Ghana’s new visa plan and pan-Africanism
By Paul Ejime
By Paul Ejime
Ghana President John Dramani Mahama in a State of the Nation
address to mark Ghana’s 59th independence anniversary on March 6, 2016 made two
important pronouncements with foreign relations implications. The first was his
government’s plan to improve the knowledge and usage of French language in
Anglophone Ghana, which is surrounded by French speaking nations. The
advantages of this strategic initiative if effectively implemented are many.
The second policy statement of international import, but
which almost escaped media attention is that, starting next July, citizens of
the other 53 Member States of the African Union (AU) can “obtain visas on
arrival (in Ghana) with the option of staying for up to 30 days.” President
Mahama expects this measure to stimulate air travel, trade, investment and
tourism in Ghana which, like many other African countries, is going through a
difficult economic patch.
To his credit, under Ghana’s independence, President
Osagyefo Kwame Nkrumah, and until his overthrow in the coup of February 24,
1966, Ghana granted visa exemptions to “persons of African descent” born in the
neighbouring West African countries, and members of the Casablanca Group –
Guinea, Tunisia, Mali, United Arab Republic, Morocco and Algeria – which along
with the Liberia Group, formed the Organisation of African Unity (OAU) in 1963,
with the Pan-Africanist Ghanaian leader playing a leading role. In his 1961
book, I Speak of Freedom, Nkrumah had also expressed the hope that: …the
African race, united under one federal government, will emerge not as just
another world bloc to flaunt its wealth and strength, but as a Great Power
whose greatness is indestructible because it is built not on fear, envy and
suspicion, nor won at the expense of others, but founded on hope, trust,
friendship and directed to the good of all mankind.”
But so much has happened with the concept of a United States
of Africa, which took its origin from the 1924 poem “Hail, United States of
Africa” by Marcus Garvey, American civil rights activist and great
Pan-Africanist. The late Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi had romanced with the
same idea in his relentless push for the formation of the AU, which succeeded
the OAU in 2002, and many still talk with passion about the African
Renaissance.
As expected the AU Commission Chairperson Nkosazana
Dlamini-Zuma has lauded Ghana’s visa-on-arrival plan, expressing the hope that
“many other African countries will follow suit, in the interest of achieving an
integrated, prosperous and peaceful Africa.”
Modern Africa owes a debt of eternal gratitude to
Pan-Africanists and independent leaders such as Nkrumah, for their sacrificial
struggles, so any initiative that seeks to rekindle the dreams of those
founding fathers must be welcomed by all true Africans and friends of Africa.
But it is a strong indictment on the continent’s post-independent leadership
that almost 60 years after many of the countries gained political freedom,
Africans are more divided than ever. Africa is not zero-poor, but with the mismanagement
of its rich human and natural resources, bad governance, corruption and the
vicious circle of social strife, poverty and unemployment, there are today more
skilled Africans in Europe, and the Americas than are in their home countries.
And almost on a daily basis thousands of disillusioned, hopeless and desperate
African youths risk their lives on perilous journeys to Europe.
Africa and Africans are fast losing their unique identity if
they have not already done so, with Pan-Africanism now at best a slogan to the
inattentive ears of present generation of Africans. Not a few African leaders
have proclaimed or still proclaim Africa as the centrepiece of their national
foreign policy. But the reality today is that while they continue to pay lip
service to African unity, most of these leaders, under the guise of solving
domestic problems, many of which are self-inflicted any way, steal their
countries dry to build personal castles at home and abroad.
Ghana’s visa-on-arrival plan for AU citizens may also be
viewed against the deafening complaints by African citizens about the
difficulties and humiliations they suffer to obtain visas for Europe and the
U.S. But the truth is that the process for obtaining visas to African countries
is no less laborious and frustrating. For many Africans, travelling in the
continent whether by road or by air is a nightmarish experience. In some cases
air fares cost more than elsewhere while immigration and check points punctuate
the transnational roads, some of which are in terrible conditions, with the
attendant extortion of travellers by the border security personnel. The travel
delays and the lack of deliberate pan-African national policies have ensured
that intra-African trade hovers between 10% and 12% compared to 40% in North
America and 60% in Western Europe.
The 15-nation Economic Community of West African States
(ECOWAS) founded in 1975 deserves commendation for its 1979 flagship Protocol
on Free Movement of persons, goods and services, rights to Establishment and
Residence, which guarantees community citizens, a free-visa entry and stay in
countries other than their own for 90 days at first instance. In spite of its
imperfections, the implementation of this protocol is a major stride towards
regional integration and makes ECOWAS the only Regional Economic Community
(REC) with a free-visa regime.
Time was when Africans took refuge and were even provided
the national passports of their host African countries during the independence
struggles. Hundreds even received free education in their host countries during
the Anti-Apartheid era. But with globalisation and world economic crisis
African migrants who once constituted the bulwark of economic development on
the continent, have become targets of violent xenophobic attacks by fellow
Africans who accuse them of stealing their jobs.
If Europe is accused of erecting walls/fences to stop
immigrants, African countries are no less guilty for the erection of invisible
walls against fellow Africans even in their times of need.
With their ill-gotten wealth and multiple foreign visas,
many African leaders and members of their families flaunt their ostentatious
life styles abroad, while the majority of Africans are stranded and condemned
to abject poverty at home. The same leaders bemoan capital flight and brain
drain from Africa but do very little or nothing to incentivise or create the
enabling environment to retain local capital or manpower. Instead, they
encourage the mass exodus of Africa’s best brains; discourage foreign investment
and incite social crisis that cause death, destruction and render citizens,
refugees in their own countries. With their dual/multiple nationalities, these
unpatriotic leaders easily disappear with their families to enjoy their
ill-gotten wealth abroad.
As things stand, Africans must undertake a serious reality
check to determine their Africanness and how they have derailed the lofty
dreams of African founding fathers, for the purpose of damage
control/limitation. Symbolic as Ghana’s visa-on-arrival initiative may seem, it
is a reminder to Africans in general about where they are coming from. The AU
and various Pan-Africanist groups/institutions and policy think-tanks must wake
up from their slumber. It is bad enough that through slavery, colonial and neo-colonial
exploitations and plundering, Africa’s sweat, blood and wealth were used to lay
the foundations for the industrialisation and transformation of many countries
in Europe and the Americas. For Africans themselves to now become champions of
Africa’s disunity/disintegration, and the continued siphoning of the
continent’s resources, is an unpardonable crime against humanity.
According to Marcus Garvey: “A people without the knowledge
of their past history, origin and culture is like a tree without roots.” It is
not enough for Africans to know their history and culture; or to continue to
blame others for their woes, they must use that knowledge strategically to work
for the good of present and future generations.
• Ejime is a media/communications consultant who wrote this piece for the Nigerian Guardian
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