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Wednesday, March 2, 2016

World's best and worst passports revealed

When it comes to crossing international frontiers, there's one travel document that opens more doors than any other.
And it isn't a U.S. passport.
German citizens, it seems, have the potential for the greatest mobility in the travel world.
With a German passport, travelers can enter 177 out of 218 countries and territories without a visa, according to the 2016 Visa Restrictions Index.
The list, compiled annually since 2006 by London-based consulting firm Henley and Partners and the International Air Transport Association, ranks nations by how freely their citizens, unencumbered by immigration red tape, can explore the planet.
    This year, it shows that citizenship of a superpower doesn't carry the clout it once did.
    The United States, which ranked first in 2014 and 2015, has now dropped to fourth place.
    Immediately behind Germany, holding its position as runner-up for the second year running, is Sweden with visa-free access to 176 countries.

    Finland, France, Italy, Spain, and the United Kingdom -- which had topped the list since 2013 -- are now tied for third place, making Northern and Western European citizens the most privileged in international travel.
    Japan and South Korea were also among the group in the top three in 2014 and 2015, but have slid down to fifth and sixth place respectively this year.
    Belgium, Denmark and Netherlands stand alongside the U.S. in fourth.
    At the bottom of the list, labeled countries with the "worst passports," are Afghanistan, at 104, followed by Pakistan, Iraq, Somalia, and Syria.
    U.S. passport policy changing
    U.S. passport policy changing 01:17

    Freedom factors

    Border controls at the airport in Prague, the Czech Republic, were lifted in 2008 as it became a member state of the border-free Schengen Area along with other newcomers.
    Fiddling with the Index's interactive features yields results rich for analysis.
    With cumulative data from 11 years, the site allows users to compare multiple countries' scores on a list, a color-coded world map, and a graph, or chart a country's progress regarding visa policies over the decade.
    Henley and Partners, a firm specializing in immigration and citizenship services, explains that visa requirements "reflect strongly" on countries' relationships.
    "Criteria that a country will consider when considering giving visa-free access to citizens of another country may include diplomatic relationships between the countries, reciprocal visa arrangements, security risks, or risks of violation of visa terms," a representative of Henley and Partners tells CNN.
    Observing that no country has dropped more than three places while some made huge leaps, the company concludes that freedom of movement, in terms of "visa-free access," is generally improving around the world.

    East Timor, which gained independence in 1999 and signed a mutual visa-waiver agreement with the EU in May of 2015, made the steepest climb of 33 places to land at 57. Meanwhile, Colombia, at 50th, moved up 25 spots.
    Hong Kong, a special administrative region of China, fell from 16th to 20th place.
    A surge in country wealth that allows citizens to flash their tourism cash may also mean a warmer welcome from other destinations.
    China is now at 87, tied with Cambodia, having risen from 93rd place in 2015 after countries likeJapan, South Korea and the United States relaxed visa restrictions for Chinese tourists.
    It's now above Chad and below Sierra Leone.
    The United Kingdom and Australia have also announced plans to further ease requirements to attract Chinese tourists.

    Striking disparity

    The large disparity between different citizens' travel mobilities is striking.
    Wealthy countries continue to afford citizens free movements and opportunities around the world, while countries torn by war and conflict remain stuck on the bottom rung of the list.
    Afghanistan has come last since 2010.
    Those uprooted by violence and fleeing wars or economic desperation have also been contributing to the rising tide of refugees and migrants entering Europe.
    Retaining the Index's top spot from the last two years, Germany received more asylum seekers than any other industrialized country in 2014, according to the United Nations.

    World's best passports (by number of countries granting visa-free access)

    1) Germany -- 177
    2) Sweden -- 176
    3) Finland, France, Italy, Spain, UK -- 175
    4) Belgium, Denmark, Netherlands, U.S. -- 174
    5) Austria, Japan, Singapore -- 173
    6) Canada, Ireland, Luxembourg, Norway, Portugal, South Korea, Switzerland -- 172
    7) Greece, New Zealand -- 171
    8) Australia -- 169
    9) Malta -- 168
    10) Czech Republic, Hungary, Iceland -- 167
    11) Slovakia -- 165
    12) Liechtenstein, Malaysia, Slovenia -- 164
    13) Latvia -- 163
    14) Estonia, Lithuania -- 162
    15) Poland -- 161
    16) Monaco -- 160
    17) Cyprus -- 159
    18) San Marino -- 156
    19) Chile -- 155
    20) Hong Kong -- 154

    World's worst passports

    94) Liberia -- 43
    95) Burundi, North Korea, Myanmar -- 42
    96) Bangladesh, Democratic Republic of Congo, Lebanon, Sri Lanka -- 39
    97) Kosovo, South Sudan, Yemen -- 38
    98) Eritrea, Ethiopia, Iran, Nepal, Palestinian Territory, Sudan -- 37
    99) Libya -- 36
    100) Syria -- 32
    101) Somalia -- 31
    102) Iraq -- 30
    103) Pakistan -- 29
    104) Afghanistan -- 25

    Migrant crisis: Russia and Syria 'weaponising' migration

    Russia and Syria are "weaponising" migration as an aggressive strategy towards Europe, the senior Nato commander in Europe has said.
    US Gen Philip Breedlove also said criminals, extremists and fighters were hiding in the flow of migrants.
    Migrants are continuing to accumulate in Greece, after Macedonia stopped allowing more than a trickle through.
    New figures suggest last year's total of one million seaborne migrants could be reached this year months beforehand.
    The International Organization for Migration (IOM)said nearly 129,500 migrants had arrived by sea so far in 2016, plus another 1,545 by land - and 418 had drowned or were missing.
    The European Commission has now adopted plans to disburse €700m (£543m; $760m) of emergency humanitarian funding between 2016-18 to help tackle the crisis, says humanitarian aid commissioner Christos Stylianides.
    The crisis has caused tensions to surge, with Greece struggling to cope with the influx and the European Commission criticising Macedonia for using tear gas on a crowd of migrants on Monday morning.
    "The scenes we just saw are not our idea of managing the crisis," said EC spokesman Margaritis Schinas.
    In the "Jungle" camp of migrants at Calais, France, the demolition of the southern half of the camp continues - in what the government has termed a "humanitarian" operation but which critics say will just leave hundreds of desperate migrants without shelter in winter.

    'On the road'

    Gen Breedlove is the head of the US European Command as well as Nato's Supreme Allied Commander Europe.
    He told the US Senate Armed Services Committee that the crisis was allowing Russia to use non-military means to create divisions in the Nato alliance and Europe.
    Migrant route to Germany map
    Russia and Syria's leader Bashar al-Assad, Gen Breedlove said, were "deliberately weaponising migration in an attempt to overwhelm European structures and break European resolve".
    He cited the use of barrel bombs - unguided weapons - against civilians in Syria. The only purpose of these indiscriminate attacks was to terrorise Syrian citizens and "get them on the road" to create problems for other countries, Gen Breedlove said.
    Gen Breedlove added that violent extremists, fighters and criminals - including elements from the extremist Islamic State group - were in the mix of migrants.
    He said he had requested more US forces be permanently based in Europe. Their numbers have dropped from a Cold War high of half a million to about 62,000 today.
    Image copyrightAFP
    Image captionThe demolitions of migrants' makeshift shift at the Jungle camp in Calais is in its third day - but critics say the problem is just being moved around
    The plan agreed by the EU's executive body, the European Commission, means EU aid agencies would for the first time work directly with the UN and other groups inside Europe, using monies usually allocated to emergencies outside its borders.
    The plan would allocate €300m this year, and €200m each the following two years, to help any EU state deal with the migration crisis.
    It still needs approval by the European Council and Parliament. BBC Europe correspondent Chris Morris says that even if such funding can be deployed quickly, the EU also needs to stem the flow of new arrivals. That would mean better co-operation with Turkey, he adds.
    Greece has asked the European Commission for nearly €500m in assistance to help care for 100,000 asylum seekers.
    "We cannot bear the strain of all the refugees coming here," government spokeswoman Olga Gerovassili was quoted as saying.
    Despite commitments to relocate 66,400 refugees from Greece, EU member states have so far pledged just 1,539 spaces and only 325 people have actually been relocated, Reuters quoted a spokesman for the UN refugee agency as saying.
    European Council President Donald Tusk is due to visit Croatia and Macedonia on Wednesday before moving on for talks in both Greece and Turkey in advance of a special EU summit next Monday.

    US election 2016: Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump rack up more wins

    Democrat Hillary Clinton and Republican Donald Trump have each won the most states on the biggest day of the race for the US presidential nominations.
    Mr Trump won seven states while his closest rival, Ted Cruz, took three. The third-placed Republican, Marco Rubio, came in with one.
    Speaking in his home state of Texas, Mr Cruz urged other Republicans to quit the race and join him against Mr Trump.
    Democrat Bernie Sanders had wins in four states.
    Super Tuesday saw 11 states voting, from Massachusetts in the east to Alaska in the north-west. A 12th state, Colorado, held a caucus - won by Mr Sanders - but does not actually select its delegates until April.
    Tuesday allocates nearly a quarter of Republican delegates, and about a fifth of Democratic delegates, who will elect their respective presidential candidates at party conventions in July. No candidate has yet won enough delegates to secure their party's nomination.

    Favourites

    Mrs Clinton, a former secretary of state, and Mr Trump, a property tycoon, entered Super Tuesday as favourites to win the vast majority of states for their respective parties.
    The Democratic frontrunner won in Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee, Virginia, Arkansas, Texas and Massachusetts, polling well among blocs of black voters.
    Delivering her victory speech from Miami, having moved her campaign to Florida for the primary there on 15 March, in common with other candidates, she appeared to already be looking towards a potential presidential race against Mr Trump.
    "The stakes in this election have never been higher and the rhetoric we're hearing on the other side has never been lower," she said.

    Donald Trump won the Republican primaries in Alabama, Georgia, Massachusetts, Tennessee, Virginia, Arkansas and Vermont.
    The billionaire insisted he had "expanded the Republican party", referring to higher turnout from a broad demographic in states that have already voted.
    He described himself as a "unifier" who could put internal fighting in the Republican party behind him and told reporters in Florida: "Once we get all this finished, I'm going after one person - Hillary Clinton."

    BBC Super Tuesday logo

    Super Tuesday states won:

    • Donald Trump (Republican): Alabama, Georgia, Massachusetts, Tennessee, Virginia, Arkansas, Vermont
    • Ted Cruz (Republican): Texas, Oklahoma, Alaska
    • Marco Rubio (Republican): Minnesota
    • Hillary Clinton (Democrat): Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee, Virginia, Arkansas, Texas, Massachusetts, and the South Pacific territory of American Samoa
    • Bernie Sanders (Democrat): Vermont, Oklahoma, Minnesota, Colorado

    Mr Trump, a former reality TV star known for his controversial policies on immigration, has stunned the Republican establishment to become the party's front-runner.
    He faced heavy criticism this week over his failure to disavow David Duke, a leader of the white supremacist Ku Klux Klan, who endorsed him. He later said he had on several occasions in the past disavowed Mr Duke.
    Victory in Alaska handed Texas Senator Ted Cruz his third state of the night, after his home state and Oklahoma.
    "Our campaign is the only campaign that has beaten, that can beat and that will beat Donald Trump,'' he told supporters at the Redneck Country Club in Stafford, Texas.
    Having managed to win only in Minnesota, Marco Rubio will need to shine in Florida, his home state, if he hopes to present a serious challenge to others.
    Hillary Clinton in in Miami, Florida, 1 MarchImage copyrightGetty Images
    Image captionMrs Clinton is fighting her second primary season having lost to Barack Obama in 2008
    Donald Trump in Palm Beach, Florida, 1 MarchImage copyrightGetty Images
    Image captionDonald Trump has pitched himself to Republicans as a can-do businessman
    Marco Rubio plays with a cut-out of his own face at a rally in Miami, FloridaImage copyrightReuters
    Image captionMarco Rubio, seen here playing with a cut-out of his own face, has the support of senior Republicans like Senator Bob Dole
    Ted Cruz at a campaign rally in Houston, Texas, 1 MarchImage copyrightReuters
    Image captionTed Cruz badly needed the win in his home state to stay in the race
    US Democratic presidential candidate and U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders is joined onstage by his wife Jane at his Super Tuesday rally in Burlington, Vermont on 1 March 2016.Image copyrightReuters
    Image captionBernie Sanders has vowed to to fight "every one" of the remaining contests with Mrs Clinton

    Analysis: Jon Sopel, BBC North America editor, Florida

    Republican U.S. presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks about the results of Super Tuesday primary and caucus voting as former rival candidate Governor Chris Christie (L) and his son Eric (R) look on during a news conference in Palm Beach, Florida on 1 March 2016.Image copyrightReuters
    This was a strikingly different Donald Trump who met reporters on Tuesday night. His tone was conciliatory. He was quietly spoken. He said he would be a unifier - of the Republican Party, of the nation. He didn't crow and he didn't claim to be the nominee, but he clearly thinks the primary race is effectively over.
    This was a man not looking to the next primary, the next bit of slog along that long and exhausting road. This was a man with an eye on the much bigger fight in November, and his presumptive opponent Hillary Clinton.
    He graciously congratulated Ted Cruz over his wins in Texas and Oklahoma. No mention last night of him being the biggest liar he's ever met. And no demeaning of Marco Rubio either. Were it not for the unmistakable blond hair and the family members at his side, you might have been forgiven for thinking an imposter had entered the room.
    It was Donald 2.0 that we had with us. The trouble, though, when you upload a new operating system (OS) is there are inevitable bugs and glitches. And the new OS takes a bit of getting used to.
    And there will be many who say what brought me to the product was the original software. So can and will the new magnanimous Donald be able to keep up this new modus operandi, and will his army of fans like what they see?

    Bernie Sanders, a self-styled democratic socialist with a following among young people and liberals, won in his home state Vermont as well as Minnesota and Oklahoma.
    Addressing cheering supporters in Vermont, Mr Sanders declared, "We are not going to let the Donald Trumps of the world divide us."
    The proportion of votes won equates to the number of delegates who will then go on to the Democratic and Republican parties' national conventions in July to officially choose the nominees for the presidency.
    The election itself, on 8 November, will see America vote for a successor to Barack Obama, a Democratic president standing down after two terms in office which have seen the Republicans take control of both houses of Congress.
    BBC map
    BBC map

    Election countdown - selected dates

    Voters in Colorado, 1 MarchImage copyrightAFP
    5 March - The next round sees contests in five states: Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Nebraska
    15 March - Primaries in five states including Florida (345 delegates), home state of Marco Rubio
    19 April - New York (386 delegates)
    7 June - California (718 delegates)
    14 June - Final primary of the season, a Democratic contest in the District of Columbia
    18-21 July - Republican convention, nominee picked
    25-28 July - Democratic convention, nominee picked
    8 November - US presidential election