Poland launches fully-digital MOS portal for all residence-permit applications
Hong Kong ramps up rail, bus and bridge services and opens 24-hour command centre for Labour Day Golden Week
Italy sets three-year immigration quotas: 497,550 extra non-EU workers cleared for 2026-2028
Latest News
IRCC invites 2,000 Canadian Experience Class candidates in 28 April Express Entry draw
On 28 April 2026 IRCC issued 2,000 Invitations to Apply under the Canadian Experience Class, with a CRS cut-off of 514. The draw highlights Ottawa’s emphasis on converting in-country talent to permanent residence and offers immediate opportunities for employers to retain skilled foreign workers. Applicants now have 60 days to submit a complete PR file.
Brazil Promulgates Cross-Border Localities Agreement, Creating Fast-Track Frontier Mobility Document
Decree 12.948, published 28 April 2026, ratifies a MERCOSUR accord that lets frontier residents of Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay obtain a biometrically-secure Document of Cross-Border Traffic valid for five years. The DTVF grants the right to work, study and access public services on either side of the border and creates express lanes at checkpoints, dramatically easing daily commuter flows and reducing compliance costs for employers with binational operations.
Western Swiss cantons form united front against population-cap immigration initiative
Six French-speaking cantons declared on 27 April that they will campaign against June’s “No to ten million” initiative, warning it would deepen labour shortages and jeopardise EU relations. The move signals mounting regional and business resistance to a hard cap on foreign residents, an issue with major consequences for corporate mobility programmes.
Immigration Department forecasts six million passenger trips during Golden Week, warns Lo Wu and Lok Ma Chau will be heaviest hit
Hong Kong immigration officials expect six million passenger movements over the 1–5 May holiday, with Lo Wu, Lok Ma Chau Spur Line and Shenzhen Bay singled out for the worst congestion. Extra staff, temporary counters and a multi-agency command centre will be deployed, while the Easy Boundary portal now offers live wait-time data that corporates can integrate into duty-of-care and scheduling systems.
State Department Imposes “No-Fear” Declarations on All U.S. Non-Immigrant Visa Applicants
Effective April 28, all U.S. consulates must deny a non-immigrant visa to anyone who admits fearing harm on return to their home country. The unprecedented pre-screen aims to block asylum claims before travelers ever reach U.S. soil. Corporations that move staff via B-1/B-2, F-1, J-1 or other temporary visas face new compliance and reputational risks and may need alternative mobility strategies.
Government sets December 2028 back-stop as Afghan Resettlement Programme enters wind-down phase
In a written statement on 28 April 2026, the Government said the Afghan Resettlement Programme will complete all eligibility decisions by spring 2027 and end relocation support by December 2028. State-funded assistance for travel out of Afghanistan is being withdrawn immediately, meaning applicants must now reach a third-country visa centre at their own expense. The shift aligns ARP with other resettlement routes and will allow the Ministry of Defence to scale back use of hotels and military housing. Businesses, councils and NGOs now have firmer timelines for budgeting and planning integration services.
German Court Strikes Down Border Check, Putting Berlin’s Internal Schengen Controls on the Defensive
The Administrative Court in Koblenz ruled that a 2025 identity check at the Luxembourg–Germany border violated the Schengen Borders Code, saying Berlin had not shown a specific security threat to justify prolonged controls. While the government will appeal, the decision intensifies pressure to roll back internal border checks that have caused delays for commuters and cargo. Companies should track disruptions and potential reimbursement claims as the legal battle unfolds.
France Begins At-Sea Interceptions of Channel Migrant Boats
Le Monde reports that French patrol boats are now authorised to intercept and escort migrant dinghies in the English Channel—a tactic deployed seven times since November 2025 and three times in April 2026 alone. The change, encouraged by UK funding, raises the stakes for cross-Channel travel and signals tougher external-border controls that could disrupt corporate mobility plans.
India Signals Imminent Easing of Visa Procedures for Bangladeshi Nationals
Bangladesh’s foreign minister says New Delhi has agreed to streamline visa issuance for Bangladeshi citizens after months of delays. The two sides are working to expand electronic applications and increase appointment capacity, aiming to revive cross-border trade, medical tourism and executive travel. Companies should prepare documentation now to take advantage of shorter processing times once the reforms are rolled out.
Australia’s ‘do-not-transit’ warning rattles Dubai and Abu Dhabi hub itineraries
Australia now advises against *transiting* the UAE, effectively putting Dubai and Abu Dhabi layovers in the same risk category as a full stop-over. Corporates must reassess itineraries, insurance coverage and emergency-routing plans as employees could be stranded mid-journey if airspace closes again.
Australia Switches on Nationwide Fast-Track Visa Processing System
Australia has activated its new AI-enabled "Unified Digital Processing Environment", slashing published service standards to 15–25 business days for key work and student visas. Faster decisions will help employers fill skill shortages and reduce uncertainty for graduates, but incomplete applications risk instant refusal, forcing HR teams to raise file-preparation standards.
Brussels Airport expected to cancel half of its flights on 12 May as unions plan national protest
Brussels Airport has told airlines to cut their 12 May departure schedule by roughly half because a nationwide union protest will leave security and ground-handling teams understaffed. While arriving flights should be less affected, some 60 000 passengers face potential cancellations or delays, posing a serious challenge for business-travel planners and connecting itineraries.
Drone-attack fallout keeps Cyprus tourism on edge as key summer season nears
Passenger traffic at Larnaca and Paphos airports fell 15 % in March and hotel occupancy for Easter was as low as 25 %, as Cyprus continues to reel from security concerns after the April drone strike on RAF Akrotiri. Although several EU states have eased travel advisories, demand is still weak, prompting the government to launch a wage-subsidy scheme for hotels. Business travellers can expect cheaper fares but fewer flight options, and mobility planners should watch for further geopolitical shocks.
Sánchez urges Spain’s mayors to champion the new migrant regularisation drive
Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez has publicly asked Spain’s city councils to facilitate the extraordinary regularisation that opened on 16 April. Town halls control the padrón certificates migrants need, and delays could jeopardise the government’s goal of approving 500,000 permits by 30 June 2026. Businesses relying on foreign labour should monitor local compliance, as uneven municipal cooperation could create regional talent shortages.
Dublin Airport warns passengers to plan ahead as May bank-holiday traffic set to smash records
Dublin Airport expects a record 465,000 passengers over the 3–6 May bank-holiday weekend, with peak traffic of 121,000 on Friday. The DAA is urging travellers to arrive early and has boosted security and border-control staffing. The surge, fuelled by sports events and holiday demand, highlights ongoing capacity concerns that could affect Ireland’s competitiveness for business travel.
EES confusion: Italian airports apply biometric border rules unevenly, leaving residents in limbo
A survey of major airports reveals that Italy is applying the new Schengen Entry/Exit System inconsistently: some hubs exempt holders of Italian residence permits while others force them through full biometric capture. The lack of nationwide instructions has already caused missed flights and risks wrongful over-stay flags. Companies should brief resident staff to carry documentary proof of exemption and budget extra time at departure.
France begins at-sea interceptions of Channel migrant boats after new £662 million UK-funded deal
Le Monde reports that French maritime forces have begun physically intercepting migrant boats in the Channel, a tactic enabled by a new three-year deal under which the UK will pay £662 million for enhanced French enforcement. At least seven interceptions have taken place this month, prompting safety concerns and legal questions. The development matters for UK employers because any reduction in Channel crossings is likely to coincide with tighter visa quotas, exacerbating labour shortages, while logistics firms face potential port delays as patrol activity intensifies.