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Oct 27, 2025

EU Strategic Committee on Immigration, Frontiers and Asylum meets; Cyprus backs roadmap for returns

EU Strategic Committee on Immigration, Frontiers and Asylum meets; Cyprus backs roadmap for returns
EU ambassad­ors and senior officials gathered in Brussels on 27 October 2025 for the latest session of the **Strategic Committee on Immigration, Frontiers and Asylum (SCIFA)**, where Cyprus lined up with Mediterranean partners to push for practical mechanisms that will phase out temporary protections and accelerate returns of migrants whose status has expired. The agenda featured discussion papers on new "return hubs", Ukraine-war displaced persons, and the impact of Syria’s evolving security situation on asylum case management.

Deputy Migration Minister Nicholas Ioannides argued that frontline states such as Cyprus shoulder disproportionate operational burdens and need a clearer solidarity formula before the EU’s Pact on Migration and Asylum enters force in 2026. He welcomed the idea of EU-funded hubs but insisted they must be located in willing third countries with robust human-rights safeguards to avoid fresh litigation at the European Court of Justice.

For companies relocating staff to Cyprus, the debate matters because the eventual phase-out of temporary-protection status for Ukrainians—currently numbering about 12,000 on the island—could tighten the local labour pool and alter work-permit processing times. Employers should audit their Ukrainian workforces and liaise with immigration counsel about pathways to long-term permits or EU Blue Cards as transitional rules sunset.

Another takeaway is the committee’s endorsement of a **biometric pre-boarding programme** tied to the Entry/Exit System. Cyprus volunteered Larnaca Airport as a test site for storing facial-image templates of third-country nationals, which could cut arrival-hall processing by up to 40 %. Travel-risk advisers, however, caution that new databases entail GDPR-compliance obligations for HR teams handling employee data uploads.

SCIFA’s conclusions will feed into the Justice and Home Affairs Council in December, where ministers are expected to agree on a timeline for dismantling temporary protections and scaling up returns. Mobility managers should monitor the Council meeting for definitive dates that could affect visa-renewal strategies in 2026.
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