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Today: March 13, 2025
Today: March 13, 2025

EU proposal would send rejected migrants to centres outside the bloc for deportation

Magnus Brunner faces a confirmation hearing before a European Parliament committee, in Brussels
March 11, 2025
Reuters - Reuters

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The European Commission on Tuesday proposed that member countries be allowed to set up centres in non-EU countries where migrants whose asylum claims were rejected would await deportation.

EU member countries struggle to ensure that asylum seekers whose claims are rejected leave their territories. The proposal aims to address the problem by sending the migrants to centres called "return hubs" in countries outside the EU while they await deportation proceedings.

โ€œThe EU has some of the highest asylum standards in the world...But this is not sustainable if people who don't have the right, abuse the system," EU Commissioner for Migration Magnus Brunner told a press conference on Tuesday.

"One out of five people who are told to leave the EU, actually leave the EU and that is not acceptable.โ€

The new plan aims to create common regulations across the EU, so that an order to a migrant to leave one member state will be considered an order to leave the entire EU.

The proposal, which still requires approval from the European Parliament and EU member states, is part of the migration and asylum pact agreed upon in late 2023.

Immigration remains a highly sensitive topic in most of the bloc's 27 member states, even though migrants entering the EU illegally dropped by 38% last year, the lowest level since 2021.

The proposal has faced heavy criticism from rights groups, who argue that it could lead to human rights violations and the extended detention of migrants on vague and punitive grounds.

โ€œThe European Commission has capitulated to the unworkable, expensive, and inhumane demands of a few vocal anti-human rights and anti-migration governments,โ€ said Eve Geddie of Amnesty International in a statement on Tuesday.

The proposal would also allow member states to detain individuals for up to two years if they pose a security risk.

(Reporting by Amina Ismail, Tiffany Vermeylen and Julia Payne; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)

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