Spring Airlines Chairman urges wider, longer visa-free entry and simpler 240-hour transit rules
UAE waives visa-overstay fines for travellers stranded by airspace closures
Qantas reroutes flagship Perth–London flight via Singapore as Gulf airspace closes
Latest News
Austrian Airlines mounts dual evacuation flights from Gulf region to Vienna
On 5 March Austrian Airlines operated two special flights—Muscat/Riyadh to Vienna—to evacuate hundreds of Austrians stranded by the escalating Gulf conflict. The missions, coordinated with the Foreign Ministry, underscore the importance of real-time traveller tracking and contingency planning for multinational employers.
Brazil Waives Short-Stay Visas for Citizens of Eight Countries Under “Open Doors 2026”
Inter-Ministerial Ordinance 18/2026, publicised on 4 March, scrapped Brazil’s short-stay visa requirement for citizens of China, Denmark, France, Hungary, Ireland, Jamaica, Saint Lucia and the Bahamas. The 30-day visa-free entry—extendable once to 90 days—cuts lead times and costs for tourism and corporate trips alike and is the flagship of the government’s “Open Doors 2026” strategy to lift international arrivals. Airlines are already adding capacity, and mobility teams are revising travel policies to reflect the new rules.
Hong Kong Widens Visa-Renewal Filing Window to 90 Days for Key Talent Schemes
Effective 1 March 2026, holders of six core Hong Kong work-visa categories—and their dependants—may apply for renewals up to 90 days before expiry, easing administrative pressure on employers and reinforcing talent-retention efforts.
Salary Thresholds for Irish Employment Permits Jump on 1 March 2026—Government Publishes Final Figures
Ireland’s long-trailed rise in employment-permit salary thresholds became law on 1 March 2026. General Permits now require at least €36,605 and Critical Skills Permits €40,904, with all figures to be adjusted annually. Employers must audit renewals and future offers immediately or risk refused permits and assignment delays.
Canada Faces Unprecedented Wave of 300,000+ Work-Permit Expiries by March 31
More than 314,000 Canadian work permits will expire by March 31, 2026, creating the largest status-loss wave on record. The concentration stems from pandemic-era permit issuances and threatens to swamp IRCC processing, strain employers and force many foreign workers either to depart or scramble for new status. Mobility managers must audit expiry dates, file renewals early and consider alternative immigration pathways.
Sirens at Akrotiri Base Prove False Alarm, But Heightened Alert Shows Cyprus’ New Normal
Late-night sirens at the UK’s Akrotiri air base on 5 March were cancelled within minutes after officials confirmed no incoming threat. The false alarm follows this week’s drone strike on the base and highlights Cyprus’ heightened security posture, with the UK, France and Greece reinforcing defences. Mobility planners should expect intermittent alerts and potential flight-holding patterns even when no attack materialises.
UAE partially reopens airspace; Emirates, Etihad and flydubai restart limited services
The GCAA has authorised a phased reopening of UAE airspace, allowing Emirates, Etihad and flydubai to run reduced schedules from 5 March. Capacity remains severely constrained, flight times are longer because of restricted regional corridors, and passengers need fresh rebooking confirmations before heading to the airport. The partial restart offers corporates a path to resume urgent travel and cargo movements but requires flexible itinerary planning.
European flight chaos grounds hundreds in Switzerland and across the continent
Severe 5 March disruption saw 22 flights cancelled in Zurich and 11 in Geneva as part of more than 1,000 affected services across Europe. Operational bottlenecks at major hubs created knock-on delays that hit Swiss business travellers and assignees. Mobility managers should factor wider buffers and multimodal back-up plans into spring travel, and remind staff of their rights under EU261.
Hong Kong Immigration Hotline Doubles Staff to Aid Residents Stranded by Middle-East Conflict
Benson Kwok’s Immigration Department has doubled staff on its 1868 hotline and activated a full emergency command centre to help hundreds of Hong Kong residents stranded in the Middle East after the latest Iran conflict closed key air corridors. Officers are coordinating flights, documents and security advice with Chinese missions and airlines until normal services resume, underscoring the need for robust corporate evacuation planning.
Government Work Report promises higher-level opening, easier entry and 17 % jump in inbound tourism
Premier Li Qiang’s report to the NPC on 5 March says inbound tourist numbers jumped 17.1 % last year and vows to make entry, payment and work-permit processes still easier in 2026. Measures include trimming the cross-border negative list, expanding visa-waiver talks, rolling out English e-gates and promoting e-CNY wallets for foreigners – all of which give multinationals clearer sight-lines for travel and relocation planning.
IRCC Issues 5,500 Invitations in French-Language Express Entry Draw, CRS Drops to 397
On March 4, 2026 Canada’s Express Entry system invited 5,500 French-speaking candidates with CRS scores as low as 397, the lowest francophone threshold to date. The draw accelerates Ottawa’s plan to boost francophone immigration outside Quebec and provides employers with a larger pool of bilingual talent who can obtain permanent residence—and Bridging Open Work Permits—within months.
First post-crisis Dubai–Salzburg flight brings 126 passengers safely home
A FlyDubai service landed in Salzburg on 5 March—the first Dubai flight since the Gulf conflict triggered widespread cancellations. The reopening of the route eases pressure on stranded Austrian travellers and restores a critical cargo and tourism link, but passengers should still expect irregular schedules and longer border-processing times.
Government lifts minimum salary floor for 482 & 186 employer-sponsored visas
Australia’s Core Skills Income Threshold for employer-sponsored visas will rise to A$79,499 on 1 July 2026, with the Specialist Skills threshold jumping to A$146,717. Employers must align budgets and contracts quickly or risk nomination refusals and sponsorship penalties. Fast-tracking applications before the deadline or budgeting for higher salaries after July is now a priority for HR and mobility teams.