The African Union is taking terrific steps by introducing a Pan-African passport. In its just ended summit in Kigali- the AUC shines light and brings onboard discussions centering on a Pan-African Passport.
Dr. Nkosazana Dhlamini Zuma, the Chairperson of the African Union Commission, asserted that a Pan-African Passport “is a steady step toward the objective of creating a strong, prosperous and integrated Africa driven by its own citizens and capable of taking its rightful place on the world stage”.
In her mind, it yields some sort of solutions to some of Africa’s long standing problems.
Many across the continent seem excited about a continental African passport that will put an end to trade barriers and non-access to borders by nationals of other African countries.
Many also think that it’s a remarkable roadmap to developing unity among African Countries – the dream of the United States of Africa as proposed by Dr. Kwame Nkrumah, Ghana’s first democratically elected African head of state.
Nkrumah freed his native country from British rule in 1957 and said that “the independence of Ghana is meaningless unless it is linked up to the total liberation of Africa”. In May 1993, in Addis Ababa, at a meeting of thirty two African head of States, he further warned, “African Unity now or we perish”.
Moreover, he admonished his comrades to lay down foundations of the United States of Africa for it would be late in the future. He brilliantly deliberated on the need for a single African monetary system, defense mechanism, currency and passport. Unfortunately his proposals were rejected – which menaces Africa is yet to recover.
As people have exuberantly subscribed to a Pan-African Passport-the realities they fail to see is the effects of the colonial boundaries coupled with the hate it has created in Africa.
The unsettled barriers which many have still not seen are the problems that need to be remedied first in achieving an African passport which will gradually lead to genuine steps towards unity.
There are still a lot of barriers to be remedied, one of which is Xenophobia in South Africa. In April of 2015, we saw awful, violent and brutal acts committed against other Africans by South Africans, who claimed that they stole their jobs. Many were tortured, burned, wounded, while some lost their lives.
In addition, Equatorial Guinea, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Sudan etc. have migration restrictions. Nationals of other African countries require VISA before entering these territories.
Today in Africa, when an African from Morocco tells you that he’s a Moroccan, it is quite different from an American saying I’m from Colorado. The intentions are just different!
The Americans see themselves to be the same-and would do anything to protect their union. People are not judged on the basis of which state they come from. In a nutshell, what I am trying to point out is this:
The idea of producing a Pan – African passport is awesome but what needs to be prioritized most is ending the hatred that Africans still practiced against one another.
The current breed of leadership in Africa as George Ayittey would put “is a far cry from the ideological traditional breed of leadership that emerged in the 60’s and 70’s”- that surfaced the issue of a Pan-African Passport.
The leaders in the 60’s and 70’s such as Nkrumah, Nyerere, and Sekou Toure etc. were Pan-African conscious and were willing to sacrifice anything for the attainment of African Unity.
In February of 1966, when Kwame Nkrumah was overthrown, Sekou Toure called him and made him Vice President of the Guinean government.
Furthermore, when Miriam Makeba was exiled from South Africa following her subsequent harassment by the US government, she went to Guinea and- was appointed Guinea’s official delegate to the United Nation.
There are so many instances of such, like Nyerere giving Makeba a Tanzanian Passport, and Guinea giving Stockley Carmichael (Kwame Ture) and his family a space to stay in Guinea.
The pondering yet unanswered question is, do we currently have leaders like those in the 60’s and 70’s to pursue this cause for real? I guess no. Until we have that generation of leaders in Africa-a Pan-African Passport to me will be fruitless and a mere cliché.
While I’m not pessimistic about a Pan-African Passport, I think a lot has to be done to achieve the dreams of our revolutionary fathers. Unity is significant to that dream. With united Africans, a united Africa is sure.
About Author:
Ansumana M.M Konneh is a young Liberian student, and an ardent believer in the philosophy of Kwame Nkrumah. Email: [email protected] or 0775926845