
EU Parliament Approves Stricter Return Rules, Paving Way for Deportation Centres Outside Bloc
The new regulation, backed by a right-wing majority, allows detention of irregular migrants for up to 24 months and the creation of 'return hubs' in third countries.
The European Parliament on Wednesday gave final approval to a sweeping overhaul of the EU’s return rules, voting 418 to 218 with 30 abstentions to enable faster deportations and, for the first time, the establishment of detention centres outside the bloc. The vote, held in Strasbourg, marks one of the most significant tightenings of European migration policy in decades and comes just days before the full entry into force of the broader Pact on Migration and Asylum. The new regulation replaces a 2008 directive and will apply directly in all member states, with some provisions—including those on return hubs and age assessment for minors—taking effect immediately, while the bulk of the rules will follow 12 months after formal adoption by the Council.
Under the new framework, a return decision issued to an irregularly staying third-country national carries an immediate obligation to leave the territory, and authorities may detain individuals for up to 24 months to enforce removal. The most contentious innovation is the legal basis for “return hubs” in non-EU countries, where migrants with no right to remain can be transferred, provided the third country is deemed safe and unaccompanied minors are excluded. Viewed from Rome, the provision vindicates Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s controversial Albania protocol, which she hailed as a model now adopted at European level. “We promised it and we did it,” Meloni said in a video message from the G7 summit in Evian, claiming the regulation as a success of her government. In Stockholm, Swedish right-wing lawmakers celebrated with chants of “send them back,” while left-wing groups across the hemicycle decried the measures as a betrayal of humanitarian values.
The political arithmetic behind the vote reveals a shifting centre of gravity in the European Parliament. The majority was assembled by the centre-right European People’s Party together with the hard-right European Conservatives and Reformists—Meloni’s group—and parts of the far-right Identity and Democracy faction, bypassing the traditional grand coalition with socialists and liberals. This alignment drew sharp criticism from progressive forces, who accused the EPP of abandoning Christian democratic principles. Meanwhile, the Commission pointed to tangible results from its external partnerships: President Ursula von der Leyen noted a 97 per cent drop in irregular arrivals from Tunisia since a 2023 memorandum, underscoring the broader strategy of outsourcing migration control.
The regulation now awaits final endorsement by the Council, a step considered a formality. Once in force, it will test the EU’s ability to negotiate return hub agreements with third countries—a diplomatic and legal challenge that has already stymied earlier proposals. Human rights organisations warn that extended detention and extraterritorial processing risk violating the principle of non-refoulement and could lead to de facto collective expulsions. Yet the political momentum behind stricter returns appears unstoppable, as governments from Rome to Stockholm and Vienna push for a more assertive deportation regime. In a separate consumer-protection move, EU negotiators also reached a provisional deal this week to update air passenger rights, requiring transparent pricing that includes hand luggage and strengthening compensation for delays—a reminder that the Brussels machinery continues to legislate across the full spectrum, even as migration dominates the headlines.
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The European Parliament gave final approval to the return regulation, introducing detention centers outside the EU and a holding period of up to 24 months. The European Commissioner stated it was about bringing order to the European house, while right-wing forces celebrated. The left voiced concern for minors and asylum seekers.
EU lawmakers are expected to give final approval to tougher migration rules that will allow for deportation centres outside the bloc and broader detention powers. The legislation, which has moved swiftly through the EU process, enables nations to send irregular migrants to 'return hubs'. The vote marks one of the final steps in a significant tightening of migration policy.
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