From the DW:
“The long wait: Why Africans
must be patient when applying for a passport”
Getting a new passport is quick
and easy in many African countries. But, in others, thousands of people spend a
long time waiting for their papers — often simply because there aren't enough
blank books. When Tanimu Garba needed a new passport in November, the
23-year-old drove to the immigration office in his hometown of Maiduguri, in
northeastern Nigeria. But he was soon disappointed. "They said I couldn't
get my passport immediately," he told DW. "Even if I pay for it and
even if I have the documents, they [were] not certain when I was going to get
it because they are not printing."
Nigeria had run out of blank
passport books. The Maiduguri immigration officials advised Garba to try again
in the capital, Abuja. Traveling by road from Maiduguri to Abuja is dangerous,
so Garba bought a plane ticket, booked a hotel, and paid the 55,000 nairas
(€120, $132) express fee for his new passport. Garba didn't have the document
in his hand until the beginning of March. But, according to the Nigeria
Immigration Service, the bottleneck should have since eased after the country
received a large shipment of blank passports. Many Africans put up with a lot
to get a new passport. Waiting times of several months are the norm in many
countries. More urgent and expensive requests often take even longer. "I
[chose] the express; they gave me two weeks," Nana Akyiaa, an entrepreneur
from Ghana's capital, Accra, told DW. "But then it [took] close to a
month. Apart from that waiting, it was okay."
Malawi's passport system
grinds to a halt And then there are cases like Malawi's: Most citizens wait
months for passports in the landlocked country in southeastern Africa. In
December, the government terminated a $60 million (€54.4 million) contract with
Kenyan service provider Techno Brain Global after reports of corruption
surfaced. The company sharply rejected accusations that the contract benefited
Techno Brain at the expense of Malawians. Since 2020, the Malawian
government has issued passports with digital security features intended to facilitate
passport control in international transit better. However, the Department of
Immigration continues to use the Techno Brain system on a transitional basis —
but only for emergency applications, spokesperson Willington Chiponde told DW.
"We are only accommodating those who have emergency reasons for
leaving the country," Chiponde said. In other words, Malawians who
cannot prove that they urgently need to travel will not receive a passport
until further notice. Chiponde said they do not have official figures on how
many citizens have been turned away so far. But, first, a new passport supplier
must be found, and a contract drawn up and signed. When asked how long
this might take, Chiponde remained vague: "It's not a matter of many
months. We are working with weeks. But we don't just want to say these are the
weeks people should expect [to hear from] us because we know a due process has
to be followed."
Corrupt cooperation partners? Several
African countries work with Belgian company Semlex to produce biometric
passports. The investigative reporting network Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting
Project (OCCRP) took a closer look at these relationships and revealed a series
of alleged corruption cases in 2020: Semlex allegedly paid an influential
government official in Madagascar at least €120,000 before the company was
commissioned to produce passports for the country. In 2020, the
Democratic Republic of Congo canceled a deal with Semlex that offered passports
for $185 apiece in one of the poorest countries in the world. DW reached
out to Semlex for its response but got no answer. In Zimbabwe, however,
Semlex is the latest player in the passport business. Last year, news platform
ZimLive reported that the government had concluded a multimillion dollar deal
with Semlex without a prior tender. ZimLive quoted the Minister of Home Affairs
and Cultural Heritage Kazembe Kazembe as saying there were no additional costs
for the government: "They invest their money and are remunerated by the
profits," he said. According to the report, Kazambe could not
guarantee that the current price of $60 per passport would remain permanent.
^ I have always had a valid
Passport (in fact I currently have a valid Canadian Passport and a valid
American Passport) so it is hard for me to truly understand how difficult it is
for other people in different countries to get one. The closest I come is
having to wait over a year for my Canadian Citizenship Certificate that I
needed before I could get my Canadian Passport. I’m not a Naturalized Canadian,
but a Natural-Born Canadian who was born outside of Canada and had to have that
Certificate and the Canadian Department dealing with it is short-staffed so
there were lengthy delays. ^
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