
Influencer Not Disqualified From Vanuatu 'Golden Passport' Due To No Conviction
A Pacific editor for the newsroom that found online influencer Andrew Tate has Vanuatu citizenship says Tate was not disqualified from getting the "golden passport" because he has not been convicted.
Tate, a self-described misogynist, faces charges of rape and human trafficking in both the United Kingdom and Romania.
The Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) found Tate was granted citizenship in December 2022.
Dan McGarry, an editor with OCCRP, said the passport was issued about 15 days after Tate was detained in Romania.
Tate bought into the "golden passport" scheme, formally known as citizenship by investment, where applicants can be granted Vanuatu citizenship for a minimum investment of $US130,000.
McGarry said the citizenship commissioner - who has been newly appointed in the role - was surprised to find out who Tate was.
"He expressed regret, but at the same time, he said that once a submission has been made, once the application is put to the commission, nothing short of a criminal conviction or false representation on the application itself is sufficient to stop the process," McGarry said.
He said despite the charges, because Tate has not been convicted, "none of that is disqualifying".
"I think if it comes out that there's a conviction that arises, it's possible that his citizenship may be revoked as a result."
McGarry said there are several reasons why people want a Vanuatu passport, including not for nefarious reasons.
"There is a fairly legitimate argument to be made for citizens of repressive regimes whose travel is restricted by their local authorities."
But for Tate, Vanuatu citizenship could have seemed appealing because there's no extradition treaty between Vanuatu and Romania.
"[Tate's] on the record saying that he has multiple passports and that he prefers to live in places where he can effectively buy his way out of any problem that he's facing.
"However, he's now facing criminal charges in the UK as well. That was just confirmed last week and there is a very long-standing extradition agreement between the UK and Vanuatu, so I'm not sure the passport is going to do what he thought it would do originally."
Citizenship by investment started in 1984 in the Caribbean, with Vanuatu launching its own scheme in 2017.
"It structured it in such a way that it was very easy for people outside of Vanuatu to insert themselves into the process by acting as sub agents, effectively selling citizenship and that made it very lucrative," McGarry said.
Until 2024, Vanuatu citizens had visa-free access to the Schengen area in the EU.
"It made the Vanuatu passport very, very attractive, and the price was somewhat better than some of the earlier programs," McGarry said.
He said citizenship by investment programmes at one point were the single largest source of government revenue in Vanuatu.
"You can imagine how attractive that made it to politicians who had always been very financially limited in terms of delivering programmes for people domestically.
"It's been very, very hard for the government to walk away from it, because there's just so much money to be made."
The Vanuatu Citizenship Commission chairman, Charles Maniel, has told the Vanuatu Daily Post it can't carry out any revocation until allegations are proven by a court of law.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

RNZ News
20 hours ago
- RNZ News
Solomon Islands PM calls for pause on Forum dialogue partner meeting
Solomon Islands Prime Minister Jeremiah Manele, right, at the 53rd Pacific Islands Forum Leaders Meeting in Nuku'alofa, Tonga. August 2024 Photo: RNZ Pacific / Lydia Lewis The Solomon Islands Prime Minister has made his case as to why at least twenty countries should be essentially blocked from a key Pacific meeting in Honiara next month. Speaking for the first time to media since news broke of his plans, Jeremiah Manele proposed that Pacific Islands Forum leaders defer the annual dialogue partner meeting till next years' summit in Palau. China and the USA, along with 19 other countries, are Forum dialogue partners. The plan is something Palau's President - a vocal supporter of Taiwan Surangel Whipps Jr backs . Manele insists partners are not being excluded rather his proposal is purely operational with a review into the Pacific's regional architecture not yet finalised. The review is the Pacific Islands Forum leaders' response to the increasing interest from a growing number of Forum dialogue partners wanting a seat - and a say - at the regional decision-making table. "What we are saying here is, let's give some more time for the region to put the process a new process in place so that we can effectively engage with our partners going forward, not now, but the later stage, once we are ready," Manele told local media in a press conference Friday local time. "It's a decision that we take based on the region's interest." Manele went on to explain how he went through appropriate channels -- first meeting with the Troika (the past, present and future hosts of the PIF leaders meeting) who've endorsed his proposal. He said now it's up to the rest of the leaders to have their say: "We understand this decision requires sacrifice, including foregoing special guest invitations during this forum, but it is necessary to ensure engagement is conducted through a robust, transparent and strategic mechanism that reflects our priorities, protects our sovereignty and strengthens our collective voice globally," Manele said. Observers will still attend, including bodies like the World Bank, the Asian Development Bank and the UN agencies. China has strengthened ties in the Solomon Islands and other countries in the Pacific. Photo: Xinhua / Liu Bin/EPA Manele dismissed claims that China/Taiwan tensions are to blame. "We acknowledge public concerns and media narratives regarding Forum matters, but let me be very clear, Solomon Islands is a sovereign nation," Manele said. Marshall Islands President Hilda Heine joined leaders from Tuvalu and Palau in strongly worded comments putting the region on notice that the future unity and stability of the Forum hangs in the balance of decisions that are made for next month's Forum leaders' meeting in the Solomon Islands - just three years since the organization pulled back from the brink of splintering. Last year, RNZ Pacific captured China's representative to the PIF meeting in Tonga asking Cook Islands prime minister Mark Brown to change the final communiqué which recognised Taiwan and China separately. Earlier this year, Solomon Islands' prime minister Jeremiah Manele warned government workers against engaging with "Taiwan." In a statement, Jeremiah Manele reaffirmed his government's commitment to the One-China Policy, raising eyebrows in Palau . However Manele insists this is not about geopolitics, rather a proposal based on the region's interest: "Decisions related to the Pacific Islands Forum are made collectively by Forum members through established processes grounded in the Pacific way, emphasizing respect dialog and consensus."

RNZ News
2 days ago
- RNZ News
Bougainville election: Women's rights activist Therese Kaetavara aims to retain her seat
Therese Kaetavara, Women's MP for South Bougainville Photo: Facebook Five years ago, Therese Kaetavara chose to follow the same path as her son, Emmanuel Carlos Kaetavara, and seek a seat in the Aonomous Bougainville Parliament. Both were successful then, and both are standing again, hoping to return as MPs after the 2025 Bougainville general election on 4 September. Therese, a longtime advocate for women's rights, is aiming to retain her South Bougainville women's reserved seat. RNZ Pacific asked her how the last five years have gone. (This transcript has been edited for brevity and clarity.) Therese Kaetavara: Well, it's been quite a journey. Don Wiseman: What would you say you've achieved in that five years? TK: In these last five years, I think because I am mostly focused on women, working with women, I feel that I have achieved quite a bit. I have worked hard trying to raise women and to attend it where they can economically sustain themselves. DW: What were you doing that would help that happen? TK: That's a good question. There is quite a few things that I have actually been helping the women with, especially helping them set up projects, like livelihood projects, projects that women actually work with, day in, day out, something that they know how to handle. They know how to manage. DW: You're now going into a second election in your South Bougainville Women's Seat. What do you expect and what are you hoping for? TK: I am re-contesting because I am defending the seat that I am sitting on, and my dream is to continue on with the work that I have started already. I just like to brief you a little on what I am doing. I like to just move on with empowering the women, encouraging them to continue supporting the journey that we have. Just want to continue to encourage my women to strengthen them, to continue to support the political independence and the economic development of Bougainville. DW: Have you noticed a change? Have things changed over the five year period? TK: It has taken quite a while, and the change that is actually coming through has taken quite a bit of time, but it is coming through, and we are moving little by little. But change is sure and it is certain. It is happening. There is change happening. I see that in my women, as well, as I continue to encourage them, empower them, do capacity building and all that, and through the help that I continue to give there's more women coming in, through SMEs and all that. Qith the gender balance in the second tier government, there's a lot of changes that have happened politically and economically. DW: The government has its eye on independence for Bougainville by 2027. Amongst your constituents how important is that, do you think? TK: It is very important. I see that in the region that I represent that is taken really seriously amongst the women community, or even the community as a whole, that's taken seriously, and that's been worked on. The area that I actually am responsible for, everything that I do is towards building my women towards that journey, and that is recognised, throughout, because there's quite a lot of work that we do, quite a lot of awareness that's been going on, and everybody knows where we are heading.


Scoop
2 days ago
- Scoop
Is The End Of NCEA A Step Forward Or A Step Backward For Pasifika?
The end of the National Certificate of Educational Achievement (NCEA) has many in the Pacific education community concerned, as Pasifika achievement continues to lag behind the general population. The NCEA will be gone by 2030, after more than 20 years as New Zealand's official secondary-school qualification. In its place will be a more streamlined system, with marks out of 100, letter grades from A to E, and a requirement to study at least five complete subjects. Education Minister Erica Stanford said that the changes would make study more consistent and in line with the skills and knowledge that society most values. However, Post-Primary Teachers'Association's Pasifika representative Angela Maisiri told RNZ Pacific that the proposed changes could be used to exclude students in marginalised communities. "We are concerned that the proposed changes to the secondary school qualifications signal a shift toward a narrowed, standardised, and monocultural approach to curriculum and assessment. "This shift could undermine the aspirations and achievement of Pasifika students and their communities." Meanwhile, Ōtāhuhu High School principal Neil Watson, whose school has a large Pasifika population, was happy to see NCEA put to rest. Watson said that in its 20-year history, NCEA had never worked for Pasifika students, as evidenced by lagging achievement rates. "I think it's a myth that NCEA has benefited Pacific, Māori or low socio-economic students. If it has, why hasn't that gap been closed?" Watson believes that the most important thing when it comes to boosting Pasifika achievement is improving teaching quality. To that end, he said that his staff are optimistic about the changes. "We've all had experiences of our own when we were in school, when we had those fantastic teachers that have inspired us to go on to do what we do in our careers... we need to get more people into teaching that can light the fire." "It's been foreshadowed for a while." Maisiri said the increased emphasis on external assessments, as well as the hardened english-maths requirements in Year 11, could risk strengthening inequality without measures to accommodate unique cultural needs. "There is a continuing absence of Pasifika perspectives, values, and languages within most assessment frameworks and subject content." "Pasifika learners bring knowledge, resilience, service, and creativity. Our assessment system must uplift these strengths, not suppress them." The Ministry of Education told RNZ Pacific that the upcoming consultation period will provide the Pacific education community a chance to outline how the changes would impact them. It also confirmed that Niue, the Cook Islands and Tokelau - all of which used NCEA - were consulted on the changes before the announcement.