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EU lists seven 'safe' countries including India, Bangladesh to speed up asylum process

ANI April 17, 2025 177 views

The European Commission has proposed a groundbreaking approach to managing asylum applications by introducing the first EU list of safe countries. This innovative strategy includes seven nations like India and Bangladesh, designed to accelerate the processing of migration claims more efficiently. The move comes in response to growing backlogs in asylum applications across EU member states. By establishing a standardized framework, the EU hopes to balance administrative speed with individual claim assessments.

"Where we can go faster, we should go faster" - Magnus Brunner, EU Commissioner"
Brussels, April 16: The European Commission on Wednesday proposed speeding up certain aspects of the EU Pact on Migration and Asylum by introducing key measures.

Key Points

1

EU creates first official safe countries list to streamline asylum procedures

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India, Bangladesh among 7 nations identified as safe origins

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Aims to reduce backlog and speed up application processing

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Provides uniform approach to handling migration claims

One of the main steps includes creating the first EU list of safe countries of origin, which includes India, Kosovo, Bangladesh, Colombia, Egypt, Morocco and Tunisia.

In a release, the European Commission said, "Today, the Commission is proposing to accelerate the implementation of certain aspects of the Pact on Migration and Asylum, adopted last year and due to enter into application in June 2026. The Commission is proposing to frontload two key elements of the Asylum Procedure Regulation with the aim of supporting Member States to process asylum claims faster and more efficiently for applicants whose claims are likely to be unfounded. In addition, and to support the same objective, the Commission is proposing to make use of one of the novelties of the Pact and establish an EU list of safe countries of origin, the nationals from which will see their applications processed in an accelerated or border procedure."

It added, "Commission is also proposing to establish a first EU list of safe countries of origin. Some Member States already have national lists of safe countries of origin. An EU list will complement these and support a more uniform application of the concept, which allows Member States to process asylum claims of nationals from countries on the list in an accelerated procedure, on the basis that their claims are unlikely to be successful. The Commission is proposing to establish a first EU list covering Kosovo, Bangladesh, Colombia, Egypt, India, Morocco and Tunisia."

Magnus Brunner, Commissioner for Internal Affairs and Migration, said that many EU countries are struggling with a growing backlog of asylum applications, and speeding up the EU Pact on Migration and Asylum is essential.

"We have a little over a year before the Pact on Migration and Asylum enters into full application, but where we can go faster, we should go faster. Many Member States are facing a significant backlog of asylum applications, so anything we can do now to support faster asylum decisions is essential. The Pact provisions on recognition rates and applying the safe country of origin concept can help Member States deal with claims more quickly, whilst always ensuring that every asylum claim still receives an individual assessment and is subject to the scrutiny of national courts," Brunner said.

Reader Comments

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Sarah K.
This seems like a practical solution to reduce the backlog while maintaining individual assessments. Hope it helps streamline the process without compromising fairness. 🤞
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Rajiv P.
As an Indian living in Europe, I'm concerned about how "safe country" is being defined here. Just because a country is generally stable doesn't mean everyone there is safe from persecution.
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Mohammed A.
Interesting to see Bangladesh and Morocco on this list. The processing might be faster but I hope they still consider each case individually. Some people genuinely need protection regardless of their country's status.
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Lena T.
Finally some action on migration policies! The current system is overwhelmed and this seems like a balanced approach. Faster decisions benefit everyone - both applicants and host countries.
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Thomas W.
While I understand the need for efficiency, labeling entire countries as "safe" seems problematic. There are minority groups in all these nations that face legitimate threats. The system should have more nuance.

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