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  • Dominica to host CIP meeting

    Representative from at least five Caribbean countries are to meet here later this week to discuss the Citizenship by Investment (CIP).

    The Coordinator of the Dominica Citizenship by Investment Unit, Emmanuel Nanton said that the countries in the Caribbean with CIPs had agreed to meet every quarter “to discuss where we are in the programme, review the industry, make recommendations for changes and basically to share information”.

    Nanton said that similar meetings have already been held in Antigua and Barbuda and Barbados.

    “At this meeting we expect to have participants from all the countries with citizenship programmes, including St. Kitts-Nevis, Antigua and Barbuda, Dominica, St. Lucia and Grenada”.

    Nanton said it is also expected that several key stakeholders, such as United States and Canadian embassies will be represented as well as a representative from the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

    Under the CIP, foreign investors are granted citizenship on conditions of making a substantial investment in the socio-economic development of any of the participating islands.

    Despite coming under criticism from some countries, the CIP represents a major investment strategy for some Caribbean countries.

     

    The Investment Migration Council had also been invited to participate and deliver a talk on industry standards.

     

    Source: antiguaobserver.com

     

  • Government of Canada Delivering Faster Processing and Shorter Wait Times for Spousal Reunification

    The Government of Canada is making it faster and easier for Canadians and permanent residents to reunite with their spouses.

    At the direction of the Minister, earlier this year Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) began a concerted effort to reduce processing times. From the start of 2016 to the fall, processing times were reduced by 15 percent for in-Canada applications and just over 10 percent for applications outside Canada.

    Starting today, processing times will be reduced even further with most spousal applications now being processed in 12 months. Complex cases may require more time.

    Applicants who already filed an application will not have to wait an additional 12 months to have them finalized. IRCC will continue to process applications in the order they have been received. Most families who have been waiting should have a decision on their sponsorship application no later than the end of December 2017.

    These new changes are expected to benefit more than 64 000 applicants by the end of 2017, and are the latest measures to bring families together.

     

    Quote
    “We have listened to Canadians and are delivering results. Bringing families together makes for a stronger Canada. Canadians who marry someone from abroad shouldn’t have to wait for years to have them immigrate or be left with uncertainty in terms of their ability to stay. What we’re announcing today is a more efficient, more considerate process to reunite families.”
    The Honourable John McCallum, Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship

     
    Quick facts
    -The application kit for new sponsors has been redesigned to be simpler and easier to understand. It will be available on December 15, 2016.
    -To bring families together, IRCC plans to admit 64 000 spouses and dependants in 2017, well above the average over the past decade of about 47 000.

     

    Source: news.gc.ca

  • New Marketing Initiative Set To Propel The SIDF Forward

    Another move to propel the St. Kitts-Nevis Sugar Industry Diversification Foundation (SIDF) forward is the introduction of the International Marketing Agent Initiative, says Les Khan, CEO of the Citizenship by Investment Unit (CIU), while appearing on the government’s radio-television programme “Working for You” on November 30.

    Mr. Khan explained that the initiative is another proactive effort to stay in line with the competition in the Citizenship by Investment (CBI) programme that will also help in identifying market opportunities in terms of who sells the product, where they sell it, and to whom.

    “This is information we didn’t have before,” he said. “So, with a combination of the new website that will give us all of this data, together with international marketing agents and the approach that we are taking, is one that is not just about competition.

    The CEO said that the CBI programme is not trying to “price up on the competition,” but that it is trying to put a process in place that allows the management of the international marketing agents, but at the same time give them an opportunity to be paid to bring applications into the programme.

    Some international marketers, who promote programmes, include Henley and Partners, Apex, CS Global and Arton Capital.

    “All of the service providers and developers have agents overseas who are marketing their product. We just don’t know who they are,” said Mr. Khan.

    Mr. Khan said that with the creation of the international marketing agent initiative, the service providers and developers will be asked to register and they will appear on the CIU website. Due diligence will also be done to know who is marketing the product. This will result in more control and will help to identify in what region the CBI programme is being marketed.

    “So, if we notice a movement in applications to one region, we could say what and who is our marketing agent, why is it happening, are they really promoting our interest or are they promoting their interest,” explained Mr. Khan.

    He added that because selling citizenship garners much cash flow, the controls are necessary to decipher whether or not the marketer is running a scam.

    “We know that sometimes out there, to use China as an example, you have 4 or 5 thousand agents and you hear stories about people selling citizenship, not St. Kitts and Nevis, from a taxi. You need to know who these people are and what they are actually selling and if it’s a scam,” said Mr. Khan.

    “It’s not just about the competition, it’s about the process, it’s about being able to control, who is taking our product and selling it,” Mr. Khan said.

     

    Source: thestkittsnevisobserver.com

  • New Zealand Doubles Cost of Investment Visa, Raises Quota

    New Zealand will double the amount of investment needed for permanent residency, the country’s immigration minister said on Wednesday, while also increasing the number of visas it issues.

    The ‘Investor 2’ visa will require NZ$3 million (1.68 million pounds) in investment from May next year and 400 places a year will be available, up from 300, Immigration Minister Michael Woodhouse said in an emailed statement.

    The move signals the government is taking a closer look into how to translate its migration policy into economic benefit.

    New Zealand is in the midst of a migration boom, but fast-growing industries such as technology and construction have struggled to find enough high-skilled workers. This has left the central bank calling for the government to reconsider its strategy, concerned that the country is not attracting “quality” immigrants.

    More than NZ$2.9 billion had been invested in the country since the visa was introduced in 2009, but two-thirds of this was poured into bonds, according to the government.

    “The government believes there is an opportunity to rebalance this towards growth-oriented investments,” Woodhouse said.

    Requirements for the parallel ‘Investor 1’ visa, which requires NZ$10 million, are unchanged.

     

    Source: reuters.com

  • Chinese National Approved to Challenge Revocation of Citizenship

     

    Lihua Tian’s lawsuit against government will proceed as she has been granted permission to challenge the revocation of her citizenship and Antigua & Barbuda passport.

     

    The High Court judge dealing with the matter has also put halt to the probe by a Committee of Inquiry investigating Lihua’s application and the approval process.

     

    Justice Pearletta Lanns noted, “The grant of leave shall operate as a stay of proceedings of the Committee of Inquiry pending the determination of the claim for judicial review, which claim is to be considered with all convenient speed.”

     

    Speaking to the three-member committee, the judge declared, “The Respondents be, and they are hereby prohibited jointly and severally from performing their functions as a Committee of Inquiry established under Section 10 of the Antigua & Barbuda Citizenship Act, pending the final determination of the Claim for judicial review, or until further order.”

     

    The claimant, who allegedly invested over US$ 200,000 to get the Antigua & Barbuda passport under the Citizenship by Investment Programme (CIP), is suing the government for depriving her of citizenship after alleging she willfully concealed material facts in support of her application.

     

    She is also challenging the placement of a CIP agent on a Committee of Inquiry set up to look into how she obtained citizenship.

     

    In the document filed in the High Court on September 6, the woman’s lawyer Dr David Dorsett contended that his client “disclosed all relevant information relating to her status to the agents who were processing her application.”

     

    As a result, Dr Dorsett wants the court to intervene, since it is alleged the agent from Henley & Partners who handled the application has refused to be subjected to cross-examination and the Committee of Inquiry has failed to issue a summons.

     

    The lawyer said “the agent is a material witness and it is our argument that the committee is unable to perform its function if a material witness is not available for cross examination.”

     

    That agent is said to have given Lihua the option to proceed with her application in the face of a wanted bulletin for her being posted by Interpol and in China. According to court documents filed, Lihua learned that a wanted bulletin had been issued for her on Interpol and in China just days after she submitted her CIP application.

     

    She alleges that she informed the agent of the bulletin and was advised she could still take the “risk” and proceed with her application.

     

     

    Source: antiguaobserver.com

  • Citizenship by Installment

     

    The government of Antigua & Barbuda has been advised that the country could be missing out on the chance to add rare professionals to the workforce by not having a “skilled persons” option in the Citizenship by investment Programme (CIP).

     

    The advice comes from Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the Citizenship by Investment Unit (CIU) Chisanga Puta-Chekwe, who argued that the proposal if taken up could benefit the country.

     

    “One of the recommendations that I made at a recent conference was adding the skilled person category. So that a person who might not have the $1.5 million to invest in a business and might not even have the 200,000 to invest in the national development fund – but a person who has skills that are badly needed by Antigua & Barbuda,” he said.

     

    Puta-Chekwe was speaking on OBSERVER radio alongside the Deputy CEO Thomas Anthony who said, “To capture that category of skilled individuals the plan is to make an amendment to the existing Permanent Residency Act.”

     

    Source: antiguaobserver.com

     

  • PM Skerrit Reports Successful Promotional Tour for CBI Programme

     

    The Hon Prime Minister, Dr. Roosevelt Skerrit is reporting that his recent trip to promote Dominica’s Citizenship by Investment programme was highly successful.

     

    Last week, Hon Skerrit led a delegation of nine Dominicans on a series of trips to in the hopes of meeting and attaining prospective investors for Dominica.
    At a press conference on Friday November 18th, the Hon Prime Minister said he was pleased with the outcome of his recent promotional travels as this achieved the objective of keeping Dominica out-front as the premier destination in the region for the CBI programme.

     

    “In two words I would say the trip was ‘very successful’, he said. “It was a success because we achieved our objective of propelling and keeping Dominica out front as the premiere destination in the region for investment in what is commonly referred to as Citizenship by Investment. As has been our practice over the last few years we organised a series of promotional events in the market place.”

     

    Dominica has one of the world’s most reputable Citizenship by Investment programmes, which offers prudent investors the ability to access the world through a trusted and affordable route to a second citizenship.
    Hon Skerrit highlighted that the process for attracting investors into the Caribbean has become an increasingly competitive one and hence the need for promotional travels.

     

    He says it is important for investors to meet and understand the leaders of promoted countries.

     

    “Dominica in and by itself does not possess any major advantages over its competitors. Potential investors are not going to opt for Dominica because of how its name is spelt or that it has more rivers than any other. You need to go to the marketplace ever so often and sell your product; you need to bring a human face to the destination,” he stated.

     

    On his recent trip, the nation’s leader met with several prospective investors and reports he is indeed happy with the outcomes.

     

    “In two weeks I visited over four countries and interfaced with scores of groups of individuals eager and excited to learn more about Dominica and to invest in the development of this country,” he explained. “I am confident that we shall reach our budgetary targets this year. The Government of Dominica is being vilified today because earnings from Dominica’s CBI programme are way, way up. I am happy to report on the success of our promotional visit and to tell you that the name and image of Dominica in the marketplace is as strong, attractive and appealing as ever and that I am confident that our programme will continue to be the programme of choice for discerning investors wanting to be associated with this hallowed region we call the Caribbean,” he stated.

     

    The CBI programme of Dominica has been operating since 1993 and is legally entrenched in the Dominican constitution and the Citizenship Act.

     

     

    Source: news.gov.dm

  • Former Nationalist Minister Furious After Henley & Partners 2012 Foreword

     

    Former Nationalist minister says Henley & Partners, concessionaires of Malta’s Individual Investor Programme, have reproduced his 2012 foreword for the latest edition of their citizenship manual
    Henley & Partners’ decision to include a four-year-old foreword by former Nationalist minister Tonio Fenech in their latest edition of the Global Residence and Citizenship Handbook, which was presented during a London conference earlier this month, has left the MP fuming.
    When contacted over his ‘latest’ contribution, Fenech, a member of the Nationalist opposition, expressed surprise and denied ever sending in a write-up for the sixth edition of the Henley handbook.
    In fact, Fenech later confirmed that Henley & Partners, concessionaires of Malta’s Individual Investor Programme, had reproduced the foreword that he had written four years ago, “as a complimentary gesture” when H&P had helped Malta in developing a high net worth scheme.
    “That foreword was written for one specific edition and it is highly unacceptable for them to reproduce it in that manner, totally out of context,” an irate Fenech told MaltaToday. “It is highly unprofessional and the least they could have done was to ask me first.”
    Albeit PN exponents are directly involved in legal firms which are IIP agents, the Nationalist opposition has been a vociferous opponent of the citizenship scheme. Opposition leader Simon Busuttil has even stated that, if elected, he would withdraw citizenships granted through the IIP – although he later changed tack and said that he would review the scheme and change its “lack of principled approach”.
    In questions sent to the Henley chairman, Christian Kalin confirmed that Fenech’s foreword “was in all the editions of the handbook”, adding that he “could not understand the fuss” when it was pointed out that the PN had come out strongly against the sale of citizenship.
    Asked whether Henley & Partners had reached out to the PN, Kalin said: “Not recently, but we think it might actually be a good idea to do so. We do not have any bad relationship with the Nationalist Party. Henley & Partners is not a political outfit, we work with governments, not with political parties. Thus we are always open to dialogue with representatives of the entire political spectrum.”
    Kalin confirmed that Fenech had written the foreword when he was still a minister, “in acknowledgement also of the good work we provided to the then PN government to assist them with the then residence programme at that time”. “The foreword is still relevant today so it was continued in subsequent editions,” he added.
    Kalin confirmed that Fenech’s contribution had not been a paid one, insisting that the firm had never “paid anyone anything for a foreword or article for any of our publications. Individuals are invited and they contribute on the basis of merit”.
    In the e-mailed reply, Kalin went on to add: “Thank you for covering our Global Residence and Citizenship handbook. I would just urge you not to create an elephant out of a non-existent fly. There is absolutely nothing wrong with having a former minister writing a foreword, except perhaps for some politically extreme minded people.”

     

     

    Source: maltatoday.com

  • Citizen of the World? Think Again Britain

     

    In her speech to the Conservative Party conference in October this year, Theresa May declared that ‘if you believe you’re a citizen of the world, you’re a citizen of nowhere’. In the febrile atmosphere of post-referendum Britain, this statement caused consternation. Here was a top level political rejection of the values of internationalism to go alongside the public’s rejection of the European model. For many, and not just those on the left, this seemed to discount the feelings of compassion and connection that came from considering oneself a global citizen. Instead, May was declaring that citizenship was something narrower and smaller, based on British provincialism, and allying herself with the anti-immigration rhetoric which featured so heavily in the Leave campaign prior to the referendum.

     

    If we place May’s statement back into context, we can see that it was part of a broader attack on the disconnect between the actions of the wealthy and the need to ‘respect the bonds and obligations that make our society work’. She attacked those ‘people in positions of power’, who ‘behave as though they have more in common with international elites than with the people down the road, the people they employ, the people they pass in the street’. It was these people she meant when she said ‘if you believe you’re a citizen of the world, you’re a citizen of nowhere’ – adding to those who believed this: ‘You don’t understand what the very word “citizenship” means’.

     

    For her, the ‘spirit of citizenship’ is a way to create a sense of unified purpose in the nation, a nation ‘built on the bonds of family, community, citizenship’. But this is a concept of citizenship based on the logic of anti-immigration. For the rich, citizenship ‘means recognising the social contract that says you train up local young people before you take on cheap labour from overseas’. The beneficiaries of this action, for May, should be the people ‘out of work or on lower wages because of low-skilled immigration’: for these people, ‘life simply doesn’t seem fair’, and they feel as though their ‘dreams have been sacrificed in the service of others’.

     

    British ideas of citizenship are extremely diffuse – May’s vision of citizenship is based on contractarian notions of obligations as well as rights – in this sense the obligations of the rich and the rights of the excluded. In articulating citizenship in this way, May was confident that she, unlike the wealthy, understood the true meaning of citizenship. But her rhetoric was also proof that the meaning of citizenship can be endlessly redefined for political purposes. This is possible because in Britain ideas of citizenship are extremely diffuse, and have been throughout the period since the second world war. The sociologist Ruth Lister, now a peer, has noted that understandings of citizenship are so fragmented that the concept ‘runs the danger of meaning what people choose it to mean’.

     

    But if we carefully unpick the main ways citizenship has been discussed in modern British history, we find that there are in fact three main ways in which ‘citizenship’ is used and defined. First, citizenship is seen as a narrowly politico-legal framework, making up the legal, political, and social rights of the population, but also the obligations expected in return. Secondly, citizenship is conceived as resulting from a sense of ‘belonging’ to a constructed national community, with belonging a key marker of, or barrier to, citizenship status. Thirdly, there is a focus on what we can call differentiated aspects of citizenship, particularly on the idea that ‘good citizens’ are those who participate more within society, with a particular emphasis on voluntary action or ‘engagement’. I call these the three registers of citizenship.

     

    The legal rights of citizens in the United Kingdom expanded during the 20th century. For those with the status of legal citizens, not only increased voting rights (for women most obviously, but also for working class men), but also increased social rights (access to the welfare state), have transformed the relationship between the state and the people. But the boundaries of legal citizenship have also been more sharply drawn, most obviously when the right to reside and work in the UK was withdrawn from British passport holders born in Commonwealth countries under the 1962 Commonwealth Immigrants Act.

     

    Underpinning such legislative change was the shift towards understanding citizenship as a category of belonging, and within this register British citizenship was increasingly racialised and associated with whiteness from the late 1950s: in this sense, non-white people born in the Commonwealth were perceived as not ‘belonging’, and not ‘really’ British. For black British citizens, this racialised notion of belonging manifested itself in their experience of the racism endemic in British society and culture in the third quarter of the 20th century. Immigration, whiteness, and citizenship were intertwined in ways that effectively excluded many Britons who possessed the status of citizens from practising their citizenship in its fullest sense.

     

    If Britons are not European, what appeal can formal British citizenship have to those Europeans who have called Britain home?

     

    Theresa May’s criticism of the ‘citizens of nowhere’ continues this process of aligning Britishness with a partial and exclusive vision of belonging. She portrays citizenship as a national community from which the ‘low-skilled’ immigrant is pointedly excluded. This is why her rhetoric matters: for many, her explicit rejection of an international outlook confirms that Britain is no longer open or welcoming to those born outside its shores. For the same reason, the government’s suggestion that European citizens apply for formal leave to remain, or for British citizenship, rather misses the point. If British citizenship is to be defined in such a way that Europeans are so visibly excluded and categorised as not belonging, what appeal can formal British citizenship have to those Europeans who have called Britain home?

     

    Citizenship means more than a simple legal framework, as May knows. It is about values and belonging, and no one source of authority can control what is valued in Britain. For many Remain campaigners, notions of Britishness and belonging were rather more elastic than what is on the cover of an individual’s passport. Pro-Leave campaigners, however, concentrated on the rights of those whose passports featured the lion and the unicorn. In post-referendum Britain, the shrinking sense of belonging is palpable. As the history of debates on citizenship shows, when an individual, group or community is no longer considered to belong, attacks on their rights, their position, and their bodies soon follow.

     
    Source: democraticaudit.com

  • Trump Presidency Could Mean Windfall for Some States

     

    Not many governments or citizens in the bloc of 15 nations in the Caribbean were hoping or praying to have to live with an administration led by Donald Trump, but his victory in the 2016 presidential election could mean a financial windfall for some countries, particularly those in the Eastern Caribbean.

     

    For island nations such as Antigua, St. Lucia, St. Kitts and others where laws allow foreigners to buy citizenship and a local passport, Trump’s continued rhetoric about mass deportations, fears of racist attacks at the hands of some of his supporters and a poisoned political atmosphere could ironically serve to boost the so-called Citizenship by Investment Program officials say.

     

    Hopes that dozens, if not hundreds, of foreigners will now be much more inclined to spend about $500,000 to buy citizenship and a passport, have risen at a time when Antigua and St. Kitts were both reporting an average 10 percent decline in “sales” of citizenship by foreigners. Dominica and Grenada also have similar programs.

     

    Didacus Jules, director general of the nine-nation Organization of Eastern Caribbean States, is predicting that the change of administration in the U.S. will provide for a spike in programs for respective countries.

     

    “Sometimes in what appears to be a crisis there are opportunities and we need to find those opportunities,” said Jules, urging people in the region to look for and to exploit any silver lining emerging from a Trump administration rather than bemoaning his win, the Caribbean Media Corporation quoted him as saying.

     

    Meanwhile, Henley and Partners, the firm contracted by Antigua to organize and promote its economic citizenship program, has already noted a rash of inquiries from Americans and Caribbean nationals who are worried about their future and are exploring options to leave the U.S.

     

    “Such spikes happen when citizens become uncertain about the future of their country,” said a representative of the firm. “They seek safer options for their families.”

     

     

    Source: amsterdamnews.com

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