Freehold owners to get residency

Robert Ditcham and Haneen Dajani

   - Last Updated: February 17. 2009 1:01AM UAE / February 16. 2009 9:01PM
   GMT

ABU DHABI // A federal law granting residency visas to owners of freehold
property will be introduced within the year, a senior government official
has disclosed.

The proposal, welcomed by property developers, will allow the owners to
obtain a six-month renewable residency visa, regardless of their nationality
or the size and value of the property, said Brig Gen Nasser al Minhali, the
acting director general of the federal Department of Naturalisation and
Residency (DNR).

Brig Gen Minhali said the aim was to create a unified visa system related to
home purchases.

"It is a security organisational procedure," he said.

"We do not want each emirate to develop procedures on its own, so we will
unify it under the Ministry of Interior."

Residency visas granted in the past would remain valid, he said. But it
would not be possible to renew them until the federal law was implemented.
He refused to reveal further details, as the law is still being studied.

Whatever the department's stated aims, property market insiders said the
introduction of a single property visa system for the whole country would
benefit a housing market that has recently been less buoyant after several
years of growth.

"We strongly support this proposal," said Mohammed Nimer, the chief
executive of Dubai-based MAG Group Properties, adding that the property
market needed a boost.

A spokesman for Aldar, Abu Dhabi's largest property developer, said: "We
would welcome any clarification regarding residency visas for international
property buyers, but it is too early for us to comment any further."

The Dubai-based master developers Nakheel and Emaar did not comment.

In several emirates, including Dubai, prospective homeowners seeking
residency have relied on property developers to act as sponsors for visas.
The three-year visa, which allowed the holder to live in the emirate but not
to work, was a significant incentive for many buyers, especially those from
Iran, Pakistan and India.
There was confusion, however, over whether developers could actually
guarantee these visas, as some promised, and whether the DNR would issue
them. The situation was clearer in Abu Dhabi, where developers said there
was not even the possibility of a residency visa for foreign buyers.

Industry insiders said a single nationwide system was vital in easing
confusion over which emirate had which entitlement. This would help to
restore confidence to the market, they said.

"It has to be federal; that way it carries weight," said Mr Nimer, who added
that the market would not fully recover until home finance became more
readily available.

Vincent Easton, the sales director at Sherwoods Independent Property
Consultants, esaid a single law would clarify an issue that had been "opaque
for too long".
However, he and several other leading estate agents said the visas'
six-month validity was too short.

Liz O'Connor, the director of residential sales and leasing at Better Homes,
said the proposal may encourage a few cash buyers to start thinking about
purchasing. But she added: "Due to the short-term nature of the proposed
visa this does not give buyers a sense of security if they are thinking of
staying, moving to or retiring in Dubai, as property for many is a long-term
investment." Ms O'Connor added that many people in Dubai purchased property
believing they would be granted a residence visa. In many cases, that had
not materialised.

An official at the Dubai Land Department said the way visas were granted had
been under review for some time.

Mohammad Sultan Thani, the department's assistant director-general for
excellence and organisational governance, said housing officials wanted to
stop developers from being able to say they could "guarantee" buyers a visa
– a claim that helped companies to sell properties, but was by no means
assured and gave prospective investors false hope.

Dubai's Real Estate Regulatory Agency last year criticised developers that
promoted housing projects in this way, pointing out that all visa
applications were subject to approval from the DNR.

A committee to examine the system proposed that the title deed for a
freehold or long-term leasehold property would itself qualify a buyer to
apply for a residency visa, cutting the developer out of the process.

Mr Thani said the proposed law would be better for landowners than
sponsorship by the developer.

"At the moment, property owners can be sponsored by the developer, as if you
were working for them, and your visa belongs to them,'' he said. "But if
there was a problem between you and the developer, it would have the power
to cancel your visa."

While admitting that the prospect of residency visas would be "very nice for
investors", he doubted people bought for that reason alone.

"For some nationalities it's a motivating factor," Mr Thani said, "but
overall people buy as a long-term investment, to live in the property, to
earn rental revenue or to sell for a profit."

rditc...@thenational.ae
hdaj...@thenational.ae

http://www.thenational.ae/article/20090217/NATIONAL/555432476/1133

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