Compliance
Cyprus Suspends "Golden Visa" Programme After "Shocking" Revelations

The fortunes of these so-called "golden visas" ebb and flow. The EU jurisdiction has put its programme on hold after a media report exposed alleged official corruption. A feature of modern globalisation, these programmes remain controversial.
The organisation representing much of the world’s “golden visa”
sector has applauded Cyprus for suspending its system. There have
been “shocking” revelations that officials in the
Mediterranean island helped a fictional Chinese businessman with
a criminal record.
Reports said Cyprus, which is in the European Union, has put its
citizenship-by-investment scheme on hold. Applicants must invest
at least €2 million ($2.34 million) to buy citizenship. It is
unclear when the suspension might end.
“Cyprus suspending the golden visa following the damming and
quite frankly shocking revelations is the right thing to do,”
Bruno L’ecuyer, chief executive and governing board member,
Investment
Migration Council, told this news service.
These visas are controversial; the European Union has fired a
number of salvos at these programmes, which are operated by EU
jurisdictions including Malta, Portugal, Cyprus and Spain. (See a
recent
case of criticism from the European Commission.) The UK
– now out of the EU – has an investor visa programme, as does the
US. Scores of jurisdictions around the world, such as Grenada in
the Caribbean and Mauritius in the Indian Ocean, also operate
them. To some degree these programmes are part of a cross-border
investment web that is a feature of globalisation. Defenders of
the programmes, such as IMC, say that they enable smaller
jurisdictions in particular to build revenue in addition to
relying on tourism and a few other activities. They also,
defenders claim, help HNW individuals who might be targeted
politically to seek refuge while putting their money to
productive use.
Some of these programmes are halted or scrapped for political
reasons, or because they fail to attract sufficient interest.
Canada mothballed its programme about five years ago after
political controversy about the impact of HNW immigrants pushing
up real estate prices. Moldova has scrapped its
citizenship-by-investment programme, which was launched at the
end of 2018. The Federation of St Kitts and Nevis has cut the
minimum contribution families must pay up for its scheme,
prompted by how the global pandemic has hit the Caribbean
jurisdiction’s economy.
A report by the Al Jazeera network said that it filmed
Cypriot officials using the scheme to assist a fictional Chinese
businessman with a criminal record. One of those filmed was
Cyprus's parliamentary speaker, Demetris Syllouris, who said he
would step down until an investigation was completed. Syllouris,
who is Cyprus's second-highest ranking state official, said he
would withdraw from his duties from 19 October.
“Our experience with media programmes like the one of Al
Jazeera is that often they are twisted to achieve a specific
goal, in this case to damage the reputation of Cyprus. Moreover,
calling for a ban on who EU member states naturalises as citizens
is wrong in so many ways and demonstrates how out of touch some
Eurocrats are with reality. It is not for Brussels to decide who
can become a European but this is a member state's sovereign
right as enshrined in treaties on the functioning of the EU,”
L’ecuyer said. He added that there are no IMC members involved in
the [Cyprus] programme. (A list of its corporate and individual
members can be found
here. Prominent firms in the advisory space to those seeking
such visas include Henley & Partners, which is an IMC member;
BDO, Fragomen Worldwide, Visas Consulting Group; Invest In The
USA and Exiger LLC.)
Late last year it was reported that fugitive financier Jho
Low – embroiled in the Malaysia-based scandal over money
siphoned from the 1MDB
fund – had obtained Cypriot citizenship in September 2015. Low is
wanted in the US, where prosecutors say he laundered billions
through its financial system. Low has denied any
wrongdoing.