Ghana announces visa-free entry for African passport holders
Ghana’s outgoing President Nana Akufo-Addo Friday announced
visa-free travel for all African passport holders from the start of this year,
marking a step towards continental economic integration.
The announcement came during his final State of the Nation
address as he prepares to step down on January 6 after two terms in office.
"I am proud to have approved visa-free travel to Ghana
for all African passport holders, with effect from the beginning of this
year," Akufo-Addo said in his speech to parliament.
"This is the logical next step to the African
Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) and the workings of the largest trading
bloc in the world," he said.
"All these are essential elements to the realisation of
the AU’s Agenda 2063, which envisages an integrated and connected Africa by
2063," he added, referring to the African Union's development blueprint
for a 50-year period.
Ghana joins Rwanda, Seychelles, Gambia and Benin in offering
visa-free entry to African travellers.
Ghana had previously allowed visa-free access to citizens of
26 African nations and visas on arrival for travellers from 25 others, while
only two African countries -- Eritrea and Morocco -- required a visa before
entry.
The visa-free policy builds on Ghana’s efforts to strengthen
its international reputation, particularly through initiatives like the 2019
Year of Return, which celebrated the African diaspora and commemorated 400
years since the transatlantic slave trade.
The campaign attracted thousands of visitors, including
celebrities, to Ghana and led to some receiving citizenship, bolstering the
country's global profile as a cultural and tourism hub.
Akufo-Addo also used his last address to trumpet economic
progress under his leadership, citing an increase in Ghana’s gross
international reserves to $8 billion, from $6.2 billion in 2017, and
significant GDP growth in 2024.
"Economic growth has returned to the pre-Covid
trajectory," he said, projecting a 6.3-percent growth rate for 2025.
"I leave behind a Ghana that is thriving, one that has
navigated significant global challenges with remarkable tenacity, whose economy
is steadily rebounding, and whose institutions are operating effectively,"
he said.
The oil-and-gold-rich West African nation is one of the most
stable democracies in Africa.
Since 2022, it has been battling one of its worst economic
crises in decades and is currently under a $3-billion International Monetary
Fund relief programme.
The outgoing president handed over power to John Mahama, who
won the December elections.
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