
Parliament supports expedited procedures, extended detention, and return hubs as key safeguards in the migration debate
The European Parliament has sanctioned a new EU-wide system for returning third-country nationals lacking legal residency rights, providing political momentum to one of the most debated aspects of Europe’s migration overhaul. The reform aims to speed up and make return decisions more enforceable, although its provisions on detention, investigative powers, and transfers to “return hubs” outside the EU are raising concerns about due process, legal accountability, and protection from unsafe removals.
MEPs backed the reform on Wednesday with 418 votes in favor, 218 against, and 30 abstentions, following an informal agreement with EU governments earlier this month. As per the European Parliament’s account of the vote, the regulation mandates that individuals subject to a return decision cooperate with national authorities and leave the member state immediately or within a specified timeframe.
A tougher approach to return policy
This measure is part of the EU’s broader effort to operationalize the Migration and Asylum Pact after years of political debate over arrivals, responsibility-sharing, and border pressure. Supporters of the reform assert that asylum and migration systems lose credibility when return decisions are not executed.
The new rules permit detention based on an individual assessment if a person is uncooperative, likely to abscond, or considered a security risk. Detention can last up to 24 months, with a possible six-month extension if circumstances change, new information arises, or cooperation with a third country improves.
Member states can also impose alternatives like regular reporting, designated residence, electronic monitoring, or a financial guarantee. National authorities may conduct searches of individuals, homes, or relevant premises and can seize personal belongings or electronic devices, subject to judicial or administrative authorization and remedies under EU and national law.
Proponents argue these tools aim to reduce fragmentation between national systems and prevent individuals from moving between member states after receiving a return decision. Critics view them as a significant expansion of coercive powers in an area where individuals may already face language barriers, limited access to lawyers, and difficulty proving risks in their home country.
The issue of return hubs
The most politically sensitive aspect is the potential transfer of people under return decisions to facilities in third countries. While unaccompanied minors are excluded, others could be sent to a non-EU country that agrees to accept them under an arrangement with a member state.
EU institutions state such agreements can only be concluded with countries that respect human rights, international law, and the principle of non-refoulement, which prohibits returning people to places where they could face persecution, torture, or serious harm. Member states must inform the Commission and other EU countries before these arrangements apply.
The practical question is not just what the agreements state but who can enforce them if rights are breached. If an individual is moved outside EU territory under an EU-linked system, responsibility could become blurred between the sending member state, the host country, EU agencies, and international monitors.
This risk has been at the heart of criticism from rights groups. Amnesty International has warned that offshore return arrangements and longer detention powers could weaken due process and expose individuals to severe rights violations. Other civil society organizations have raised similar concerns about access to legal assistance, independent monitoring, complaint mechanisms, and protection for vulnerable individuals.
Next steps
The regulation still requires formal adoption by the Council and publication in the EU’s Official Journal before coming into force. Some provisions, including those related to return hubs, age assessment of minors,













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