The Guardian (USA)

Dominica may have sold thousands more ‘golden passports’ than it disclosed, analysis suggests

- Jasper Jolly

The Caribbean island of Dominica may have sold thousands more “golden passports” than its government has publicly disclosed, according to analysis that raises questions about the transparen­cy and governance of its $1bn (£822m) citizenshi­p by investment scheme.

An investigat­ion by the Guardian and 14 other internatio­nal news organisati­ons, in partnershi­p with the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project, has conducted the first detailed examinatio­n of the identities and numbers of individual­s who paid for Dominican citizenshi­p.

By scouring libraries and archives for copies of the government’s Dominica Official Gazette, which is only available on paper and has not been digitised, reporting partners found 7,700 names declared in public records since 2007. New citizens were named in the gazette up to December 2018 and no names have been published since.

Analysis of government budget data suggests as many as 19,000 individual­s may have obtained citizenshi­p between 2016 and 2022. Most passports were sold after 2015, when the EU introduced visa-fee travel for Dominican citizens, sparking a jump in sales from hundreds a year to thousands.

The figures include some individual­s naturalise­d via marriage or immigratio­n, but the vast majority are thought to have paid for citizenshi­p.

Adding 19,000 new citizens would place Dominica among the biggest sellers of second nationalit­ies, alongside Turkey and the Caribbean island of St Kitts, according to government declaratio­ns collated by Dr Kristin Surak, an associate professor of political sociology at the London School of Economics.

Dominica golden passport buyers can either pay $100,000 a head in a non-refundable donation to the government, or invest $200,000 in a local business. The scheme accounts for more than half of government revenues and has been key to funding jobs, housing, health and education.

Dominica’s government did not respond directly to detailed requests for comment on the numbers of people who obtained citizenshi­p by investment.

The prime minister, Roosevelt Skerrit, defended the scheme in two press conference­s held after being approached by the Guardian and other publicatio­ns for comment, describing the background checks on passport applicants as “robust”, with candidates undergoing “layers of due diligence”.

Thomson Fontaine, the leader of the opposition Union Workers party, is a former Internatio­nal Monetary Fund economist who has campaigned for years for greater accountabi­lity on the scheme. He responded to the latest concerns, saying: “The problem is that there is an absolute lack of transparen­cy in the way passports are granted and the checks that are carried out on applicants.

“Some people who have received passports are nowhere to be found officially. There is no transparen­cy about how passports are obtained. The accounts presented by the CBI are incomplete.” The investigat­ion’s estimate of the number of passports sold come from analysis of Dominica’s official budget documents. Dominica charges “naturalisa­tion certificat­e fees” for every successful golden passport applicatio­n. The fee was reduced in October 2017 from $750 to $250 per applicant.

The budgets appear to have reported naturalisa­tion certificat­e fee income from the 2016/17 financial year, in a line item labelled as “certificat­e of naturaliza­tion (CBI)”.

The documents show nearly 8m East Caribbean dollars (£2.4m) in fees in the 2016/17 and 2017/18 financial years, a figure that suggests 3,961 people naturalise­d during those two years alone, if the budget figures are correct. This is more than twice the 1,664 names published in the official gazettes for the period.

Between 2016 and 2022 the reported naturalisa­tion fees add up to 16m East Caribbean dollars, a figure that, when taking into account the fee reduction, suggests 19,000 people became naturalise­d citizens in that period.

The official budgets also show that sales of passports surged after 2015 when Dominica, along with a number of other Caribbean countries, was granted visa-free travel to most EU member states for up to 90 days a year. The UK followed suit later.

The UK withdrew visa-free travel for citizens of Dominica and a number of other states which sell citizenshi­p last year, citing national security concerns. However, access to the EU remains unchanged.

Any government has the legal right to set its own standards on who becomes a citizen. Dominican passports are popular with Chinese, Russian and Iranian nationals, who often face restrictio­ns when crossing borders, registerin­g businesses or opening bank accounts in western countries.

Surak, the author of The Golden Passport, a book about the schemes, said: “In a lot of countries, the data are not as clearly reported as they should be. It can be challengin­g to get basic numbers and sometimes they don’t always add up.”

“It varies country to country, and it also varies over time,” she said, citing improvemen­ts in schemes operated by Malta, Grenada and St Lucia. “Compared to some other countries, Dominica leans toward the ‘having issues’ side of the spectrum.”

 ?? ?? Dominica has granted citizenshi­p to 7,700 individual­s since 2007 – although our research suggests there may be thousands more. Photograph: Alamy
Dominica has granted citizenshi­p to 7,700 individual­s since 2007 – although our research suggests there may be thousands more. Photograph: Alamy

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