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Egypt to offer citizenship to foreigners for $400,000 — lawmakers object

Egypt to offer citizenship to foreigners for $400,000 — lawmakers object
Egypt has been looking to boost its finances and draw back foreign investment that fled the country after the revolution of 2011. (Shutterstock)
Updated 16 July 2018

Egypt to offer citizenship to foreigners for $400,000 — lawmakers object

Egypt to offer citizenship to foreigners for $400,000 — lawmakers object
  • Foreigners who make a deposit of 7 million Egyptian pounds receive the option of taking citizenship if they surrender the deposit after five years
  • The draft bill still faces a final approval by the president Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi before it can become a law

CAIRO: Egypt is offering citizenship to foreigners who deposit at least 7 million Egyptian pounds ($392,000) and then hand it over to the Treasury after five years, an amendment passed by parliament on Monday said.
Egypt has been looking to boost its finances and draw back foreign investment that fled the country after the revolution of 2011, notably through a series of tough reforms tied to a $12 billion IMF loan program it began in late 2016.
Under the new law, foreigners who make a deposit of 7 million Egyptian pounds or the equivalent in foreign currency receive the option of taking citizenship if they surrender the deposit after five years.
It was not immediately clear what economic benefits a foreigner would obtain by acquiring citizenship as Egypt places few restrictions on foreign investment projects, although it does forbid foreign ownership of agricultural land and property in the Sinai peninsula, where it faces an insurgency.
“The minister of interior may grant Egyptian citizenship to all foreigners that have resided in Egypt for a period of at least five consecutive years prior to applying for naturalization,” the amendment said.
“Upon the acceptance of the naturalization request, the value of the deposit shall be transferred to the public treasury,” it said.
The head of parliament’s defense and national security committee, General Kamal Amer, said the new law compliments recent amendments to an investment act that grants incentives to foreigners to invest in the country.
He said foreigners who acquire citizenship would enjoy no political rights until after five years of citizenship and would need 10 years to be eligible for election or appointment to a representative body.
Spouses and children will not be eligible for citizenship unless they reside in Egypt, he added.
The draft bill still faces a final approval by the president, Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi, before it can become a law.
It has set off a storm of criticism by legislators and on social media networks.
Lawmaker Haitham el-Hariri accused the government of “selling Egyptian citizenship” when instead it should be “facilitating residency and visa procedures” for investors. Pro-government lawmaker Mustafa Bakri also rejected the bill saying that “the Egyptian citizenship is not for sale.”
Many Egyptians took to social media sites, lashing out at the draft bill which amends a 1960 law on granting citizenship and residence to foreigners. Prominent columnist Abdel-Azim Hammad suggested in a Facebook post on Sunday that the government should instead focus on “retrieving the money that was stolen and smuggled” out of Egypt, in a reference to businessmen who fled the country during its 2011 uprising.
The official MENA news agency on Monday quoted Parliament Speaker Ali Abdel-Aal also defending the bill and saying: “Some foreign residents enjoy (government) subsidies and services ... and in the end take the citizenship of another country, why not grant them Egyptian citizenship?“
Lawmaker Mohammed el-Sewidy, head of the Support Egypt Coalition, the majority block in the parliament, defended the bill. He argued that the proposed draft is “part of improving the investment climate” in Egypt.
The deliberation over the bill comes as Egypt presses ahead with a broader economic reform program that has included slashing subsidies, imposing a value-added tax and a currency flotation. The program has was designed to meet demands by the International Monetary Fund for a $12 billion bailout loan. Egypt secured the loan in 2016.
The tough austerity measures have won praise from economists and business leaders but have dealt a heavy blow to poor and middle-class Egyptians.
Egypt’s President Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi, the architect of the economic reforms, defended his government’s decision to slash subsidies.
El-Sisi recently said that the reforms have put Egypt on “the right track” and urged patience as they take effect.
In an address to parliament in July, Prime Minister Mustafa Madbouly said citizens will start reaping the benefits of the reform program within two years.
Egypt’s economy is still recovering from unrest following the 2011 uprising that toppled longtime ruler Hosni Mubarak.

* With Reuters and AP