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Japan Transportation News

Japanese Passport Now World's Most Powerful (cnn.com) 175

According to the Henley Passport Index, compiled by global citizenship and residence advisory firm Henley & PartnersCitizens, Japan now has the most powerful passport on the planet. From a report: Having gained visa-free access to Myanmar earlier this month, Japanese citizens can now enjoy visa-free or visa-on-arrival access to a whopping 190 destinations around the world -- knocking Singapore, with 189 destinations, into second place. Germany, which began 2018 in the top spot, is now in third place with 188 destinations, tied with France and South Korea. Uzbekistan lifted visa requirements for French nationals on October 5, having already granted visa-free access to Japanese and Singaporean citizens in early February.
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Japanese Passport Now World's Most Powerful

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  • by harvey the nerd ( 582806 ) on Sunday October 14, 2018 @03:39PM (#57477276)
    Whether the passport does more to get you favors or "Out", is more important than "In".
  • by sombragris ( 246383 ) on Sunday October 14, 2018 @03:43PM (#57477286) Homepage

    My country (Paraguay) is 34th with visa-free access to 143 destinations. Glad to see it placed so high given the fact that it is a small and relatively unimportant country.

    • Re:34th here! (Score:5, Informative)

      by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Sunday October 14, 2018 @04:19PM (#57477400)

      This raises an interesting question: What is the worst passport to have?

      I figured it would be North Korea, but nope, it is Afghanistan.

      North Korea isn't even in the bottom 10. Eleven countries allow visa free travel to North Koreas, and 35 more issue visas on arrival.

      Here's the bottom ten:
      Iran
      Ethiopia
      Lebanon
      Sudan
      Yemen
      Somalia
      Syria
      Pakistan
      Iraq
      Afghanistan

      So if you want to be at the bottom, you need to be an exporter of terrorists.

      So who allows visa free access to Afghans? According to Wikipedia [wikipedia.org], they are Dominica, Haiti, Micronesia, Saint Vincent, North Cyprus, Cook Islands, and Pitcairn Island.

      • South Africa is pretty bad. I have neighbours from there and they need to get a visa to visit their own country. Not to mention pretty much every other country on earth.
        • Just checked the index [henleypassportindex.com], there's a surprising 102 countries that an SA passport will get you into. Less surprising is what those countries are: Places like Kyrgyzstan, Kosovo, Niue, and a pile of African countries and a few South American ones. Anywhere else, Europe, North America, Australasia, nope. Some, like the US, you may as well not bother applying for on an SA passport even if, on paper, you can get a visa.
        • South Africa is pretty bad.

          64 countries allow visa free entry to South Africans, and another 33 issue visas on arrival.

          South Africa is near the middle.

          Here is the list: Passport rank by country [passportindex.org]

          • South Africa is pretty bad.

            64 countries allow visa free entry to South Africans, and another 33 issue visas on arrival.

            It depends on the country. Visa-free entry to Afghanistan, Yemen, Syria, Somalia, Congo, the South Sudan, and South Ossetia isn't exactly a selling point for a particular passport. See my other comment, you need a visa for most of the countries you'd actually want to visit, and for some even though you can in theory get a visa in practice you can't.

      • And North Cyprus isn't a real country anyway.

    • My country (Paraguay) is 34th with visa-free access to 143 destinations. Glad to see it placed so high given the fact that it is a small and relatively unimportant country.

      That's 15 less than Mexico! Time to build another wall.

      • That's 15 less than Mexico! Time to build another wall.

        To keep out Paraguayans, we can just make the Panama Canal wider.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Glad to see it placed so high given the fact that it is a small and relatively unimportant country.

      Being important in this case is secondary to being remarkable (for both good and bad reasons). Unimportant and unremarkable countries fair well for visa issues. Being known for good reasons isn't relevant, you need to ensure you're not known for bad reasons.

  • by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Sunday October 14, 2018 @03:55PM (#57477332)

    Japanese citizens can now enjoy visa-free or visa-on-arrival access to a whopping 190 destinations around the world ...

    MasterCard ecstatic.

  • Meanwhile... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by GerryGilmore ( 663905 ) on Sunday October 14, 2018 @03:59PM (#57477342)
    ...as an American citizen, I can be arrested for visiting Cuba, 90 miles away. Why? Something, something Communism.....
    • Re:Meanwhile... (Score:5, Informative)

      by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Sunday October 14, 2018 @04:48PM (#57477520)

      ...as an American citizen, I can be arrested for visiting Cuba, 90 miles away.

      It is legal to visit. You just can't spend money there. But enforcement is lax, and nobody really cares.

    • ...as an American citizen, I can be arrested for visiting Cuba, 90 miles away. Why? Something, something Communism.....

      Um, yeah "something something communism". "something something brutal dictatorship". "something something gulags" "something something political prisoners" "something something political executions"

      You do know that communist dictatorships are real, right?

      You might want to learn something something about it, instead of trying so hard to pose as being cool.

    • by Strider- ( 39683 )

      So one of the more surreal experiences of my life happened when I travelled to GTMO back in 2007 or so. I was standing in line at the NX at Marine Hill, when my mobile phone rang. I picked it up and answered, then looked around and realized that everyone was looking at me like I had grown antennae. That's when it dawned on me that my Canadian phone had happily roamed onto the Cuban cell network while none of them had a working phone.

    • It's weird, they list Cuba as a country where Canadians needs a visa. Must be included in plane ticket price and pretty automatic. Not sure why that doesn't count as a VOA.

    • The same reason the US hates Iran so much more then other countries with worse human rights records. Because they overthrew an American friendly dictatorship for American hostile dictatorship.

  • by redelm ( 54142 ) on Sunday October 14, 2018 @04:23PM (#57477408) Homepage

    It is a start to recognize visa-free is a good thing. But their list ought not to simply count countries, but weigh them by something -- population, GDP, area, /. postings, ... ). Simple binary dot-product.

    After all, visa-free to Russia or China is more useful than visa-free to Uzbekistan or Mongolia for most people.

    • by novakyu ( 636495 )

      I would much rather count net. Bilateral agreements are cheap and plentiful (the whole thing is symmetric; no real reason for restriction in a peaceful world). Whether your passport is powerful or not ought to be determined by how many countries can you get in without a visa while the citizens of that country cannot enter yours likewise?

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • But their list ought not to simply count countries, but weigh them by something

      That depends on what you're measuring in your success.

      Better trading: GDP.
      Better choice of travel destinations: area.
      Better treatment of people by foreign governments: number of countries.

  • EU passport (Score:3, Interesting)

    by dremon ( 735466 ) on Sunday October 14, 2018 @04:24PM (#57477412)
    This rating is only for visa-free travel. Passport of the EU country doesn't only give you visa-free access to the majority of countries but also a right to live and work in any of the 28 member states. That should be really top rated but it isn't. (and yeah, good bye UK, you got what you deserve for your ultimate stupidity)
  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Sunday October 14, 2018 @06:05PM (#57477774)

    When I read the headline, I wondered if Japanese passports now transformed into some sort of giant mecha creature.

  • by aberglas ( 991072 )

    Aint nobody gettin' in here without a visa, filled out in triplicate.

    Except those pesky Kiwis, but we have been sending them back pretty sharply recently.

    And there are so many other countries that charge us for nasty visas when they do not charge anyone else...

    • by Harlequin80 ( 1671040 ) on Sunday October 14, 2018 @07:17PM (#57477964)

      You know that Australia is 7th on the list right?

    • by jrumney ( 197329 )

      And there are so many other countries that charge us for nasty visas when they do not charge anyone else...

      It's called reciprocity, you get back what you dish out.

    • Afaict Australia isn't really much different from the US or Canada in terms of advanced authorisation requirements for people arriving by air (which we all know is how most people travel internationally). They just chose to consider their online travel authorisations Visas rather than denying they are Visas like the US and Canada do.

  • The passport owned to Chuck Norris, it makes all over passports run for the shredder

  • As a japanese resident of over 20 years I still wouldn't give up my current citizenship to naturalize even though it'd be easy.

"I am, therefore I am." -- Akira

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