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Oct 27, 2025

French Minister Delegate for Europe visits Nicosia, puts Schengen & migration cooperation on agenda

French Minister Delegate for Europe visits Nicosia, puts Schengen & migration cooperation on agenda
At 08:08 on 27 October 2025, French Minister Delegate for Europe Benjamin Haddad landed in Nicosia for a one-day working visit that Cypriot officials say will “intensify strategic dialogue” on EU security, economic and **people-mobility policies**. Haddad met President Nikos Christodoulides and Deputy Minister for European Affairs Marilena Raouna to prepare a refreshed bilateral roadmap that places heavy emphasis on Schengen governance, relocation of skilled talent and joint border-management technologies.

Cyprus—outside Schengen but bound by its acquis—wants French backing to accelerate its phased entry into the passport-free area once the EU completes the 2026 evaluation cycle. Paris, for its part, is keen to leverage Cyprus’ eastern-Mediterranean location to pilot pre-screening of irregular arrivals before they reach the continental mainland, using biometric Entry/Exit System (EES) infrastructure scheduled to go live next October. Haddad’s delegation included interior-ministry experts on digital identity wallets and talent-attraction visas for high-tech sectors.

Sources close to the talks said France offered technical support to expand **Cyprus’ fledgling Digital Nomad Visa quota** and link it with France’s own long-stay “passeport-talent” scheme, allowing remote workers to spend time in either member state while maintaining tax compliance. The two sides also explored mutual recognition of professional qualifications in shipping, fintech and renewable-energy engineering—a boon for multinational employers rotating staff between Marseille, Paris and Limassol.

For corporate mobility teams, the visit signals potential streamlining of work-permit procedures and faster security-background checks once interoperability pilots commence. Global IT and maritime firms with hubs in both countries should watch for bilateral memoranda that could open **trusted-employer fast tracks** similar to schemes already operating between France and Germany.

The Nicosia stopover fits a broader French push to cement influence among southern-EU states ahead of France’s EU Council Presidency in 2026. If Cyprus gains observer status in Schengen working parties next year—as diplomats hinted—the island’s airports could adopt Schengen-style short-stay visa stickers sooner, further aligning business-travel paperwork with the bloc’s core.
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