EU strikes migration deal for more deportations and detention centers
abroad
[June 02, 2026]
By SAM McNEIL
BRUSSELS (AP) — The European Union has moved forward with a vast
overhaul of its migration policy, aiming to ramp up deportations and ink
controversial deals to build detention centers abroad, in what rights
groups compare to the Trump administration's aggressive immigration
policies.
“The new regulation will speed up the return process and increase
returns of persons who have no legal right to stay in the EU,” said
Nicholas Ioannides, deputy migration minister for Cyprus, which holds
the rotating presidency of the 27-nation bloc.
The deal was struck between the EU's three main institutions — the
European Commission, the European Council and European Parliament —
during a so-called “trilogue” Monday evening.
“Europe cannot afford another period of standstill,” said Dutch lawmaker
Malik Azmani, who shepherded the regulation through the European
Parliament.
“There is an urgent need for an effective return policy with higher
return rates," he said, adding that only 28% of rejected asylum seekers
return to their country of origin, with the majority staying put in the
EU. “This situation is deeply concerning. It undermines public
confidence in our common migration policies.”
Critics compared the regulation to the immigration policies of the Trump
administration, which has struck a series of secretive agreements with
nations around the world to deport thousands of people to countries that
are not their own. The United Kingdom also planned to deport migrants to
Rwanda, but the plan was bogged down in legal red tape and was dropped
when a new government came to power in July 2024.

Several EU governments are already in talks with third countries
“Across the Atlantic, we see the violence and fear created by ICE’s
brutal immigration enforcement," said Silvia Carter, spokesperson for
the Brussels-based Platform for International Cooperation on
Undocumented Migrants, referring to U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement. “Europe should be learning from the harms of that model,
not building its own version of it.”
Law enforcement officers across the bloc no longer need warrants from
judges to raid private residences or public institutions like hospitals,
she said. “The regulation is going to create a draconian detention and
deportation machine."
The provisional agreement will now head to the EU lawmakers and
governments, where approval will likely be swift.
“These new rules will ensure swifter, simpler, and more effective
procedures across the European Union for returning non-EU nationals who
have no right to stay, in full respect of international law and
fundamental rights,” said Henna Virkkunen, EU commissioner for
technology.
EU member nations will soon be able to set up bilateral deals with
countries outside the bloc to build deportation centers. At least five
EU nations — Germany, Austria, the Netherlands, Denmark and Greece — are
already in talks with third countries, mostly in Africa, to host “return
hubs” on the model of Italy's detention deal with Albania.

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Police conduct a search operation at a makeshift camp of migrants
who want to cross the English Channel to Britain near Dunkirk,
northern France, Wednesday, May 27, 2026. (AP Photo/Jean-Francois
Badias)

“We are delivering the member states tools in their hands to make
those agreements and arrangements with third countries,” Azmani
said.
Mélissa Camara, a lawmaker from the French Green party, said the
deal was “a historic setback” for human rights in the bloc.
“The legalization of return hubs outside the European Union, the
green light for the detention of minors, home visits inspired by ICE
practices: the legal arsenal serving a xenophobic ideology is now
complete,” she said.
EU migration policy has steadily shifted to the right
The EU has continually tightened migration policies after right-wing
parties secured the majority of votes in some countries in the 2024
elections to the European Parliament. European Commission President
Ursula von der Leyen, from the center-right European People’s Party
coalition, has said that the new measures will prevent a repeat of
the 2015 crisis caused by Syria’s civil war, when about 1 million
people arrived to seek asylum.
Fueled by people fleeing conflict and poverty across Africa and the
Middle East, the 2015 refugee crisis and successive years of
irregular migration to Europe drove a rightward shift in the bloc's
politics not unlike the anti-immigrant sentiment that buoyed a “ red
wave ” in the 2024 election in the United States.
After successfully campaigning on tougher migration policies, the
winners of that election, the European People’s Party, the largest
political group in the EU, began negotiating migration reform with
centrist and left parties only to eventually sidestep them by
allying instead with the far right, said Carter, the asylum rights
activist. “There was quite an unprecedented shift in the European
Parliament."
Advocacy groups warned the regulation would cut deep into the
protections granted by the EU fundamental charter on human rights
and expose people to risks outside the bloc.

“This deal will give governments much broader powers to detain and
deport people," said Marta Welander, a spokesperson for the
International Rescue Committee, a humanitarian organization. "It
looks set to normalize immigration raids, expand the use of
detention in prison-like facilities outside EU territory that are
essentially legal black holes, and increase the risk of people being
deported to countries where they could face persecution, torture or
worse.”
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