News Articles

Visa rules could cost SA R7.5bn a year

Source: Liezel Hill – News24, 01/10/2015


Johannesburg - South Africa`s new visa requirements could cost the
economy about R7.5bn a year in lost tourism revenue and should be
revoked immediately by the government, industry representatives
said.


The number of air passengers under 18 years of age travelling to and
from the country fell 50% year-on-year in June and July due to a
requirement to carry an unabridged birth certificate, David Frost,
chief executive officer of the Southern Africa Tourism Services
Association, told reporters in Johannesburg on Thursday, citing data
compiled by Airlines Association of Southern Africa.


Total overseas tourist arrivals fell 13%, including a 27% decline from
China, he said.


The Ministry of Home Affairs last year introduced new visa rules
requiring applications to be made in person. The birth certificate
stipulation, aimed at reducing child trafficking, took effect in June
this year. The regulations have already had a significant effect on
tourist travel to South Africa, Frost said.


"What we are asking for very unequivocally is to abolish" these rules,
he said. "They are irrational and they cannot be implemented."


Projections by the Tourism Business Council of South Africa indicate
the new rules will reduce the total number of annual foreign tourists
by 578 000, Frost said. That`s equal to about 6% of the 9.5 million
foreign tourists that travelled to the country last year, visiting
attractions such as Table Mountain and Kruger National Park, according
to Statistics South Africa.


Tourism sub-sectors including hotels and car rentals are seeing volume
declines as a result of the rule changes, representatives of the
respective associations said at the event.


South Africa`s jewellery and diamond industry has been severely
affected, particularly because of the slump in Chinese tourism, said
Lorna Lloyd, CEO of the Jewellery Council of South Africa.


An inter-ministerial committee led by Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa
was established in August to review the regulations. The tourism
industry wasn`t properly consulted before the rules were introduced,
Frost said. South Africa is the only country in the world that
requires an unabridged birth certificate, he said.


"There is clear and unequivocal evidence, hard data on the table, that
these regulations have had a severe impact on a major economic sector
in our country," Frost said. "We urge the deputy president, we urge
you Sir, to scrap these regulations before any more damage is done."


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