The cabinet has reviewed passport fees upwards to US$60 and US$200 for an ordinary and three-day passport respectively while the 24hour passport remained unchanged at USD318.00.
According to the Minister of Information, Publicity and Broadcasting Services Senator Monica Mutsvangwa, the cabinet agreed on measures be taken to deal effectively with the current situation which is affecting locals and diasporans, alike.
“Thus passport fees were reviewed to US$60; and $200 for a three-day passport issuance, pegged at the average US$:ZW$ exchange rate. An emergency 24-hours passport remains pegged at a cost of US$318.00. This will ensure appropriate cost-factored passport revenue. E-Passport fees are pegged at US$80.00.
“Cabinet noted that failure to provide passports on time is causing inconveniences to citizens, with the current backlog now at 256,000. The passport production factory has an installed production capacity of 8,000 passport booklets per day. However, the passport personalisation capacity is way below at 2,500 passports per day, while the installed quality assurance is further down at 2,000 passports per day.
“Foreign currency is required for the off-shore procurement of consumables. However, the current fees payable is the local currency are no longer viable due to the fact that the auction exchange rate, when applied to the fees charged translate to unviable returns on expenses. The production cost for a single passport is US$58.55,” she explained.
“The public is assured that passports issuance services will run uninterrupted until the backlog is cleared. The passport issuance shifts will be increased to three in order to expedite production. New machines are being acquired in order to improve operations. The training of personnel to work on the passport issuance programme will commence immediately,” she stated.