Ryanair forces South Africans to prove nationality with Afrikaans test
>> Reuters
Published: 06 Jun 2022 06:13 PM BdST Updated: 06 Jun 2022 06:13 PM BdST
-
Ryanair aircraft are seen at dawn at Dublin airport Dublin, Ireland Mar 20, 2018. REUTERS/Clodagh Kilcoyne/File
Ryanair RYA.I is requiring South African passengers to prove their nationality before travelling by completing a test in Afrikaans, a language used by just by 12% of the population that has long been identified with apartheid and the white minority.
Europe's largest airline by passenger numbers, which does not operate flights to and from South Africa, said it required any UK-bound passengers from the country to fill in the "simple questionnaire" due to what it described as a high prevalence of fraudulent South African passports.
"If they are unable to complete this questionnaire, they will be refused travel and issued with a full refund," a spokesman for the Irish airline said.
The UK High Commission in South Africa said on Twitter that the test was not a British government requirement to enter the United Kingdom.
Ryanair said it would apply to any South African passport holder flying to Britain from another part of Europe on the carrier. The airline did not immediately respond to a query about why it would apply to those routes, given Britain says it is not a requirement.
Afrikaans is the third most spoken of 11 official languages in South Africa, used by 12% of the 58 million people in the country. It was considered the official language until the end of apartheid in 1994.
The language was born of Dutch settlement in South Africa in the 17th century, and has long been identified with racial classification and associated with the ideology of apartheid which was primarily enforced and propagated by the white minority National Party from 1948.
Its dominance under apartheid was seen as a symbol of inequality imposed on previous generations by restrictions on where people could live, work, go to school and own land.
-
At least 30 Nigerian soldiers killed in ambush
-
Protesters break into Libya's parliament
-
Germany hands Benin Bronzes back to Nigeria
-
Sudan security forces skirmish with demonstrators
-
Nigerian court orders death for homosexuality
-
8 killed in Sudan as protesters rally
-
Internet cut in Sudan capital ahead of pro-democracy protests
-
Anger, tears in S Africa after 21 likely accidentally poisoned
-
At least 30 Nigerian soldiers killed in ambush after mine attack
-
Protesters break into Libya's parliament building in Tobruk
-
Germany hands first of Benin Bronzes back to Nigeria
-
Sudan security forces skirmish with demonstrators after protest deaths
-
Nigerian Islamic court orders death by stoning for men convicted of homosexuality
-
Eight killed in Sudan as protesters rally on uprising anniversary
Most Read
- Bangladesh is gearing up to open its first river tunnel by the end of 2022
- Drastic fall in passenger numbers forces owners to cut Dhaka-Barishal launch fares
- Bangladesh to celebrate Eid-ul-Azha on Jul 10
- Biman Bangladesh jets collide again at Dhaka airport
- War crimes fugitive Aminul Haque took several trips to Pakistan, RAB says
- Amin Hilaly, ‘missing’ real estate boss named in NSU graft case, is found in Savar
- Bangladesh’s exports climb to record $52bn in FY22
- Bangladesh state minister apologises for power cuts fuelled by gas shortage
- RFL Electronics gets $23m in British loans to boost manufacturing
- Daylong chaos as expressway tolling slows traffic