EU countries are paving the way for funding controversial deportation centres beyond the bloc’s borders with EU money, in the latest sign of Europe’s tougher stance on migration.
It would mark a further step towards outsourcing migration control, despite warnings from critics that such arrangements would weaken legal and human rights safeguards.
EU governments’ position on the bloc’s next budget, which will run from 2028 to 2034, says “innovative solutions” for managing migration could be financed through the EU’s foreign aid and external spending instrument. The position paper is due to be adopted by EU affairs ministers on Tuesday.
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