
Transport Minister Alexis Vafeades has confirmed that the first construction phase of the Limnes Migrant Centre – Cyprus’ flagship pre-removal and accommodation facility near Larnaca – was delivered on schedule on 6 February. The centre, co-financed by the EU’s Asylum, Migration and Integration Fund, is budgeted at €85 million and will ultimately host up to 1 800 people whose asylum claims have been rejected or are awaiting repatriation.
Phase 1 provides administrative offices, medical units, secure accommodation blocks and basic recreational areas. Staffing has already begun and a limited number of residents will move in "within days", relieving pressure on the overcrowded Pournara reception camp and allowing authorities to convert the Menogeia detention facility into Cyprus’ first juvenile correction centre.
Vafeades stressed that the project is central to the government’s strategy of coupling faster asylum decisions with humane but firm return procedures. Community leaders from nearby villages expressed concern about security and the lack of promised compensatory projects, highlighting the need for ongoing stakeholder engagement as construction continues.
For individuals or employers needing to secure short- or long-term visas amid these shifting migration policies, VisaHQ can simplify the process. The service’s Cyprus portal (https://www.visahq.com/cyprus/) provides real-time guidance on required documents, fees and processing times, helping travelers, family members and HR departments avoid delays and remain compliant with local regulations.
For corporate HR departments and relocation providers, the phased opening matters because it should shorten waiting times for negative-decision holders who currently remain in urban areas while lodging appeals – a situation that can delay family-reunification visas and burden municipal services. Once fully operational in September, Limnes will include sports grounds, worship facilities and vocational-training classrooms, signalling a shift toward more structured, EU-aligned migration management.
The timely completion also demonstrates Cyprus’ ability to deliver complex infrastructure – an argument Nicosia will deploy in Brussels as it campaigns for Schengen accession. Phases 2 and 3, scheduled for April and September respectively, will expand capacity and add dedicated return-counselling units run by the International Organization for Migration.
Phase 1 provides administrative offices, medical units, secure accommodation blocks and basic recreational areas. Staffing has already begun and a limited number of residents will move in "within days", relieving pressure on the overcrowded Pournara reception camp and allowing authorities to convert the Menogeia detention facility into Cyprus’ first juvenile correction centre.
Vafeades stressed that the project is central to the government’s strategy of coupling faster asylum decisions with humane but firm return procedures. Community leaders from nearby villages expressed concern about security and the lack of promised compensatory projects, highlighting the need for ongoing stakeholder engagement as construction continues.
For individuals or employers needing to secure short- or long-term visas amid these shifting migration policies, VisaHQ can simplify the process. The service’s Cyprus portal (https://www.visahq.com/cyprus/) provides real-time guidance on required documents, fees and processing times, helping travelers, family members and HR departments avoid delays and remain compliant with local regulations.
For corporate HR departments and relocation providers, the phased opening matters because it should shorten waiting times for negative-decision holders who currently remain in urban areas while lodging appeals – a situation that can delay family-reunification visas and burden municipal services. Once fully operational in September, Limnes will include sports grounds, worship facilities and vocational-training classrooms, signalling a shift toward more structured, EU-aligned migration management.
The timely completion also demonstrates Cyprus’ ability to deliver complex infrastructure – an argument Nicosia will deploy in Brussels as it campaigns for Schengen accession. Phases 2 and 3, scheduled for April and September respectively, will expand capacity and add dedicated return-counselling units run by the International Organization for Migration.








