ShowBiz & Sports Lifestyle

Hot

EU paves way to allow migrant deportation to centres outside bloc

EU paves way to allow migrant deportation to centres outside bloc

By Amina IsmailMon, June 1, 2026 at 9:31 PM UTC

0

FILE PHOTO: A drone view shows the European Union flags outside the European Commission headquarters, known as the Berlaymont building in Brussels, Belgium, April 29, 2026. REUTERS/Yves Herman/File Photo

By Amina Ismail

June 1 (Reuters) - European Union lawmakers and governments agreed on Monday on new rules allowing countries to send migrants ordered to leave the bloc to centres in third countries.

The ‌deal is part of a broader tightening of EU migration policy amid pressure from right‑wing parties, ‌even as irregular arrivals fell 26% last year to their lowest level since 2021.

The legislation, which still requires formal approval by EU governments ​and the European Parliament, was proposed by the European Commission last year. The commission says it would streamline procedures and give governments more tools to deport people while respecting fundamental rights.

EU countries say they struggle to ensure that rejected asylum seekers and visa overstayers leave their territory. The commission says only about 20% of people ordered to leave ‌currently depart.

Under the new rules, EU states ⁠would be able to establish so‑called “return hubs” outside the bloc for people whose asylum claims have been rejected or who have been ordered to leave the EU. Deportees could ⁠be sent to hubs in countries they do not have connections to.

"With the new rules, we have more control over who can come to the EU, who can stay, and who needs to leave,” said European Commissioner Magnus Brunner.

Advertisement

The ​draft ​legislation extends detention periods and introduces penalties, including entry bans, ​fines and possible criminal sanctions for non‑cooperation.

Authorities ‌would be allowed to seize belongings, collect biometric data and search homes. Coercion is permitted as a last resort to obtain fingerprints.

The deal also allows authorities to search migrants and “relevant premises”, a term that rights groups criticise as being overly broad and enabling home raids.

Human rights activists and NGOs working with asylum seekers in the EU say some of the practices are already occurring and have increased in recent months, pointing to a rise in ‌deportations from Germany and other states of recognised refugees to ​Greece and other EU border countries.

There, they say, in some cases ​authorities carry out night‑time home searches to detain ​people and transfer them to detention centres or airports for deportation, sometimes without allowing ‌them to gather their belongings.

Minos Mouzourakis, a lawyer ​and advocacy officer at Greece‑based ​non‑profit Refugee Support Aegean, warned the draft legislation amounted to “a recipe for extremely damaging and extremely dangerous practices” in Europe.

French Green lawmaker Mélissa Camara said: "The legalisation of return hubs outside the European Union, the ​green light for the detention of ‌minors, home visits inspired by ICE practices: The legal arsenal serving a xenophobic ideology is now ​complete."

(Reporting by Amina Ismail, additional reporting by Charlotte Van Campenhout and Layli Foroudi and Gnaneshwar Rajan ​in Bengaluru, Editing by Nick Zieminski and Cynthia Osterman)

Original Article on Source

Source: “AOL Breaking”

We do not use cookies and do not collect personal data. Just news.