Yahoo – AFP,
October 23, 2015
People walk on the beach in the upmarket suburb of Camps Bay, one of the most popular tourist destinations in Cape Town, on January 11, 2014 (AFP Photo/ Rodger Bosch) |
Johannesburg
(AFP) - South Africa said Friday it will overhaul its controversial new visa
regulations after the tourist arrivals fell by six percent earlier this year,
the biggest decline in six years.
Introduced
in June, the new rules demanded that visitors apply for visas in person at
South African embassies to have their biometric information taken.
But after
months of digging in its heels, the Department of Home Affairs has announced it
would ease these restrictions.
"In
countries where there is no South African mission, the Department of Home
Affairs will receive applications, including by post, and capture biometrics of
travellers on arrival at ports of entry," the government's statement said.
"To
address concerns around the geographical spread of countries like China, India
and Russia, certain measures will be put in place to ease the process of
application, in particular for tourists."
The
decision comes after President Jacob Zuma established a committee in August to
investigate reports that the tourism industry had been badly impacted by the
change.
Tourism
Minister Derek Hanekom said in July figures for the first quarter of the year
showed a "worrying drop".
According
to Statistic South Africa, tourists from China decreased by 38 percent in the
first quarter compared with the previous period in 2014. India was down by 13
percent.
The
six-percent decline in overall tourist arrivals was the biggest fall since 2009
at the height of the global financial crisis.
The
regulations still require children from non-visa-exempt countries to travel
with unabridged birth certificates in addition to their passports when entering
or leaving the country.
The rule
has caused widespread confusion, but Home Affairs has strongly defended the
measure as necessary in the fight against child trafficking.
The
department is also considering the introduction of long-term multiple entry
visas for frequent travellers.
South
Africa is one of the leading tourism destinations in Africa, with officials
aiming to attract 12 million international tourists by 2018.
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