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Rich Lebanese Scope Passport Options in Wake of Crisis

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Date Published: January 4, 2018 | Date Updated: August 14th, 2020
By January 4, 2018 August 14th, 2020 No Comments

The Daily Star, Lebanon | 2017-11-27

Prime Minister Saad Hariri’s abrupt resignation and prolonged stay in Riyadh have led some wealthy Lebanese nationals to consider purchasing a second passport. “We can trace an upsurge in interest to about exactly 48 hours after the resignation,” Jeremy Savory, founder and CEO of Savory & Partners, told The Daily Star.

“From the time [Hariri] resigned to the following business day, we had about 90-something inquiries.”

Savory & Partners is just one firm catering to the niche crowd looking into “citizenship planning” along with career and family planning.

Rather than applying for a second citizenship through conventional means – the processing and approval of which often takes years – clients of Savory & Partners pay considerable amounts of money to expedite the process, obtaining citizenship from a group of countries with regulations that effectively allow foreigners to buy passports.

Such security, however, comes at a steep price. The cheapest program offered at the firm comes to about $100,000* per person, excluding extraneous fees.

Savory, too, listed a series of recent political upheavals that had led to a spike in prospective clients.

“You can definitely see a type of correlation of all those events to increase in demand. Eventually, though, it levels out until it reduces to a steady stream,” he said, noting that the sudden upswing in Lebanese interest that began nearly two weeks ago had since calmed.

Whether the 90 potential Lebanese clients will evolve into serious clients for Savory is yet to be seen.

“It’s too soon to tell at this point because the client gestation period takes a while. It depends on each [and] whether they’ve been thinking about this for a long time. I would think within a week we would have a better figure of who is serious, and start processing applications,” Savory said.

The recent uptick in inquiries is just a small bump in a larger trend of increased Lebanese interest in applying for second citizenship, according to a review carried out by Savory & Partners.

Compared to this quarter last year, the firm has reportedly experienced a 46.4% increase in Lebanese clients seeking a second passport.

One reason, Savory said, is St. Kitts and Nevis’ recent drastic cut in citizenship fees. The Caribbean island, an extremely popular choice amongst Lebanese hunting for another passport, requires applicants to go through less than six months of processing to obtain citizenship.

After being hit by Hurricane Irma in September, St. Kitts and Nevis sought to attract additional funds and slashed their citizenship fees in half. For some contemplating second citizenship, the discount was enough to erase any lingering doubts. “That cut made it much more affordable for many Lebanese who had been thinking about it,” Savory said.

According to Savory, many clients choose to buy their citizenship simply because they are willing and able to purchase the freedom of mobility, allowing them to travel unhindered by time-consuming visa applications.

“A lot of clients are business owners, CEOs or CFOs of large multinationals, who want to know [that] what happens in Lebanon doesn’t stop them from conducting their business and that they can move without restrictions.”

Currently, Lebanon’s passport ranks 187 out of 199 on the Passport Index, which evaluates the strength of these documents.

In other words, the Lebanese passport is the world’s 13th-worst in terms of ease of travel.

Only 12 countries will allow entry to travellers using the passport without a visa, while only 25 allow a visa to be given on arrival.

The numbers give an indication of why – despite the high price of insulating oneself against travel hassles and political instability – many Lebanese are willing to pay.

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Source: The Daily Star

Jeremy Savory

About Jeremy Savory

Jeremy Savory, the founder and CEO of Savory and Partners, runs one of the world’s leading HNW citizenship by investment firms. The second passport company has coverage in over 20 jurisdictions including Europe.

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