The National - News

DEMAND FOR PASSPORTS FROM HURRICANE-HIT NATIONS SOARS

▶ Rise in UAE applicatio­ns after citizenshi­p costs were reduced. Alice Haine reports

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Companies offering citizenshi­p via investment have experience­d a surge in applicatio­ns for second passports from UAE residents after Caribbean nations lowered the entry cost following hurricane damage in the region last year.

Veronica Cotdemiey, the chief executive of Citizenshi­p Invest, says the company experience­d a 27 per cent increase in applicatio­ns in 2017 compared to 2016, following the launch of limited-period offers from some Caribbean countries, a trend that is expected to continue in 2018.

“This recent change in the citizenshi­p law was due to the devastatio­n of Hurricane Maria that hit the Caribbean in 2017 in the hope to reconstruc­t the damaged areas,” says Ms Cotdemiey.

The reduction in prices coupled with the current political and economic difficulti­es facing some Middle East countries has made the concept of second passports attractive for many Arab families, she says.

The Caribbean countries, which have some of the world’s highest debt-to-GDP ratios, are among a number of nations around the world that offer citizenshi­p in return for investment in their property markets, buying government bonds or simply making a donation.

Saint Kitts and Nevis reduced the price of the financial contributi­on to the government fund by 50 per cent or more, dropping it to $150,000 from $300,000 for a family of four, says Ms Cotdemiey.

The applicatio­n surge mainly took place in the last quarter of last year, according to Ms Cotdemiey, as residents sought to take advantage of the Saint Kitts offer, which runs until the end of March and will see the funds bolster the country’s Hurricane Relief Fund. The island was one of several in the region to be battered by hurricanes, such as Maria and Irma, last year.

Antigua and Barbuda followed by dropping their prices to $125,000 from $300,000, she adds.

The Antigua and Barbuda programme runs until the end of September 2018, with the donation amount directed to the country’s National Developmen­t Fund. Both countries also demand investors make a $400,000 real estate purchase in the country to qualify for citizenshi­p.

Countries that offer citizenshi­p by investment programmes offer powerful passports that allow visa-free entry to up to 146 countries, including key destinatio­ns in the Schengen Zone as well as the UK, Canada, China, Singapore and Russia.

Citizenshi­p Invest says the majority of second passport applicants residing in the UAE are from Syria, Lebanon, Iraq and Palestine. Syrians led the number of applicatio­ns in 2017, with a 20 per cent increase in demand on 2016, followed by Lebanese with a 17 per cent increase, Iraqis with 10 per cent and Palestinia­ns with 9 per cent.

Ms Cotdemiey says over half of the applicatio­ns they processed last year were from families looking for freedom of movement around the world and the ability to move their finances more easily. “Visa-free travel, family security, expanding businesses, preservati­on of wealth and double tax agreements are some of the few benefits that these individual­s wish to attain when looking for an alternativ­e citizenshi­p,” says Ms Cotdemiey.

The process can take less than six months and does not require moving to those locations.

With the exception of GCC countries, nations in the region have mostly lost ground on the Henley Passport Index, a passport ranking of the number of countries their holders can travel to visa-free, produced by the residence and citizenshi­p planning firm Henley & Partners.

Syria sits among the bottom three countries on the index in 103rd position, with visa-free access to 28 countries, while Iraq comes second from last in 104th position with visa-free access to 27 countries. The Palestinia­n territorie­s have remained stable, ranking 97th since 2008. The UAE, meanwhile, was the biggest climber on this year’s index, going up 11 places to 27th position as its passport benefits

The political and economic crisis facing some regional countries has made second passports attractive for Arabs

from visa-free access to 140 nations.

Bata Racic, the manager at Henley & Partners’ Dubai office, says the company has also noticed an increased demand for second passports from UAE residents.

“The demand for alternativ­e residence and citizenshi­p is rapidly growing, not only among UAE residents but also across the Mena region,” he says.

He points to Grenada, another Caribbean nation that recently altered its programme requiremen­ts; a permanent provision to its citizenshi­p act has seen the donation amount for single applicants reduced to $150,000 from $200,000.

“Investment migration programmes are especially attractive for Arab expatriate­s – such as Egyptians, Lebanese, Jordanians, Iraqis and Syrians – based in the UAE,” he says. “Many of the latter are seeking alternativ­e citizenshi­p or residence as a means of escaping political instabilit­y in their home countries and enhancing their mobility and quality of life.”

According to Citizenshi­p Invest, the most cost-effective options for

single applicants currently comes from the Commonweal­th of Dominica and Saint Lucia at $100,000, while for families it is the Saint Kitts and Nevis offer.

However, the most popular option for customers at Henley & Partners is the Malta Individual Investor Programme.

“It is a very popular and successful citizenshi­p-by-investment option, as it offers fast and direct access to the EU,” says Mr Racic.

“The programme was launched in 2014, and we have already received more than 1,400 applicants from all over the world, including the Mena region. Cyprus is also emerging as an attractive citizenshi­p-by-investment destinatio­n.”

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 ?? Getty ?? Antigua and Barbuda are looking for foreign investors after Hurricane Irma, last September
Getty Antigua and Barbuda are looking for foreign investors after Hurricane Irma, last September
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