
Interior Minister Constantinos Ioannou met with Germany’s ambassador to Cyprus, Dr Hans-Peter Jugel, on 22 October to discuss bilateral cooperation on migration management and digitalisation of residence permits, the ministry said in a read-out. Topics included Berlin’s experience rolling out biometric residence cards and how Cyprus could adapt the technology as part of its Schengen preparations.
Germany offered technical assistance and access to its supplier short-list for secure card production, which could shave six months off Cyprus’s procurement timeline, officials told reporters afterwards. The two sides also reviewed Germany’s Western Balkan talent-visa model that channels skilled workers into shortage occupations—an approach Cyprus is considering for IT and health-care roles.
For employers, the prospect of a chip-based ID backed by EU digital-signature standards would allow seamless e-verification of right-to-work documents, cutting onboarding time for foreign hires. The ministry aims to table enabling legislation in Parliament by April 2026.
The meeting also covered return cooperation and plans for a joint information campaign to deter irregular travel via the occupied north of the island. A follow-up technical workshop will take place in Berlin in November.
Germany offered technical assistance and access to its supplier short-list for secure card production, which could shave six months off Cyprus’s procurement timeline, officials told reporters afterwards. The two sides also reviewed Germany’s Western Balkan talent-visa model that channels skilled workers into shortage occupations—an approach Cyprus is considering for IT and health-care roles.
For employers, the prospect of a chip-based ID backed by EU digital-signature standards would allow seamless e-verification of right-to-work documents, cutting onboarding time for foreign hires. The ministry aims to table enabling legislation in Parliament by April 2026.
The meeting also covered return cooperation and plans for a joint information campaign to deter irregular travel via the occupied north of the island. A follow-up technical workshop will take place in Berlin in November.




