EU takes Malta to court over ‘golden passports’

EU takes Malta to court over ‘golden passports’ | INFBusiness.com

The European Commission on Thursday (29 September) formally took Malta to the EU’s highest court for its cash-for-passports scheme that endows Maltese citizenship on wealthy third-country citizens in return for money and investments.

The Commission said it considers the scheme a violation of EU law and has long called on Malta, a member state since 2003, to withdraw the scheme over fears of money laundering and citizenship being granted to high-risk individuals.

“By offering citizenship in exchange for pre-determined payments or investments, without a genuine link with the member state concerned, Malta breaches EU law,” tweeted EU justice affairs commissioner Didier Reynders.

“European Union values are not for sale,” he added.

EU takes Malta to court over ‘golden passports’ | INFBusiness.com

EU Commission ramps up legal action against Cyprus, Malta over ‘golden passports’

The European Commission on Wednesday (9 June) stepped up legal action against Cyprus and Malta over their cash-for-passports schemes in a move that may eventually see the two islands end up in court and face fines.

Malta’s government responded with a statement denying the scheme violated EU law, and reiterated that its citizenship policy was strictly a matter of national competence.

Going to court “gives Malta the opportunity to continue rebutting the said allegations and let the Court of Justice of the European Union (ECJ) settle the matter”, a government statement said.

If Malta loses its case at the ECJ, it must comply with the court decision or face hefty fines.

The history of the scheme

The controversial scheme was announced shortly after now-disgraced ex-prime minister Joseph Muscat came to power, involving a concession awarded to Henley & Partners- a company administering similar schemes worldwide.

It saw hundreds of mainly Russian, Chinese, and Saudi applicants and their families gain Maltese citizenship, visa-free travel, and the right to remain throughout the EU and, until recently, the UK.

Those searching for a passport had to satisfy several requirements including renting or buying a property for a certain value and time frame, demonstrating a link to the country, paying thousands of euros in fees, and donating hundreds of thousands to the Maltese government. They also had to pass due diligence processes to ensure they were of good reputation and character.

However, multiple investigations found glaring problems with the process.

Many applicants were found to have simply rented a hovel or garage to satisfy the requirement while not actually living in the country. Others had no link or intention of calling Malta home and openly intended to use it as a stepping stone to other EU states.

Meanwhile, the government was non-transparent on who received citizenship via the scheme in a bid to throw journalists off the scent.

But years of investigations found Maltese citizenship had been awarded to members of the Saudi royal family, Russian oligarchs associated with fraud, money laundering, and tax evasion, as well as others close to the Putin regime, Turkish tycoons, and several others that went on to be investigated for various financial crimes.

One of the journalists reporting on the scheme was Daphne Caruana Galizia who was assassinated in 2017. She was threatened with multiple law suits from the government and the concessionaire company for her reporting.

The island’s scheme also attracted attention from Low Taek Jho, an international fugitive accused of stealing billions in Malaysia’s largest-ever corruption scandal, although he was ultimately refused.

Others applied for citizenship despite it being illegal in their native country, and reports of kickbacks to politicians involved in getting the scheme off the ground were rife.

Malta has controversially raised €1.1 billion since 2013 by offering passports in exchange for investments.

Cyprus and Bulgaria previously had similar programmes, which they both withdrew following national scandals and EU pressure.

Nicosia put an end to its “golden passport” offer last year while Bulgaria withdrew after concerns of possible irregularities in almost half of all passports issued.

After Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Malta excluded Russians and Belarusians from its scheme as Europe cracked down on Russian oligarchs and politically linked individuals.

EU takes Malta to court over ‘golden passports’ | INFBusiness.com

Malta scraps citizenship scheme for Russians, Commission to monitor

The Maltese government has suspended its cash-for-passports scheme for Russian and Belarusian citizens following pressure from the EU and civil society over fears oligarchs linked to the Kremlin were buying their way into the bloc.

Malta and Bulgaria are the last …

In March, the commission issued a recommendation saying that EU member states “still operating investor citizenship schemes need to terminate them immediately”.

It also called for “golden passports” or similar investment-dependent residence permits given to Russians or Belarusians hit by EU sanctions to be immediately withdrawn.

Source: euractiv.com

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