
The European Parliament’s Civil Liberties (LIBE) Committee dedicated a special hearing on 24 February to “Empowering Police and Judicial Authorities: Towards More Effective and Lawful Data Access for Law-Enforcement Purposes.” The session – included in Parliament’s calendar at Nicosia’s request – examined how upcoming EU rules on cross-border electronic evidence can dovetail with the bloc’s new migration architecture.
Cypriot Deputy Minister for Migration Nicolas Ioannides told MEPs via video link that rapid, privacy-compliant information exchange is essential if the Migration & Asylum Pact is to deliver both security and humane processing.
Amid this evolving policy landscape, organisations and individual travellers can streamline compliance through specialised services such as VisaHQ. The company’s Cyprus portal (https://www.visahq.com/cyprus/) consolidates the latest visa, residence-permit and carrier data-submission requirements, offering guided applications and real-time tracking—support that becomes increasingly valuable as API-PNR obligations and EU-wide database cross-checks take hold.
He noted that Cyprus will pilot an API-PNR (advance passenger information/passenger name record) fusion platform at Larnaca Airport from June 2026, connecting carriers directly to the national screening system. Experts from Europol, Eurojust and the European Data Protection Supervisor warned that divergent national procedures still slow down time-critical requests. They urged lawmakers to fast-track the proposed e-Evidence Regulation and to clarify safeguards when biometric or travel-history data are reused for asylum or return decisions. For mobility stakeholders the message is clear: digital due-process standards are converging with border-management tools. Employers sponsoring work/residence permits should expect authorities to verify documents against EU-wide databases in near-real time – reducing fraud risk but requiring impeccable record-keeping. Travel-management teams will also need to track new carrier obligations as API-PNR pilots expand.
Cypriot Deputy Minister for Migration Nicolas Ioannides told MEPs via video link that rapid, privacy-compliant information exchange is essential if the Migration & Asylum Pact is to deliver both security and humane processing.
Amid this evolving policy landscape, organisations and individual travellers can streamline compliance through specialised services such as VisaHQ. The company’s Cyprus portal (https://www.visahq.com/cyprus/) consolidates the latest visa, residence-permit and carrier data-submission requirements, offering guided applications and real-time tracking—support that becomes increasingly valuable as API-PNR obligations and EU-wide database cross-checks take hold.
He noted that Cyprus will pilot an API-PNR (advance passenger information/passenger name record) fusion platform at Larnaca Airport from June 2026, connecting carriers directly to the national screening system. Experts from Europol, Eurojust and the European Data Protection Supervisor warned that divergent national procedures still slow down time-critical requests. They urged lawmakers to fast-track the proposed e-Evidence Regulation and to clarify safeguards when biometric or travel-history data are reused for asylum or return decisions. For mobility stakeholders the message is clear: digital due-process standards are converging with border-management tools. Employers sponsoring work/residence permits should expect authorities to verify documents against EU-wide databases in near-real time – reducing fraud risk but requiring impeccable record-keeping. Travel-management teams will also need to track new carrier obligations as API-PNR pilots expand.