13 IIP applicants granted Maltese citizenship
13 of the 573 applicants for Maltese citizenship through the ‘golden passport scheme’ have been granted citizenship
13 of the 573 applicants for Maltese citizenship through the ‘golden passport scheme’, the Individual Investor Programme have been granted citizenship.
This was revealed by Home Affairs Minister Carmelo Abela in response to a parliamentary question by Opposition MP Robert Arrigo. Arrigo had also asked for the reasons why other IIP applicants were rejected, but Abela did not respond to the latter part of the question.
In response to a separate parliamentary question by deputy PN leader Beppe Fenech Adami, Abela said that 38 people were naturalised as Maltese citizens throughout 2014. This contrasts with the 52 who were naturalised in 2013 and the 111 who were naturalised in 2012.
Fenech Adami had also requested the names and ID cards of these people
A year since the scheme’s introduction, the government has not yet published the full list of new citizens in the government gazette as it is bound by law.
In parliament last week, Abela told Nationalist MP Jason Azzoprdi that he was mindful of government’s obligation at law but that he could not specify the time when they will be published.
The first list of naturalised citizens, which will include holders of the IIP passport can be expected in 2015, since the IIP started in 2014 and applicants are granted citizenship after 12 months of residency.
The list will not make any distinction between naturalised citizens, and those who have paid for their passport.
In fact the amended Maltese Citizenship Act no longer binds the home affairs minister to publish the names of all naturalised citizens every three months in the Government Gazette. That important clause, which guaranteed some form of transparency on citizenship, was plainly expunged by a new clause setting up the regulator of the IIP.
Instead a legal notice setting down the rules for the IIP says the minister has to publish an annual list of all those granted Maltese citizenship by registration or naturalization, including those persons who were granted Maltese citizenship under the programme.
Anonymity for IIP applicants was an important condition laid down by citizenship concessionaires Henley & Partners, something that was vigorously opposed by the Opposition.
In November 2013 deputy prime minister Louis Grech told MaltaToday that IIP passport holders would no longer be secret.
But while that statement was believed to mean that IIP citizens would be published in the regular quarterly lists, when the government moved its amendments to citizenship laws, it totally removed the clause that mandated the publication of naturalised citizens; replacing it with the clause appointing a regulator, who compiles an annual report on the IIP without including any personal data of applicants.
Fishing out the new citizens of Malta in this year’s list will be quite a chore: the IIP regulator’s report so far has revealed enormous interest from Russian citizens – over half of the 576 applications.