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Which countries have the most powerful passports?

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FILE PHOTO: Thailand bans entry from 8 African countries over the coronavirus Omicron variant© Provided by Quartz FILE PHOTO: Thailand bans entry from 8 African countries over the coronavirus Omicron variantFor the third year in a row, Singapore and Japan have the most powerful passports in the world. According to data from the International Air Transport Association, analyzed by immigration consultants Henley& Partners, citizens of those two nations can travel to 192 of 227 destinations without having to secure a visa.

On the bottom of the list—seven places below North Korea—is Afghanistan, where nationals can gain visa-free access to just 26 countries and territories. Several states severed diplomatic ties with the beleaguered country after the Taliban seized power in August.

Henley’s analysts point out that the latest ranking reflects the greatest disparity between nations at the top and bottom of the list since it began the survey 17 years ago.

The top-ranked countries

RANK COUNTRY COUNTRIES NATIONALS CAN VISIT WITHOUT A VISA
1 Japan 192
Singapore 192
2 Germany 190
South Korea 190
3 Finland 189
Italy 189
Luxembourg 189
Spain 189
4 Austria 188
Denmark 188
France 188
Netherlands 188
Sweden 188
5 Ireland 187
Portugal 187
6 Belgium 186
New Zealand 186
Norway 186
Switzerland 186
United Kingdom 186
United States 186
7 Australia 185
Canada 185
Czech Republic 185
Greece 185
Malta 185
8 Hungary 183
Poland 183
9 Lithuania 182
Slovakia 182
10 Estonia 181
Latvia 181
Slovenia 181

The bottom 10

RANK COUNTRY COUNTRIES NATIONALS CAN VISIT WITHOUT A VISA
101 Congo (Democratic Republic) 42
Iran 42
102 Lebanon 41
Sri Lanka 41
Sudan 41
103 Bangladesh 40
Kosovo 40
Libya 40
104 North Korea 39
105 Nepal 37
Palestinian Territory 37
106 Somalia 34
107 Yemen 33
108 Pakistan 31
109 Syria 29
110 Iraq 28
111 Afghanistan 26

Covid’s impact on borders

Of course, politics isn’t the only thing at play during a pandemic. Covid-19 has countries asking travelers to present an ever-changing list of entry forms, QR codes, and testing reports to secure entry, and the emergence of new variants has resulted in a number of wholesale travel bans between countries, however limited in duration.

Most recently, the highly transmissible omicron variant resulted in a kind of “travel apartheid” against poorer nations, UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres said last month. Speaking in New York, Guterres decried blanket travel bans based on nationality as both “deeply unfair” and ultimately ineffective; he argued that only regular testing will slow the spread of covid.

Swiss health expert Andreas Brauchlin raised an additional point in a recent blog post: The freedom and mobility of a country’s citizens is likewise impacted by which vaccines they have access to, and whether they’ve been approved by the World Health Organization. “Vaccine passports, which once held the hope of negating the requirement for travel restrictions, are likely to expire after certain time periods,” Brauchlin wrote. “Seemingly, an individual’s health and vaccination status are as influential on mobility as their passport’s visa-free access.”

Which countries have the most powerful passports? (msn.com)

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