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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Adopting a ‘backup country’

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Neil Sands -


New Zealand passports are not for sale, Prime Minister Bill English said on Thursday, after it emerged US tech titan Peter Thiel gained citizenship in the South Pacific nation despite not meeting official criteria.


The dispute over Thiel’s citizenship follows reports that mega-wealthy Americans are eyeing the remote South Pacific nation as a “bolthole” should Donald Trump’s presidency go disastrously wrong.


The government confirmed this week that German-born billionaire Thiel was granted citizenship in June 2011, just two months after donating $730,000 to an official Christchurch quake disaster fund.


English acknowledged Thiel did not meet the usual requirements —living at least 70 per cent of the previous five years in New Zealand — but said he was granted citizenship due to exceptional circumstances.


He declined to detail the exceptional circumstances and dismissed as “ridiculous” suggestions New Zealand had sold citizenship to Thiel, who Forbes estimates is worth $2.7 billion. “It’s not a case of whether wealthy people can jump the queue,” English said. “It’s whether people have particular skills, particular contributions that don’t quite meet the criteria.”


The opposition Labour Party’s immigration spokesman Iain Lees-Galloway said the case raised questions about whether the rich were receiving special treatment. “I don’t think that fits very well with New Zealand’s egalitarian values,” he said. Thiel, who has reportedly retained his US citizenship, co-founded PayPal and was an early investor in Facebook. The 49-year-old made headlines last year when he acknowledged secretly funding a lawsuit against gossip website Gawker. He bucked the trend in Silicon Valley by supporting Trump and is part of the president’s transition team.


The New York Times said that after Thiel strongly supported Trump’s America-first rhetoric, adopting a “backup country” appeared a typically contrarian move by the tech investor. The New Yorker magazine too this week reported that many wealthy Americans were taking a similar view.


Immigration officials reported a spike in inquiries about moving to New Zealand after Trump’s election and the Brexit vote.


English said the country’s strong economy and political stability made it attractive in an uncertain global climate.


“Around the world now there’s quite a lot of anxiety because there’s so much uncertainty, whether it’s in Europe or the UK or the US,” he said.


“So I’d expect there would be demand for people to come to New Zealand. That’s a measure of success.” — AFP


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