EuroNews (English)

EU refers Malta to court over controvers­ial 'golden passport' scheme

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The European Commission has said it will take Malta to court over the member state's "golden passport" scheme.

Foreign citizens can buy Mal-tese and EU citizenshi­p in exchange for around € 1 million of investment under the controvers­ial programme.

The Commission said in a statement on Thursday that it decided to refer Malta to the EU's Court of Justice.

Cyprus and Bulgaria had also issued "golden passports" but both have since ended, leaving Malta as the only EU country with such a scheme.

Brussels has long criticised the initiative, arguing it encourages corruption and money laundering while complainin­g the investors do not have any obligation to live in the EU.

"EU values are not for sale," EU Justice Commission­er Didier Reynders wrote on Twitter.

"By offering citizenshi­p in ex-change for pre-determined payments or investment­s, without any real link to the Member State concerned, Malta is in breach of EU law," he added.

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The EU Commission first launched an infringeme­nt procedure against Malta in October 2020 to stop the controvers­ial practice.

The Maltese government has maintained that its system "does not contravene" the EU treaties and reiterates that its citizenshi­p policies fall within its national competence.

The sale of passports generat-ed more than € 800 million for Malta between 2014 and 2020, the government said.

The "golden passport" scheme was however suspended for Russian and Belarusian citizens in March following Moscow's invasion of Ukraine.

"Although this is a positive step, Malta continues to implement the scheme for nationals of all other nationalit­ies and has not expressed any intention to end it," the Commission's statement read.

"EU citizenshi­p automatica­lly gives the right to free movement, access to the EU internal market, and the right to vote and to be elected in European and local elections."

"For these reasons, the condi-tions for obtaining and losing nationalit­y, regulated by the national law of each Member State, are subject to due respect for EU law."

Some EU countries still operate programmes to sell so-called "golden visas" that allow foreign investors to obtain residency.

 ?? ?? Malta has argued that the scheme helped the government support businesses during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Malta has argued that the scheme helped the government support businesses during the COVID-19 pandemic.

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