an equal basis.
Kenyan nationals can travel to 18 African countries visa-free and to 15 African countries with a visa on arrival, which represents one of the highest mobility rates on the continent.
Source Business Daily