U.S. expands $5,000–$15,000 visa bond program to 12 additional countries
Starmer signals softer stance on ‘earned settlement’ immigration overhaul
IRCC’s March 18 Express Entry French-Proficiency draw invites 4,000 at record-low CRS 393
Latest News
Australia activates Section 84B ‘arrival-pause’ power, making visa grants conditional on real-time border controls
Home Affairs has, for the first time, switched on the Section 84B Arrival Control Determination, giving the minister legal authority to pause entry for entire visa cohorts after visas are issued. Airlines must verify a new ‘arrival OK’ flag before boarding, and employers are urged to build contingency into travel plans. The measure aims to give Canberra rapid-response border flexibility but raises business-planning and transparency concerns.
Storm-related cancellations and TSA staffing crisis snarl U.S. air network for second straight day
On March 17, a major winter storm combined with a government-shutdown-induced TSA staffing crunch to cancel or delay more than 8,000 U.S. flights. The compounded disruption is costing airlines and corporate travellers millions as security lines lengthen and crew scheduling collapses.
Strike Grounds All Flights at Berlin Brandenburg Airport, Disrupting 57,000 Travellers
A one-day ver.di strike shut down Berlin Brandenburg Airport on 18 March 2026, cancelling 445 flights and stranding about 57 000 passengers. The union wants a 6 % pay rise and at least €250 more per month for 2 000 staff; talks resume 25 March. The stoppage underscores growing labour unrest across Germany’s transport sector and poses fresh headaches for business travel planning.
IRCC issues 4,000 Canadian Experience Class invitations with CRS 507 in March 17 Express Entry round
On 17 March 2026 IRCC invited 4,000 Canadian Experience Class candidates at a CRS cut-off of 507—the lowest CEC threshold since late 2024. The draw offers relief to temporary workers facing looming work-permit expiries and signals Ottawa’s plan to convert more in-Canada talent to permanent residents while gradually reducing overall temporary-resident numbers. Employers should audit foreign staff CRS scores and PR-readiness now to avoid talent leakage.
Indian carriers resume Dubai and West Asia operations as Dubai re-opens to scheduled traffic
Dubai has lifted its 72-hour suspension on Indian flights, allowing Air India, Air India Express and IndiGo to restart West Asia services from 18-19 March 2026. The move restores a critical business-travel and cargo corridor, averting higher freight costs and giving thousands of stranded passengers a way home.
ImmiAccount rolls out real-time queue tracker and fixed decision timeframes for key visa classes
ImmiAccount’s long-promised live progress tracker went live on 18 March, giving applicants and employers a visible queue position and published target processing times (10 weeks for TSS 482, eight weeks for student visas, six months for ENS PR). The upgrade should improve planning for recruitment, enrolments and assignments, though migration agents stress the figures are aspirational.
Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson hit by 3,000-plus flight disruptions amid weather and checkpoint closure
Atlanta’s hub registered more than 3,000 combined delays and cancellations in 48 hours, driven by severe weather and a shutdown-related TSA checkpoint closure. The gridlock is rippling across domestic and international itineraries, prompting airline CEOs to demand quick congressional action.
Backlash grows as Australia’s Temporary Graduate (485) visa fee hike hits applicants’ wallets
A sudden 100 % increase in the Temporary Graduate (subclass 485) visa fee—from AUD 2,300 to AUD 4,600—has triggered criticism from universities and business. Stakeholders say the hike undermines Australia’s attractiveness to international graduates and may exacerbate skill shortages; Home Affairs argues the revenue will fund tougher compliance and a new Genuine Student test.
Home Office proposes 8 % passport-fee hike, pushing online adult applications above £100
A consultation published on 18 March proposes lifting the standard online adult UK-passport fee from £94.50 to £102, with similar rises for children and premium services. The Home Office says the hike will help fund digital upgrades, but travel managers warn it will inflate mobility budgets and deter SME travel. New prices could take effect as early as June.
First Nigerian state visit in 37 years opens talks on UK–Nigeria mobility corridor
King Charles welcomed President Bola Tinubu on 18 March, kicking off the first Nigerian state visit since 1989. Beyond pageantry, ministers launched negotiations on a youth-mobility visa for up to 5,000 young Nigerians a year, faster business-visit processing and expanded air-service rights—measures that could ease skills shortages for UK firms and stimulate two-way trade.
Cyprus fire chief warns of evacuation planning gaps that could hamper mass movement in emergencies
Cyprus’ top fire official told MPs that serious shortcomings in evacuation planning, night-time fire cover and enforcement of safety rules remain unresolved. Without rapid improvements, the island could struggle to move residents, tourists and expatriate workers during wild-fires or security incidents—an issue of growing concern for multinationals basing staff in Cyprus.
Foot-and-Mouth response stabilises but livestock movement controls remain around Cypriot transport hubs
Veterinary authorities say Cyprus’ FMD outbreak is no longer expanding, yet stringent movement permits, vehicle disinfection and export-traceability checks remain in force around the island’s ports and airports. Freight forwarders and agri-exporters face longer clearance times, while live-animal trade and agri-tourism will stay constrained until at least late April.