Zimbabwe has recorded an exceptional 115,6 percent increase in tourist arrivals to resorts such as Victoria Falls. Correspondent African countries are set to record an increase in tourism numbers in 2024, as more countries continue to open their borders to other African countries by abolishing visa requirements. In 2023, most African countries made significant strides to liberalise their visa regimes, with Rwanda and Kenya being the latest to completely remove visa requirements for all African travellers, joining Gambia, Benin, and Seychelles. Kenya’s transition towards a visa-free regime saw the country’s Immigration Department receive almost 10,000 applications for the new Electronic Travel Authorisation (ETA) allowing foreign nationals to visit or transit through the country by air, in the first week of January 2024 alone. The Immigration department was processing the applications based on the travel schedule submitted by each applicant, according to Kenya’s Immigration Principal Secretary Julius Bitok. Kenya expects to more than double its tourism numbers from 2 million visitors to 5 million arrivals every year, thanks to the new system. The African Development Bank’s 2023 Africa Visa Openness Index, reports that 50 countries have now improved, or maintained, their openness scores. The increase has been attributed to the rise in country-to-country and, in some instances, multi-country agreements to completely remove or ease visa restrictions. A concerted effort by African countries to promote the free movement of people across the continent is seen growing in the New Year, to bolster tourism and trade. “Sustaining the momentum on visa liberalisation is...
Visa-free regimes to bolster African tourism growth
Posted on: January 12, 2024
Posted on: January 12, 2024