Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Cyprus broke the rules in granting ‘golden passports’

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Cyprus’ tarnished passports for cash scheme operated for 13 years with minimal oversight as the government broke the rules in granting citizenshi­p to investors, an inquiry ruled.

An inquiry into the scheme was completed earlier in the week with the head of the probe, former supreme court judge Myron Nikolatos, saying there was “criminal and political” responsibi­lity.

A committee of inquiry set up last September investigat­ed the issuing of so-called ‘golden passports’ between 2007 and August 2020, before the scheme was scrapped in November.

“It is obvious the Cyprus Investment Programme operating between 2007 and 2020 with gaps and deficienci­es, an inadequate legislativ­e framework and almost no regulatory framework,” Nikolatos told reporters Monday.

A damning report said that over half (53%) of the 6,779 passports granted were done so illegally, encouraged by a due diligence vacuum or insufficie­nt background checks.

The controvers­ial passport-for-investment scheme was abolished last year over corruption allegation­s.

The cabinet had the final say on approving each passport applicatio­n by a wealthy investor.

Cypriot government spokespers­on Kyriacos Koushous said the administra­tion was determined to “punish” those responsibl­e.

He said completion of the report “closes, or should close, a prolonged cycle of political tension and toxic climate, which primarily targeted the President and his government”.

Last November, the Mediterran­ean island dropped the passport scheme after Al Jazeera aired a documentar­y showing reporters posing as fixers for a Chinese businessma­n seeking a Cypriot passport despite having a criminal record.

Parliament speaker Demetris Syllouris and an opposition MP were secretly filmed allegedly trying to facilitate a passport for the fugitive investor.

They later resigned, although both insisted they were innocent of any wrongdoing.

Al Jazeera reported that dozens of those who applied were under criminal investigat­ion, internatio­nal sanctions or even serving prison sentences.

Nicosia had long faced pressure from Brussels to reform the scheme over concerns it may have helped organised crime gangs infiltrate the European Union.

Cyprus had argued it had attracted necessary investment following the island’s 2013 economic meltdown.

Nicosia issued thousands of passports under the scheme, allowing investors to acquire one in exchange for an investment of EUR 2.5 mln, netting over EUR 7 bln for state coffers over the years.

Money laundering programme.

The hefty report said authoritie­s rubber-stamped citizenshi­p requests without following due process or proper scrutiny.

Much to the chagrin of Brussels, the scheme attracted wealthy foreign investors because a passport from EU member Cyprus allowed free travel and residence within the 27-member bloc.

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