Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Rich Lebanese grab ‘island passports’ as crisis bites

Mostly living in Gulf or African nations, wealthy Lebanese are now among those hunting for passports that offer easier travel and a safety net from the economic crisis at home

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LEBANESE executive Jad splurged around $135,000 on new citizenshi­p for himself and his wife, fearing visa hassles could cost him his job in Dubai while an economic collapse has dashed any homecoming options.

Within a month of making the payment last year, the 43-year-old businesspe­rson received a small package in his mailbox. Inside were two navy blue passports from the Caribbean island nation of Saint Kitts and Nevis – his ticket to visa-free access to more than 150 countries, including Europe.

This was a major upgrade from the Lebanese passport, which is ranked among the worst in the world and has become nearly impossible to renew because the cash-strapped state is running out of stocks.

“Three years ago, I would not have imagined I would buy a passport,” said Jad, who had previously grappled with lengthy visa procedures for business trips.

“But now because of the situation in Lebanon – and because we can afford it – we finally did it,” he said, asking for his full name to be withheld for privacy reasons. A Saint Kitts passport ranks 25th in the world while Lebanon languishes at 103rd on the Henley passport index for freedom of travel. With a population of under 55,000, it started selling citizenshi­ps a year after gaining independen­ce in 1983. Citizenshi­p by investment schemes has become a booming business internatio­nally, attracting the wellto-do from volatile countries like Iraq, Yemen and Syria.

Some EU member states, including Bulgaria, Cyprus and Malta, have also operated “golden passport” schemes, but they have run into opposition from the European Commission over the back door they offer to EU citizenshi­p.

Wealthy Lebanese, mostly living in Gulf or African nations, are now among those hunting for passports that offer easier travel and a safety net from the economic crisis at home.

‘NICE COUNTRY’

Commonweal­th Caribbean nations are particular­ly attractive because their long-standing schemes offer citizenshi­p within months in exchange for a lump sum. Applicants are not even required to visit. When Jad first went to Paris as a Kittitian, officers at passport control told him: “You come from a nice country.”

“But actually I have never been there,” he said.

Jad’s Lebanese friends in the Gulf were also shopping for “island passports” or investing in real estate in Greece and Portugal to obtain residency as part of so-called “golden visa” schemes, he said.

“This is not just a trend. It’s a solution.” Lebanese expatriate­s in Gulf Arab states have long borne the brunt of political bickering and rifts between their capitals.

Last year, several Gulf countries cut diplomatic ties with Beirut for months after a Lebanese minister criticized a Saudi-led military interventi­on in Yemen.

Kuwait limited the number of visas granted to Lebanese, and many in the diaspora worried other Gulf states would follow suit. “That made me think: I have a problem here, I don’t want to jeopardize my work in the Gulf,” said Dubai-based businesspe­rson Marielli Bou Harb.

The 35-year-old bought Saint Kitts passports for his family of four last year, encouraged by a hefty discount as the COVID-19 pandemic beleaguere­d the island nation’s tourism-dependent economy. A single passport usually costs around $150,000, a sum funneled into a sustainabl­e growth fund for the country, which only installed traffic lights in its capital Basseterre in 2018.

Other Caribbean islands, including Antigua and Barbuda, Dominica, Grenada and Saint Lucia, also sell passports.

FEW CAN AFFORD

Few people can afford such a purchase in Lebanon, a country in an economic crisis that has seen the currency nosedive, banks freeze deposits and most of the population fall into poverty.

Yet demand for foreign citizenshi­p has spurred a boom in passport consultanc­y, with firms advertisin­g on social media, billboards and even inside Beirut’s airport.

Among them is Global Pass, converted in 2020 from a real estate company after Lebanese started complainin­g of higher visa rejection rates.

“Our business has grown by at least 40% from 2020 to 2021,” said founder Ziad Karkaji. Even internatio­nal firms are raking in a profit.

Jose Charo, who heads the Beirut office of Swiss-based Passport Legacy, said Lebanese now account for one-quarter of the company’s clientele.

Their number has grown fivefold due to the economic crisis that was made worse by a devastatin­g explosion at Beirut’s port in 2020, Charo said.

 ?? ?? Jose Charo, head of the Beirut office of Passport Legacy, shows the website of his company in Beirut, Lebanon, April 12, 2022.
Jose Charo, head of the Beirut office of Passport Legacy, shows the website of his company in Beirut, Lebanon, April 12, 2022.

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