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Dec 19, 2025

EU Labels Seven ‘Safe’ Countries, Fast-Tracks Asylum Claims – Decision Unveiled in Brussels

EU Labels Seven ‘Safe’ Countries, Fast-Tracks Asylum Claims – Decision Unveiled in Brussels
Meeting in Brussels on International Migrants’ Day (18 December 2025), EU lawmakers and member-state ministers struck a political deal to designate Bangladesh, Colombia, Egypt, Kosovo, India, Morocco and Tunisia as ‘safe countries of origin’. Under the revised Asylum Procedures Regulation—part of the long-negotiated Pact on Migration and Asylum—applications from nationals of those states will be processed in as little as 12 weeks, with the burden of proof shifted onto the applicant.

Belgium, as the seat of the talks and future holder of the rotating EU Council presidency in 2026, played a brokerage role. Belgian State Secretary for Asylum and Migration Anneleen Van Bossuyt welcomed the agreement, saying it would “free capacity for genuine protection cases,” but promised humane safeguards.

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EU Labels Seven ‘Safe’ Countries, Fast-Tracks Asylum Claims – Decision Unveiled in Brussels


NGOs including Amnesty International blasted the move, arguing that generic ‘safe lists’ ignore individual risks such as caste-based violence in India or political crackdowns in Egypt. They warn of higher rejection rates and accelerated returns from Zaventem Airport and other EU hubs, potentially leading to detention bottlenecks.

For employers, the decision could indirectly impact talent pipelines: rejected asylum seekers often seek regularisation through work permits, a channel that may shrink as fast-track refusals rise. HR teams should monitor whether the affected nationals face longer security vetting when applying for business visas or single permits.

The new rules will be gazetted in early 2026 and give each member state—Belgium included—the right to expand the safe-country list unilaterally, signalling a tougher stance on irregular migration across the bloc.
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