South Africa has extended visa-free entry to citizens of 22 African nations, allowing stays ranging from 30 to 90 days depending on bilateral agreements and passport type. The policy, effective now, quietly challenges one of the continent's most persistent ironies — that Africans have long found it easier to travel to Europe than to one another's capitals. In opening its borders more widely, South Africa is not merely courting tourists; it is staking a claim as the connective tissue of a continent still learning to move freely within itself.