Reaction to the Al Jazeera Investigations video of Cyprus

Reaction to the Al Jazeera Investigations video of Cyprus

Yesterday evening I reviewed the entire Al Jazeera Investigations video of four main protagonist groups ostensibly involved in granting a Cyprus passport to a fictional Chinese investor.

These included:

  • A British couple promoting property in Cyprus;
  • A Cypriot lawyer;
  • A Cypriot Member of Parliament, together with his staff members;
  • The Speaker of the Cyprus Parliament.

My impressions are the following.

1. The audience is being shown selected footage by Al Jazeera. We don’t see the full context: only what Al Jazeera shows us. Please keep this in mind.

2. Not a single crime takes place in this video. No application is submitted. No due diligence, KYC and AML process takes place. Each of the protagonist group mentions that a review has to be made. Yet Al Jazeera’s conclusions are robust: The programme is corrupt. And so are Cypriots, at the highest political level, and across the entire spectrum.

3. This reportage is neither fair nor balanced in terms of reporting. If this were a fair and balanced reporting, you would have heard from a far more representative group of people:

  • You would have received an overview of the complete KYC and due diligence process.
  • You would have heard from a banker, without whom no transaction can take place.
  • You would have heard from members of the Committee for Supervision and Control of the Citizenship by Investment Programme, or by a representative of the Ministry of Finance, or the Cyprus Investment Promotion Authority, or others.
  • You would have heard from actual beneficiaries who have invested and been granted a passport.

4. My company, and I personally, have reviewed the applications procedure for the Cyprus Citizenship by Investment Programme. We have spoken to a number of intermediaries (lawyers, accountants, banks, property agents) involved. Each of the intermediaries we have spoken to have assured us that the procedure is difficult but transparent. This does not mean that all applications are approved: many are rejected. The conclusions we draw are far different from that of Al Jazeera.

5. The most difficult part, in terms of KYC and AML, is actually conducting a financial transaction for the asset. I can confirm this from other transactions that have occurred in Cyprus (not related to the passport programme) and from operating bank accounts as a company and as a person. I can also confirm that there appears to be a double standard for foreigners, who are under a lot more pressure to confirm their KYC/AML requirements, and pay higher fees, than Cypriots.

6. In the Al Jazeera video: The discussions that do take place do so in informal settings, prior to signing any kind of contract or starting any kind of vetting process. In other words, each protagonist group here is selling their services. As anyone who has been in a sales situation is aware, there is always going to be exaggeration and hyperbole.

7. In the Al Jazeera video: Much has been made of the idea that applicants can avoid due diligence by having a wife or son apply for citizenship, and then slipping someone in with a criminal record. That’s not true. The due diligence applies to every applicant.

8. On the issue of whether a convicted criminal could receive a Cypriot passport: according to the letter of the due diligence process, no. If this crime has been recorded and published, it will be found. From that point onwards, it is the responsibility of each of the speakers who maintain that they can avoid a criminal conviction to justify that. My opinion, based on prior experience, is that they cannot. They are over-selling. Or lying.

9. In the Al Jazeera video: At one stage, the lawyer says something to the effect that “not a single passport case has been clean”. This is his personal opinion, not established fact. He is, again, saying that in a sales situation. It hardly reflects well on him. But it is also not representative of the facts, and a media organization should present a fair and balanced viewpoint.

10. I was most disappointed by the role of the Speaker of Parliament. He should know better than to be making promises that he cannot keep to any visitor, let alone one interested in a citizenship by investment application. He should also know better than to confuse his statutory responsibilities with his individual gain. However, I also reflect that hyperbole, solipsism and conflict of interest characterizes many Cypriot politicians. And not only.

To conclude:

  • The CIP programme has a verifiable KYC/AML/approval process. Like all processes, there may be imperfections, but it is broadly in line with industry best practice;
  • The sole responsibility for citizenship remains that of the EU Member State, not the European Union;
  • Cyprus is in compliance and receives generally high rankings from compliance with AML and equivalent standards;
  • To suggest based on the interviews published that the entire CIP programme is corrupt and that all people who have received citizenship from it is unacceptable;
  • The journalistic standard of the Al Jazeera reportage is neither fair nor balanced, and meets none of the objective requirements of reporting.

I believe that any well-informed viewer can draw their own conclusions from this.

Philip Ammerman

Managing Director

[email protected]

George Zeipekkis

Chief Technology Officer and Founder at Trusted Technology Professionals. We enable enterprises to become intelligent and digital businesses.

4 年

I don't buy the claim "there is no chance to get through the banks". It did get through, hence the number of black listed individuals who obtained the citizenship. The fact the EU announced legal proceedings against Cyprus recently proves the case. It is worth mentioning EU investigation on the matter was initiated a long time ago. The president of Cyprus openly admitted there were "mistakes" made. There is corruption beyond any doubt and everyone has been playing along, including the lawyers and the bankers who are now trying to play smart

Panayiotis Panayides

Director at FSB Properties Ltd

4 年

This analysis, however 'good' it may be is just looking for damage control. Irrespective of Al Jazeera's motive, it was the whole team's intention to find ways around the system. Maybe they would not have gotten through the KYC/AML, but that's not the point, the point was that it highlighted high level individuals, legal persons and unlicenced agents all plotting together to assist a convicted criminal, which resulted in the suspension of the programme and a shameful face being presented to the international community. You say no crime was committed, I say, I don't agree, from the moment that they started the plot and were discussing how to beat the system, it shows the intent. Guy Fawkes plotted to blow up the Houses of Parliament, he didn't succeed, did he or did he not commit a crime. Once intent in shown, you are guilty, it is called premeditation. It is the difference between killing someone accidentally and plotting to do it. In court you would definately go to jail if the latter. I am no friend of Al Jazeera, I am a Cypriot and was disgusted at what I saw, these politicians and lawyer talk with such positivity on how it could be done, depending on 'How much it would cost'. It has embarrassed us all, but for the actions of the few. So, no my firend I will not shoot the messenger, I will look into the detail, because the devil is in the detail. If they have spoken like this about this fictitious client, one must wonder how many other may have 'Paid the right amount' or knew the 'Angels'.

George Zeipekkis

Chief Technology Officer and Founder at Trusted Technology Professionals. We enable enterprises to become intelligent and digital businesses.

4 年

Philip, let's not fool ourselves. The politicians run the show in Cyprus and white collar crime is running high. Let's focus on cleaning up the mess as opposed to finding excuses to cover it up. Everyone in Cyprus is an accomplice to the corruption crimes that are taking place, starting from simple people who put up with it, to others who benefit in one way or another

Shankar Bharathan

Business advisor with expertise in Economic Zones/ Offshore jurisdictions , Fund-raising ,Luxury real estate, Citizenship programs, Armored vehicles & Political networking ( selected Countries)

4 年

Brilliant analysis

Ηarry ?.

Chief Executive Officer - Trading, Marketing & Business Development Officer (CEO, CSO, CMO, BDO) - Dubai Financial, Forex, Crypto & Investment Services

4 年

Great analysis Philip! It couldn't be said more clearer. We all know the real interests of Al Jazeera channel and the clients/sponsors it is serving! The size, scale and cost of such campaign (over 10 million$) in combination with it's publishing timing explains it all! Somebody is paying for this and i guess all intellect people understand who is behind this! It's really pitty to see mainstream media channels going rogue and lame!

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