
Poland on 9 April deported 25 Pakistani citizens who had attempted to enter the European Union via Belarus in what authorities describe as an organised smuggling operation. The group was placed on a charter flight from Warsaw to Islamabad after expedited administrative proceedings. Polish officials said the migrants crossed into the Białowieża forest corridor, guided by facilitators who charge upwards of PLN 40,000 (€8,900) per person. After interception by border guards, they were held at a guarded centre while Warsaw coordinated removal with Islamabad.
Companies managing cross-border assignments can turn to VisaHQ for real-time guidance on Polish entry requirements; the platform’s online tools and document concierge services simplify applications for work, business and short-stay visas, helping mobility teams avoid the very compliance pitfalls highlighted by this case. More information is available at https://www.visahq.com/poland/
The incident illustrates the continuing security dimension of the Belarus corridor, which EU governments accuse Minsk of weaponising to pressure neighbouring states. Since January, Poland has returned more than 300 third-country nationals using fast-track procedures, enabled by 2024 amendments that allow deportation within 48 hours if no asylum claim is lodged. For employers the episode is a reminder that foreign nationals recruited remotely must verify legal entry routes; onboarding someone who later proves to have entered Schengen irregularly exposes a company to fines and reputational damage. Mobility teams should also watch for possible retaliatory restrictions by Pakistan, which has hinted at more stringent document checks for short-term Polish visas.
Companies managing cross-border assignments can turn to VisaHQ for real-time guidance on Polish entry requirements; the platform’s online tools and document concierge services simplify applications for work, business and short-stay visas, helping mobility teams avoid the very compliance pitfalls highlighted by this case. More information is available at https://www.visahq.com/poland/
The incident illustrates the continuing security dimension of the Belarus corridor, which EU governments accuse Minsk of weaponising to pressure neighbouring states. Since January, Poland has returned more than 300 third-country nationals using fast-track procedures, enabled by 2024 amendments that allow deportation within 48 hours if no asylum claim is lodged. For employers the episode is a reminder that foreign nationals recruited remotely must verify legal entry routes; onboarding someone who later proves to have entered Schengen irregularly exposes a company to fines and reputational damage. Mobility teams should also watch for possible retaliatory restrictions by Pakistan, which has hinted at more stringent document checks for short-term Polish visas.