The African Union wants to roll out the continental passport to millions of Africans.
African leaders gather for the 27th African Union Summit in Kigali, Rwanda, July 17. CYRIL NDEGEYA/AFP/GETTY IMAGES |
The summit saw the launch of an Africa-wide passport aimed at promoting freedom of movement within the continent.
The
African Union (AU) has launched its continental Africa-wide passport,
with the presidents of Chad and Rwanda being the first two
recipients.
The
five-language diplomatic passport, which ensures holders free
movement throughout the continent, was
unveiled at the opening of the 27th AU Summit in Kigali, the Rwandan
capital, on Sunday.
Chadian
President Idriss Déby,
the body’s current chairperson, and Rwandan
leader Paul Kagame were
presented with the passports by outgoing AU Commission chief
Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma. “I
feel deeply and proudly a true son of Africa after receiving this
passport,” said Déby. Dlamini-Zuma said
that the
body had been “overwhelmed” with requests for the passport since
its launch was announced in January and that other heads of state
would be issued with the document over the course of the summit,
which concludes Monday.
Dlamini-Zuma also
urged heads
of states in Africa to create their own protocols for introducing the
pan-African passport to their citizens “as and when they are
ready.”
The
document will initially only be available to politicians and
diplomats. Images of the passport show inscriptions in five
languages—English, French, Arabic, Portuguese and Swahili—and the
AU claims that the document has “high security features,”
although it is not clear what these are.
The
AU outlined in 2013 the introduction of a African passport in its
Agenda 2063 document, which lays out the conditions for development
of the continent over the next five decades. Fifty-four African
countries are members of the AU—the only non-member is Morocco,
which left a precursor organization in 1984 due to a dispute over
Western Sahara, a territory contested by the Algerian-backed
Polisario Front.
The continent already contains several regional
blocs, with different levels of freedom of movement. For example,
residents of countries in the Economic Community of West African
States—a bloc of 15 nations including Nigeria and Ghana—can move
freely between member states without having to obtain visas, or
obtaining visas upon arrival. Ghana recently instituted a
visa-upon-arrival schemefor
all AU residents after President John Dramani Mahama announced the
policy in February, saying it would stimulate trade and tourism.
Source:
NewsWeek
FIRST AFRICAN PASSPORTS GO TO PRESIDENTS OF RWANDA AND CHAD
Reviewed by E.A Olatoye
on
July 18, 2016
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