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Oct 27, 2025

EU migration committee debates return hubs and Syrian case management with frontline states, including Cyprus

EU migration committee debates return hubs and Syrian case management with frontline states, including Cyprus
The EU Strategic Committee on Immigration, Frontiers and Asylum (SCIFA) met in Brussels on 27 October for its quarterly session, with officials from all 27 member states—Cyprus among them—scrutinising new discussion papers on ‘Return Hubs’ and the impact of Syria’s post-conflict landscape on asylum decisions.

Cyprus’ delegation pushed for EU funding to expand its existing pre-removal centre in Menoyia into a regional hub that could process returns for both irregular migrants intercepted in Cypriot waters and overstayers transferred from other Mediterranean states. Interior Ministry sources argue the facility could double removal capacity to 6 000 persons a year if Brussels finances charter‐flight pooling similar to the Frontex-backed scheme operating out of Rome.

Another agenda item concerned the “transition out of temporary protection” for Ukrainians. Nicosia supported phased voluntary-return incentives but warned that sudden status withdrawals could create secondary movements through the Green Line, complicating Cyprus’ own border management.

A third paper examined how Assad’s fall has altered risk assessments for Syrian nationals. Cyprus has seen 1 300 Syrians withdraw asylum claims since December 2024, and Deputy Minister Nicholas Ioannides urged harmonised EU guidance so that decisions are not overturned by national courts citing divergent country-of-origin data.

Although SCIFA is a preparatory body, its debates feed directly into Home Affairs Council conclusions due in December. Mobility and compliance teams should track forthcoming EU rules on common return-flight pools and revised Syrian COI notes, both of which could influence removal timelines and humanitarian parole policies in Cyprus.
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