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Passport inequality, Bankole Oluwafemi's Nigerian perspective on global mobility

Cape Times

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March 25, 2025

LAST week, Nigerian travel content crea- tor Alma Asinobi attempted to break the Guinness World Record for the fastest journey across the world's seven conti- nents. The current record of 64 hours is held by Johnny Cruz Buckingham of the US, set in February 2025.

Passport inequality, Bankole Oluwafemi's Nigerian perspective on global mobility

Asinobi's journey began on March 20th from Antarctica, taking her through Chile, the Dominican Republic, Spain, Egypt, and Dubai. Her record-breaking ambitions were ultimately dashed by the obstacles that come with travelling while Nigerian - including being denied boarding a flight to Perth, which delayed her arrival in Sydney. Total travel time: 71 hours and 35 minutes.

Although she failed to break Buck- ingham's record, Asinobi's journey has ignited fresh conversations about pass- port inequality and travel restrictions faced by citizens of developing nations.

It's a reality even Africa's wealthiest person, Aliko Dangote, has acknowl- edged. During a 2023 Africa CEO Forum conversation with CNN's Larry Madowo, Dangote revealed that despite his high-net-worth individual (HNWI) status, his Nigerian passport subjects him to dozens of visa applications annually - just to move around the continent, let alone the rest of the world. He pointed out that, HNWI privileges notwithstand- ing, he enjoys considerably less freedom of movement than an everyday Western passport holder.

Meet Bankole Oluwafemi

I first encountered Bankole ‘Lord Banks’ Oluwafemi’s work back in 2013 when TechCabal was still finding its feet as one of the first dedicated African tech publications. Long before the current wave of ‘Africa rising’ tech narratives became fashionable, he was document- ing Nigeria's nascent startup ecosystem from cramped co-working spaces in Lagos, often navigating through the city's notorious traffic to chase stories with nothing but a notepad, curiosity and an unwavering belief that African tech deserved serious coverage.

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Agriculture Department rejects claims of regulatory collapse in fertilisers and farm feeds

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Oosthuizen warns Blitzboks must hit the ground running

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Nedbank to pay Transnet R600m in confidential settlement

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Vodacom invests over R1.1bn to boost network infrastructure across KwaZulu-Natal

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time to read

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Transnet celebrates milestone of 200th Traxx 23E locomotive

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South Africans are still battling the effects of long COVID

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time to read

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Octodec Investments boosts dividends amid resilient inner-city portfolio performance

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Van den Berg warns depleted Wales will 'chase lost causes'

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FRANK STEWART BRIDGE

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Activists haul government to court over claims of citizens fighting for Israel

ATTORNEY and human rights defender Ziyaad Ebrahim Patel and Safoudien Bester, a Palestinian Solidarity activist have launched a high court application to hold the government accountable to its international and other obligations following allegations that a group of South Africans was unlawfully serving in the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) in the armed conflict in the Gaza Strip.

time to read

1 min

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