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Oct 23, 2025

Rome to Host 13-Nation Meeting on ‘Accelerated Repatriations’ of Migrants

Rome to Host 13-Nation Meeting on ‘Accelerated Repatriations’ of Migrants
An informal coalition of 13 EU member states—including Italy, Austria, Germany and Greece—agreed on 23 October to push for “accelerated repatriations” of third-country nationals with rejected asylum claims. Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, Danish premier Mette Frederiksen and Dutch counterpart Dick Schoof convened the discussion on the margins of the European Council; officials will reconvene in Rome on 5 November to flesh out concrete measures.

At the heart of the talks is the stalled EU Return Regulation, which would harmonise criteria for declaring countries of origin “safe” and speed up deportations across the bloc. Member states on the migration front line argue that, without faster returns, new legal-migration schemes such as Italy’s enlarged *Decreto Flussi* risk being undermined by uncontrolled inflows. Meloni’s government insists that a credible return policy is the necessary counterpart to larger legal channels announced earlier this year.

Business immigration advisers say the political momentum could eventually translate into tougher document checks at borders and stricter scrutiny of humanitarian residence requests—issues that can delay corporate transfers and family reunifications. Companies sending staff to Italy should monitor how the “safe country” list evolves, as it may affect dependants from high-risk jurisdictions. Travel managers should also anticipate sporadic border-control spot-checks if the political climate hardens.

The Rome meeting will also examine joint investment in biometric systems for external borders and a pilot platform for sharing return-flight manifests, according to EU officials briefed on the agenda. If adopted, the platform could streamline charter-flight procurement but may pose data-protection questions for carriers.

Ultimately, the initiative underscores Italy’s two-track migration strategy: open the front door wider for workers employers need, while bolting the back door against those deemed ineligible. Mobility stakeholders should plan for policy volatility until EU institutions agree a common framework.
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