
Senior officials from all 27 member states convened at the Europa Building on 27 October 2025 for the quarterly meeting of the Strategic Committee on Immigration, Frontiers and Asylum (SCIFA). The agenda—circulated ahead of the session—focused on three politically sensitive files: (1) ‘return hubs’ that would centralise pre-removal detention and speed up deportations; (2) transitioning out of the Temporary Protection regime for 4.2 million Ukrainians in the EU; and (3) common guidance on asylum decisions for Syrian nationals in light of evolving security conditions.
Belgium, as host, pressed for greater financial solidarity to relieve pressure on its overcrowded reception network, arguing that the proposed hubs should be co-funded through the EU Budget rather than by individual host states. The Belgian delegation also tabled a non-paper calling for an “EU corporate sponsorship” pilot that would allow employers facing skills shortages to underwrite integration costs for refugees who transition into work.
Although SCIFA is an advisory body, its conclusions shape dossiers sent to COREPER and ultimately to Justice and Home Affairs Council ministers. For global-mobility managers, the outcome will influence the timeline for phasing out temporary protection residence cards and could create new compliance obligations if ‘sponsorship’ pathways are adopted.
Observers expect a draft Council Recommendation on Return Hubs by December and a Commission communication on post-TPR residence statuses in Q1 2026. Companies employing Ukrainian nationals in Belgium should therefore monitor right-to-work documentation expiry dates and plan for potential shifts to Single Permit or Blue Card regimes.
NGOs present at the meeting warned that accelerated returns risk undermining fundamental-rights safeguards; they called for independent monitoring at any new hubs and harmonised access to legal aid across member states.
Belgium, as host, pressed for greater financial solidarity to relieve pressure on its overcrowded reception network, arguing that the proposed hubs should be co-funded through the EU Budget rather than by individual host states. The Belgian delegation also tabled a non-paper calling for an “EU corporate sponsorship” pilot that would allow employers facing skills shortages to underwrite integration costs for refugees who transition into work.
Although SCIFA is an advisory body, its conclusions shape dossiers sent to COREPER and ultimately to Justice and Home Affairs Council ministers. For global-mobility managers, the outcome will influence the timeline for phasing out temporary protection residence cards and could create new compliance obligations if ‘sponsorship’ pathways are adopted.
Observers expect a draft Council Recommendation on Return Hubs by December and a Commission communication on post-TPR residence statuses in Q1 2026. Companies employing Ukrainian nationals in Belgium should therefore monitor right-to-work documentation expiry dates and plan for potential shifts to Single Permit or Blue Card regimes.
NGOs present at the meeting warned that accelerated returns risk undermining fundamental-rights safeguards; they called for independent monitoring at any new hubs and harmonised access to legal aid across member states.





