The International Organization for Migration (IOM) and UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, welcomed the entry into force today of the European Union's Pact on Migration and Asylum as an opportunity to move beyond crisis-driven responses and implement a more predictable, fair and effective approach to the issues across Europe.
EU Member States should seize this moment to strengthen migration management and refugee protection while advancing solidarity and responsibility-sharing in line with European values and international obligations, the agencies' chiefs said.
"The Pact's entry into full effect today is an important step toward a more predictable and coherent European migration system. What matters now is steady implementation over time that is effective, humane, sustainably resourced and grounded in cooperation," said Amy Pope, Director General of the International Organization for Migration. "The priority is turning the reforms into practical results for States, communities, and people on the move."
The Pact aims to make EU asylum systems more efficient and consistent, offering a structured framework for member state cooperation. This can reduce backlogs while maintaining the quality of assessments, provide greater certainty for asylum-seekers and enable refugees to begin rebuilding their lives and contributing to their communities sooner.
"This Pact is an important step in the right direction, advancing shared responsibility and more predictable, sustainable approaches across the European Union," said Barham Salih, UN High Commissioner for Refugees. "UNHCR stands ready to support all Member States in strengthening asylum systems - ensuring access to protection for those in need, upholding human rights and dignity, and enabling safe, lawful and dignified returns for those not in need of international protection."
IOM and UNHCR welcome the EU's renewed focus on partnerships with all affected countries.
Reducing irregular movements means addressing root causes, ensuring access to protection, tackling smuggling networks, and enabling safe, regular pathways. The organizations will continue to support route-based approaches that ensure policies deliver on protection, dignity and shared responsibility, while contributing to sustainable solutions that benefit both countries and communities along migration routes.
UNHCR and IOM welcome several key elements of the Pact, including earlier identification of people with specific needs, strengthened legal assistance, and new independent monitoring mechanisms at external borders. Returns of those with no legal right to stay must be both effective and humane. Alongside enforcement, they should ensure access to informed voluntary return, early case management and reintegration support, working with countries of origin, transit and first asylum as part of a balanced approach that upholds dignity and fundamental rights.
These measures can help ensure that asylum processing and return procedures are faster and fairer, reducing uncertainty for asylum seekers while strengthening public confidence in the migration and asylum system.
UNHCR and IOM stress that implementation will be the decisive test. Procedures must be carried out with adequate safeguards to ensure that no one is returned or transferred to a situation where they may face persecution, conflict or other forms of serious harm.