Home
FacebookTwitterSearchMenu
  • Subscribe (free)
  • Subscribe (free)
  • News
  • Features
  • TravelInfo
  • Columns
  • Community
  • Sponsored
  • Contact Us
    • Contact Us
    • About Us
    • Advertise
    • Send Us News

Share

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • E-mail
  • Print

A SADC passport? Not so fast

29 Mar 2017 - by Chana Boucher
Comments | 0

IT MAY be some time before

all citizens from the SADC

region travel with the same

passport.

According to Mayihlome

Tshwete, spokesperson of the

SA Ministry of Home Affairs,

while all African countries

support the theory of free

movement, the technicalities

need to be figured out

first. “To do this, the right

foundation is needed, as are

certain preconditions.”

One of these preconditions is

a national population register,

which Mayihlome says is

needed to ensure that people

coming from a particular

country can be identified as

such.

Earlier, media outlets quoted

Tanzania’s Foreign Minister,

Augustine Mahiga, as saying

that the SADC states were

“busy working on a common

regional passport that would

also stimulate regional trade”

creating a borderless region

and continent.

However, Mayihlome said at

a recent meeting between

SADC countries that it

had been agreed that the

introduction of a regional

passport had to be

approached with caution to

prevent any backlash or fallout.

“To say someone is coming

from the SADC is not good

enough for some countries. If

something happens and they

want to send that person back,

they need to know where to

send them back to.”

He added that skipping

the vital first steps and not

taking security measures

into account would have a

negative impact on South

Africa’s relationships with

other countries and regions.

“An SA traveller is a citizen of

South Africa, not the SADC.

Whatever we do, we have to be

accountable for our citizens.

If someone is travelling with

our documents and they are

not in line with the rules of

other countries, it will have

a negative impact,” says

Mayihlome.

He pointed out that some

progress had already been

made, for example, in Lesotho,

where travellers were only

required to be fingerprinted to

cross the border, eliminating

the need for passports. These,

he said were essential building

blocks in realising dynamic

free movement throughout the

region. 

Sign up to our mailing list and get daily news headlines and weekly features directly to your inbox free.

Pilgrims keep booking despite conflict

Today 18:50
Comments | 0

QR responds to airspace chaos

Today 18:40
Comments | 0

Turkish returns to Sabre

Today 18:30
Comments | 0

China launches online visa processing

Today 18:25
Comments | 0

Luxury travel – the value is in personal enrichment

Today 18:20
Comments | 0

Hilton plans Nile cruise

Today 18:15
Comments | 0

Turkey to open ruins for tourism

Today 18:10
Comments | 0

Air travel round-up: Cathay increases Brisbane, Perth flights

Today 18:05
Comments | 0

Latest Changes on Travelinfo (26 June'25)

Today 18:00
Comments | 0

No cover for war-related delays

Yesterday
Comments | 0

Embraer highlights quick-win intra-Africa routes

Yesterday
Comments | 0

MD and UU sign codeshare

Yesterday
Comments | 0

TAAG finalises airport move

Yesterday
Comments | 0
  • Load more

FeatureClick to view

Snow holidays June 2025

Poll

Are clients shying away from Middle Eastern travel hubs?
  • © Now Media
  • Privacy Policy
  • Travel News on Facebook
  • eTNW Twitter
  • Travel News RSS
  • Contact Us
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Send Us News