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Oct 24, 2025

Gambia Travel Advice Tightened: Finland Urges Heightened Caution in Border Areas

Gambia Travel Advice Tightened: Finland Urges Heightened Caution in Border Areas
Finland’s MFA also updated its travel bulletin for The Gambia on 24 October 2025, maintaining an overall level of “exercise special caution” but adding explicit warnings for the Casamance border region with Senegal. Although the small West-African nation remains popular with Nordic winter sun-seekers and Finnish development NGOs, sporadic clashes involving separatist groups in neighbouring Casamance have spilled over into Gambian territory.

The advisory instructs Finns to avoid large gatherings, nighttime travel in rural areas and overly persistent beach touts around the resort strip near Banjul. It reminds visitors that medical facilities outside the capital are limited and that power outages may disrupt digital payments—a growing problem for business travellers relying on cashless per-diem systems.

For companies managing short-term projects in fisheries, forestry and tourism, the MFA recommends formal security briefings, pre-arranged airport transfers and vetted local drivers. Organisations should register travellers through Finland’s online travel-notification portal so MFA can reach citizens quickly if tensions rise. HR teams are advised to review evacuation options via Dakar or charter flights, given The Gambia’s single-runway airport and a history of last-minute flight cancellations during political unrest.

The update follows a wider regional trend: both Sweden and Denmark revised their Gambia advisories earlier this month. Insurance brokers say premiums for personal accident and kidnap-and-ransom cover have increased by 10–15 percent for postings in the Senegambia corridor. Mobility professionals should budget accordingly and ensure staff have yellow-fever vaccination certificates, still required for entry even on connecting flights.

In the immigration sphere, Finland’s e-visa application volumes from Gambian nationals remain modest but are expected to rise now that Helsinki Airport’s winter-schedule offers three weekly Banjul charters via Lisbon. Employers hiring seasonal hospitality staff from West Africa must thus plan for longer background-check turn-around times and possible biometrics backlogs at regional visa centres.
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