By Tata Mbunwe
Germany has opened four new Schengen visa application centers in Cameroon, Nigeria, and Cyprus to improve access for applicants and address a long-standing problem of visa rejection.
The centers are located in Yaounde (Cameroon), Abuja and Lagos (Nigeria), and Nicosia (Cyprus), a move that aims to expand Germany’s visa processing network.
This initiative is part of a renewed seven-year partnership with VFS Global, and it aims to streamline visa processing, reduce waiting times, and enhance service delivery.
The centers will handle document collection, biometric enrollment, and appointment scheduling, alleviating pressure on existing facilities such as the German Embassy in Abuja and the Consulate General in Lagos, which previously managed Nigeria’s applications.
The expansion addresses growing demand from African and Middle Eastern nationals seeking entry to Germany for education, healthcare, tourism, and employment.
The new centers are expected to improve accessibility for applicants in these regions, where travel to Germany has been a key priority.
African applicants have historically faced high Schengen visa rejection rates.
In 2024, data from the European Commission and LAGO Collective indicated that African countries recorded some of the highest refusal rates globally.
Comoros was leading the visa rejection list, with 61.3%, followed by Guinea-Bissau (51%), Ghana (47.5%), Mali (46.1%), Sudan (42.3%), and Senegal (41.2%).
Six of the top ten countries with the highest rejection rates are African.
Several factors have accounted for it, including stringent documentation requirements, limited access to reliable financial records, and perceptions of immigration risk.
The high rejection rates have resulted in significant financial losses, with African applicants losing approximately €60 million ($67.5 million) in non-refundable fees in 2024.
The European Commission noted that countries with lower application volumes often experience disproportionately high refusal rates, contributing to frustration among travelers.
The new centers are expected to stem this problem and reverse the trend.
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