
Concluding a high-level summit in Brussels on 22 October 2025, the European Union—including Italy as a key member state—and Egypt issued a joint declaration committing to ‘dignified, coordinated’ return and reintegration of irregular migrants. The communiqué notes that the EU has already earmarked €200 million for mobility and border-management projects in Egypt for 2024-2027.
Italian diplomats said the agreement complements Rome’s Mediterranean strategy, which seeks to shift screening and return procedures closer to countries of origin. NGO critics, however, warn that Egypt’s human-rights record makes monitoring essential; they urge Italy and other member states to condition funding on safeguards against arbitrary detention.
From a corporate-mobility perspective, the deal could accelerate visa issuance for Egyptian technicians needed in Italy’s construction and ship-repair sectors, as Cairo is expected to negotiate expanded legal-migration quotas in exchange for cooperation on returns. The text also references the need for ‘skills partnerships’, echoing Italy’s experience with Morocco and Tunisia.
Implementation details will be discussed at a follow-up meeting in Rome in February 2026, co-hosted by Italy’s Interior Ministry and the European Commission’s DG HOME.
Italian diplomats said the agreement complements Rome’s Mediterranean strategy, which seeks to shift screening and return procedures closer to countries of origin. NGO critics, however, warn that Egypt’s human-rights record makes monitoring essential; they urge Italy and other member states to condition funding on safeguards against arbitrary detention.
From a corporate-mobility perspective, the deal could accelerate visa issuance for Egyptian technicians needed in Italy’s construction and ship-repair sectors, as Cairo is expected to negotiate expanded legal-migration quotas in exchange for cooperation on returns. The text also references the need for ‘skills partnerships’, echoing Italy’s experience with Morocco and Tunisia.
Implementation details will be discussed at a follow-up meeting in Rome in February 2026, co-hosted by Italy’s Interior Ministry and the European Commission’s DG HOME.






