
Roughly 300 activists marched through Charleroi on 25 October to oppose federal plans for a 180-bed detention centre in nearby Jumet, which would become the largest facility for undocumented migrants in Wallonia. The project—long championed by the Buildings Agency and the Ministry for Asylum and Migration—was recently sent back to the drawing board after a delegated Walloon official issued a negative planning opinion. Final approval now rests with Walloon Spatial-Planning Minister François Desquesnes.
Demonstrators argue that large-scale detention violates human-rights standards and entrenches a punitive migration model. They prefer investment in open reception facilities and accelerated regularisation procedures. Local authorities are divided: Charleroi’s city council initially opposed but later backed the project, citing jobs and security benefits.
For international employers, the political fracas highlights Belgium’s tougher stance on irregular stay. The proposed centre would streamline deportations, potentially reducing overstays that sometimes arise when assignees’ permits lapse inadvertently. Yet critics warn that greater enforcement could also lead to higher spot-checks on foreign workers.
Mobility advisers should therefore re-emphasise compliance hygiene: timely renewals of single permits, accurate A1 documentation for posted workers, and clear audit trails for short-term business visitors. Companies sponsoring local CSR initiatives may also wish to engage with civil-society partners monitoring detention conditions, aligning corporate-responsibility goals with migrant-rights advocacy.
Whether the Jumet facility proceeds now hinges on regional planning politics, but the debate itself signals that Belgium’s migration enforcement landscape is set to tighten—a factor global mobility teams can no longer ignore.
Demonstrators argue that large-scale detention violates human-rights standards and entrenches a punitive migration model. They prefer investment in open reception facilities and accelerated regularisation procedures. Local authorities are divided: Charleroi’s city council initially opposed but later backed the project, citing jobs and security benefits.
For international employers, the political fracas highlights Belgium’s tougher stance on irregular stay. The proposed centre would streamline deportations, potentially reducing overstays that sometimes arise when assignees’ permits lapse inadvertently. Yet critics warn that greater enforcement could also lead to higher spot-checks on foreign workers.
Mobility advisers should therefore re-emphasise compliance hygiene: timely renewals of single permits, accurate A1 documentation for posted workers, and clear audit trails for short-term business visitors. Companies sponsoring local CSR initiatives may also wish to engage with civil-society partners monitoring detention conditions, aligning corporate-responsibility goals with migrant-rights advocacy.
Whether the Jumet facility proceeds now hinges on regional planning politics, but the debate itself signals that Belgium’s migration enforcement landscape is set to tighten—a factor global mobility teams can no longer ignore.







