Four go on trial for graft over Cyprus passports scheme
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[September 12, 2022]
NICOSIA (Reuters) - A court
in Cyprus ordered a former senior state official and three others to
stand trial for suspected corruption next month in connection with a
lucrative cash-for-passports scheme abandoned in 2020.
The east Mediterranean island was forced to scrap a
citizenship-for-investment programme in late 2020 following a barrage of
media reports that the system was open to abuse.
Four people, including former Parliamentary Speaker Demetris Syllouris,
a former MP, a property executive and a lawyer, will appear before a
criminal court on Oct. 26, a district court in the capital Nicosia ruled
on Monday.
They have all denied any wrongdoing.
Just over 7,000 people received citizenship from 2007 to 2020 under the
programme, popular particularly with Russian and Chinese investors.
As the country is a member of the European Union, Cypriot passports
provide visa-free travel and access throughout the bloc.
Before it was shut down a Cyprus passport could be obtained by an
investor, and by extension members of their families, for a minimum
investment of 2 million euros.
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A general view shows the city of Nicosia, Cyprus January 28, 2021.
REUTERS/Yiannis Kourtoglou/File Photo
All four suspects were featured in a documentary filmed by the Al
Jazeera network aired in 2020, where undercover journalists posed as
fixers to get a passport for a fictitious Asian investor with a
criminal record.
Syllouris, who as speaker was second in the state hierarchy,
resigned after the documentary came out. An lawmaker from the
leftist opposition AKEL party also stepped down.
The individuals, who were not obliged to enter a plea at Monday's
hearing, have said any remarks they made in the film were taken out
of context.
Some of the charges they will face are related to the Al Jazeera
report, while others related to individuals who received passports,
state prosecutors announced on July 14.
Hundreds of people - from real estate agents to lawyers and fixers -
were involved in an industry which generated billions, throwing a
financial lifeline to Cyprus after a financial meltdown in 2013.
Last month, Cyprus's Auditor-General urged authorities to
investigate indications that many of the investments recorded under
the scheme may have been fictitious.
(Reporting By Michele Kambas; Editing by Andrew Heavens)
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