terça-feira, 2 de junho de 2026

Offshore detention hubs: Europe's turn to Trump-style tactics on migration • FRANCE 24 English

 

EU negotiators reached a provisional agreement on a strict new Returns Regulation on June 1, 2026, designed to accelerate and streamline the deportation of third-country nationals staying illegally within the bloc.

 


EU negotiators agree new migrant return law

EU negotiators reached a provisional agreement on a strict new Returns Regulation on June 1, 2026, designed to accelerate and streamline the deportation of third-country nationals staying illegally within the bloc. The deal between the European Parliament and the Council of the EU completes a core pillar of the EU Pact on Migration and Asylum. It addresses a long-standing enforcement bottleneck, as fewer than 30% of current EU deportation orders are successfully carried out.

 

Key Pillars of the New Law

  • Offshore Return Hubs: Member states can establish deportation centers in non-EU countries to host rejected asylum-seekers. These hubs can serve as transfer facilities or final destinations, provided the host country respects human rights and the principle of non-refoulement. Unaccompanied minors are strictly excluded from these external transfers.
  • Extended Detention Limits: Authorities can detain individuals for up to 24 months to prevent them from absconding or if they fail to cooperate. A further 6-month extension is possible under specific shifting circumstances. Families and unaccompanied minors can only be detained as a measure of last resort for the shortest possible timeframe.
  • Strict Cooperation Mandate: Illegal residents face a mandatory obligation to cooperate with national authorities. Non-compliance triggers consequences such as reduced social benefits, denial of voluntary return incentives, or criminal sanctions including prison time where national law permits.
  • European Return Order (ERO): The law introduces a standardized European Return Order form to establish uniform documentation across the bloc. While mutual recognition of return decisions between member states will start as a voluntary measure, the European Commission will reassess making it mandatory after three years.
  • Security Risk Measures: Stricter rules apply to individuals deemed a security risk. Member states can enforce entry bans exceeding the standard 10-year limit—including permanent bans—and utilize immediate prison detention.

Political Context and Criticism

The compromise was propelled forward through unusual legislative backing from right-wing and far-right factions alongside the European People's Party (EPP) within the European Parliament. Civil society groups and left-wing MEPs have fiercely criticized the agreement, labeling it a draconian system that compromises fundamental human rights and risks tearing families apart.

Next Steps and Timeline

According to official press releases from the Council of the EU and the European Parliament, the provisional text must now clear final formal endorsements by both institutions. Implementation is scheduled to begin immediately upon its publication in the Official Journal, though a compromise clause delays the applicability of several complex provisions for 12 months

 

EU negotiators agree new migrant return law

 



EU negotiators agree new migrant return law

 

Change would allow countries to send people who’ve been ordered to leave EU territory to “return hubs” outside the bloc.

 

June 1, 2026 11:06 pm CET

By Hanne Cokelaere

https://www.politico.eu/article/eu-negotiators-agree-new-migrant-return-law-hubs-deportations-borders-asylum-seekers/

 

Negotiators on Monday agreed new rules to speed up and increase deportations from the EU, including making it possible to send failed asylum-seekers to hubs outside the bloc.

 

The text is part of sweeping reforms the EU is rolling out to increase control over who crosses its external borders and to support countries that receive the most external migrants, with Monday’s agreement landing just days before other migration and asylum reforms start applying on June 12.

 

Monday’s agreement will help the EU regain control over “who comes to to the European Union, but also who has to leave the European Union,” Migration Commissioner Magnus Brunner said.

 

He pointed to the rate of failed asylum-seekers who leave the bloc, which recent Eurostat figures put around 27 percent. “We must give the people the feeling back that we have control over what’s happening,” he said.

 

Under the deal, countries will be allowed to send people who’ve been ordered to leave EU territory to “return hubs” outside the bloc — an option several EU countries are already exploring, but which civil society groups warn could open the door to more abuse and human rights violations.

 

The text also introduces stricter rules for dealing with people who are considered a security threat; the possibility of home searches; long detentions; entry bans; and penalties for those who don’t cooperate.

 

“For years, Europe sent the worst possible message: even if you had no right to stay, chances were high that nothing would happen. That era is ending. If you have no right to stay in Europe, you will have to leave,” French MEP François-Xavier Bellamy, who represented the center-right European People’s Party in the negotiations, said in a comment.

 

Parliament entered the negotiations with a position supported by the EPP, the right-wing European Conservatives and Reformists and the far-right Patriots for Europe and Europe of Sovereign Nations groups, despite opposition from lawmakers in liberal and left-wing groups.

 

Monday’s deal introduces a “legal arsenal serving a xenophobic ideology,” Greens negotiator Mélissa Camara said in a comment. The French MEP slammed the text for permitting hubs outside the European Union, the detention of minors, and “home visits inspired by ICE practices,” referring to the controversial U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency.

 

Talks last month collapsed over disagreements on when the new measures should be implemented. Under Monday’s deal, parts of the text will only come in after a year, but some provisions, including measures allowing countries to establish return hubs, will start applying immediately — a key point for countries that are forging ahead with deals to establish them, including The Netherlands and Germany.

 

Marta Welander, EU advocacy director of the International Refugee Committee, said the plans mark an “alarming new chapter in the EU’s approach to asylum and migration.”

 

“This deal will give governments much broader powers to detain and deport people. It looks set to normalise 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,” she said.

 

Both the Council and the Parliament still need to approve the deal.

Brussels’ nightmare French election scenario risks coming true: Bardella vs. Mélenchon

 



Brussels’ nightmare French election scenario risks coming true: Bardella vs. Mélenchon

 

The far right and far left are on the march, while France’s imploding centrists are busy fighting each other.

 

June 1, 2026 4:01 am CET

By Clea Caulcutt

https://www.politico.eu/article/french-election-brussels-nightmare-jean-luc-melenchon-vs-jordan-bardella/

 

PARIS — Brussels’ nightmare scenario is no longer looking far-fetched: a French presidential election next year in which both candidates in the runoff hail from the political extremes and hold a deeply skeptical outlook on the EU and NATO.

 

Jordan Bardella of the far-right National Rally — the nationalist, anti-immigration party of Marine Le Pen — has long been the favorite to win the 2027 race, but mainstream centrist parties have been hoping they can find a unifying challenger to beat him in the second round.

 

That prospect of stopping Bardella has hit a major potential hurdle, however, as momentum builds behind the campaign of the firebrand Jean-Luc Mélenchon, leader of the far-left France Unbowed party. The latest polls suggest he now has a strong chance of qualifying for the second-round showdown — depriving the race of a centrist who could rally voters against the far right in the EU’s No. 2 economy.

 

Mélenchon draws much of his support from working-class and immigrant communities, and his critics have condemned him for antisemitism and a “brutalization” of politics. While it would be a major coup for him to reach the second round in 2027, most polls predict he would then lose to Bardella by a landslide.

 

It’s an election landscape that is already bringing the French center out in a cold sweat.

 

“A lot of people believe that if they have to choose between the France Unbowed and the National Rally … it would be a nightmare. And I agree,” said Édouard Philippe, a conservative, who is seen as the leading mainstream candidate in the race for the Élysée.

 

Gérald Darmanin, justice minister under liberal President Emmanuel Macron, also warned that Mélenchon was now set to be the main challenger to the far right. “You have … to be wearing blinkers not to see it,” he said.

 

Shock polls

Last week, two polls shook France’s political class.

 

The first, conducted by Odoxa, showed Mélenchon neck-and-neck in second place after Bardella with the center-right former Prime Minister Philippe. The second poll, from Toluna-Harris Interactive, showed Mélenchon qualifying for the run-off vote against the far right if there were too many candidates running in center ground, including Philippe and another of Macron’s former prime ministers, Gabriel Attal.

 

There is no sign yet, however, that the prospect of being eliminated from the presidential race is proving to be the electroshock therapy the political center needs to start uniting around one candidate rather than dividing the field.

 

The center-right Philippe is locked in an intense rivalry with Attal, and neither shows any indication they want to throw in the towel.

 

“The competition with Gabriel Attal could be fatal,” said Bruno Cautrès, a political analyst with the Sciences Po institute.

 

“If Attal doesn’t pull out until the autumn, it might sharpen the appetites of those on the left, who will start thinking we really can make it to the runoff against the far right,” he said.

 

Comeback kid

For Mélenchon, the national polls are a dramatic comeback after having been largely written off in the wake of his confrontational municipal election campaign in March. Opinion polls repeatedly show that the 74-year-old radical leftwinger is one of the most disliked French politicians.

 

But Mélenchon has earned the reluctant admiration of rivals for his energetic campaign since he announced in May that he was running in next year’s presidential election.

 

On June 7, far-left supporters are planning a show of force at a rally in Saint-Denis, an impoverished suburb north of Paris that the France Unbowed won in the local elections.

 

“It’s hard not to admit that Mélenchon has probably understood better than anybody what a modern presidential campaign looks like,” wrote Stanislas Rigault, a former spokesperson for the far-right Reconquest party of Éric Zemmour.

 

The potential showdown between Mélenchon and the far right’s Bardella (or perhaps Marine Le Pen, should she be permitted to run) is something that both camps are trying to play up.

 

In recent years, Mélenchon has repeatedly insisted that in the end it will be an “us against them” fight against the far right as the traditional center-right and center-left parties unravel. At the other end of the spectrum, members of the National Rally said Bardella is convinced he will face Mélenchon or a leftwing candidate in the second round of the presidential election.

 

In France, the president is elected in a two-round vote, with the two candidates with the highest share of votes in the first round going through to a run-off.

 

Both Le Pen and Mélenchon are leaning into the fight and have already started sparring online over the economy and the far left’s concept of a “new France” that the far right says pits a new generation, many with migrant backgrounds, against people of longer French ancestry.

 

Left out

For the moderate left, Mélenchon’s rise has triggered alarm bells, given he’s highly unlikely to defeat the current favorites on the far right. Indeed, polls have put support for Bardella at more than 70 percent in a second-round showdown with Mélenchon. Last week’s Toluna-Harris Interactive poll showed Bardella winning against Mélenchon with 68 percent of the vote.

 

“Mélenchon wants to be the king of the cemetery on the left,” said a Socialist Party official, who was granted anonymity to discuss internal politics.”We really need to pull our finger out,” he added.

 

But the center left has never appeared further from marshalling its forces.

 

Last month, the Socialist Party came close to imploding when a third of its leadership left over tensions between the party president Olivier Faure and a key ally Boris Vallaud.

 

One of the strongest presidential hopefuls for the left, MEP Raphaël Glucksmann tried to gather momentum last week, with a book launch and multiple interviews. But he has been weakened by doubts over his talents on the campaign trail and the leaking in POLITICO of an internal memo that suggested he should avoid targeting poor voters.

 

According to Cautrès, the political analyst, who has studied Mélenchon’s multiple presidential campaigns, the far-left leader is divisive but can also appeal more widely.

 

“Mélenchon is liked on the left because he’s abrasive, he doesn’t make concessions to capitalism, but there are other aspects to his personality, he is well-versed in history and he can see the bigger picture,” said Cautrès.

 

“He’s softening his image… he knows how to run a presidential campaign,” he said.

 

Philippe challenged

But it’s not just the moderate left that is worried about Mélenchon’s popularity surge.

 

The center right is also under threat.

 

In the 2022 presidential election, Mélenchon won close to 22 percent of the vote in the first round of voting. That could well prove a very competitive level. In the latest Odoxa poll, Bardella was seen winning the first round on 32 percent, while Philippe was on 17 percent and Mélenchon on 16 percent.

 

Philippe’s problem is that much of his energy is spent fending off competition from Bruno Retailleau, leader of the conservative Les Républicains party, and the hyperactive centrist Attal, who last month announced he was running for the presidential election.

 

Most recently, the rivalry between Philippe and Attal focused — somewhat bizarrely — on whether they would be prepared to stand up on a table to make a point and which of them was more like former President Jacques Chirac.

 

“Things are complicated in the political center because its leaders are too busy attacking each another,” said a person close to Macron.

 

“I’ve heard a lot about who they are … and not enough about the country or any new ideas,” the person added.

 

Supporters of Attal and Philippe have said the two men — both of whom are former premiers under Macron — will ultimately reach an agreement and unite behind a single candidate.

 

But there are indications talks might not be quite so straightforward.

 

In a briefing with the press on Thursday, an adviser to Attal floated the possibility that he could stay in the race until the end if the Mélenchon threat receded. “That would change the game,” said the adviser.

 

“We have to work on the assumption that maybe one or the other won’t withdraw,” said an ally of Philippe.

 

With just under a year to go before the presidential election, there’s still time to settle differences. But in the meantime, the far right and far left are asserting their grip on the race.

 

Giorgio Leali, Sarah Paillou and Klara Durand contributed reporting.



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