Kenya Emerges as Potential Host for Migrants Deported from the EU

Posted
By Martin Olage
🕑 2 min read
Kenya Emerges as Potential Host for Migrants Deported from the EU

Kenya is among several countries being considered by European governments as potential hosts for centres that would accommodate rejected asylum seekers awaiting deportation.

The proposal forms part of the European Union’s recently adopted Migration Pact, which is intended to speed up the removal of people who have exhausted all legal options to remain in the bloc. The planned facilities, known as "return hubs", would be located outside Europe and would hold migrants whose asylum applications have been rejected while arrangements are made for their return to their countries of origin.

The Netherlands is reported to be leading discussions on the initiative, with Kenya identified as a leading candidate. Rwanda, Benin, Ghana and Uzbekistan have also been named in preliminary assessments, although it remains unclear how far formal discussions with those governments have progressed.

European officials are assessing a range of factors, including political stability, economic capacity and compliance with international human rights standards. Kenya's relatively strong economy and reputation for stability are understood to be among the reasons it has attracted interest. 

The Netherlands is working with Germany, Austria, Denmark and Greece in examining possible partner countries. The discussions come amid increased diplomatic engagement between Nairobi and Brussels. 

President William Ruto and Prime Cabinet Secretary Musalia Mudavadi recently met European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen during the G7 Summit in France. No agreement has been announced, and Dutch authorities have declined to comment on individual countries under consideration, citing the sensitivity of the talks.

The proposal follows the approval of new EU return rules by European lawmakers earlier this month. The measures require migrants who receive return decisions to leave within a specified period and give authorities wider powers to prevent individuals from avoiding deportation orders. 

Dutch lawmaker Malik Azmani welcomed the changes, saying: "Today, Europe delivered. People rightly expect that those with no right to stay return to their countries of origin."

Supporters of the plan argue that it could help address long-standing difficulties in carrying out deportations, which have often been slowed by logistical and diplomatic challenges. For countries that agree to host the facilities, the arrangement could bring financial and political support from Europe, while also increasing scrutiny of their human rights records and domestic policies.

Add new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether or not you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.

Facebook Comments

Loading Facebook comments...

Leave a Comment

 

Share |
Subscribe Contact