The Star Malaysia

Cyprus to probe how Cambodian elite got EU passports

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ATHENS: Cyprus said it would investigat­e the circumstan­ces under which relatives of Cambodia’s prime minister were granted citizenshi­p and did not rule out revoking passports if necessary.

A Reuters investigat­ion published last week revealed that family members and allies of long-time Prime Minister Hun Sen have overseas assets worth tens of millions of dollars and have used their wealth to buy foreign citizenshi­p – a practice Hun Sen has decried as unpatrioti­c.

The Cypriot probe, announced by government spokespers­on Prodromos Prodromou, would review citizenshi­p granted to eight relatives and persons close to Hun Sen.

“An investigat­ion will take place for these cases, and if anything untoward is establishe­d decisions will be taken, not excluding revoking citizenshi­p, if that is warranted,” Prodromou told journalist­s yesterday after a Cabinet meeting.

Cyprus has had a citizenshi­p for investment plan in place since 2013,

2mil under which a minimum (RM9.3mil) investment can buy a passport and visa-free travel throughout the European Union.

Eight relatives or allies of Hun Sen – including Cambodia’s police chief, who has been instrument­al in clamping down on dissent, and its finance minister – sought Cypriot citizenshi­p in 2016 and 2017, Reuters reporting showed.

One relative obtained citizenshi­p because she was deemed “financiall­y dependent” on her mother, only months after spending £5.5mil (RM29.7mil) on a London apartment.

Hun Sen had previously denied claims from the opposition that members of his inner circle had passports from third countries and lived the high life overseas.

Reuters’ disclosure­s triggered demands from Cypriot opposition parties for answers from authoritie­s, with one party questionin­g how passports could be given to individual­s “who probably couldn’t find Cyprus on the map”.

The Cypriot government had repeatedly declined to comment on individual cases, citing data protection laws.

Cypriot media had cited sources saying there was no question of revoking citizenshi­p.

In his comments yesterday, Prodromou referred to naturalisa­tions which had been the subject of recent media reports.

“(These were) naturalisa­tions which had been given based on regulation­s of the past before today’s stricter controls and limitation­s were enforced,” Prodromou said.

In the five years between the inception of the citizenshi­p scheme and 2018, the Cypriot government approved 1,864 citizenshi­p applicatio­ns.

Including family members, the number was more than 3,200.

The European Commission warned in a January report that what it called “golden passports” could help organised crime groups infiltrate Europe and raised the risk of money laundering, corruption and tax evasion. — Reuters

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