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10月 31, 2025

Amnesty International slams Schengen visa ‘obstacle course’ for human-rights defenders

Amnesty International slams Schengen visa ‘obstacle course’ for human-rights defenders
A new Amnesty International report released on 30 October 2025 concludes that Europe’s short-stay (C-type) visa regime amounts to indirect racial discrimination and systematically impedes activists from 104 Global South countries. France, as the leading Schengen destination for civil-society events and UN forums, is singled out for opaque outsourcing practices and slow decision times.

Testimonies describe activists forced to travel to third-country consulates, submit exhaustive bank records, and receive visas too late to board scheduled flights. The NGO urges Schengen states to operationalise flexibility clauses already in EU law, issue more multi-entry visas, and train external service providers.

For French conference organisers and companies hosting corporate social-responsibility (CSR) dialogues, the findings highlight reputational and logistical risks: last-minute speaker cancellations, rebooking costs, and potential accusations of exclusion. Mobility managers should build longer lead times—at least 12 weeks—for invitations and consider supporting letters emphasising applicants’ HR-defender status.

The report could add momentum to French parliamentary proposals to simplify short-stay visas for civil-society invitees ahead of the Paris Climate Summit in June 2026. The Foreign Ministry said it would “study the recommendations closely”.
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