Fri. Sep 13th, 2024

Luxembourg, 13 June 2024

The Council welcomes the proposal to extend the temporary protection for the more than 4 million Ukrainians fleeing from Russia’s war of aggression until 4 March 2026.

As long as bombs are falling in Ukraine, the situation there is not safe. Ministers today showed renewed solidarity and decided that they will continue to offer protection to the Ukrainian people in the EU.

Nicole de Moor, Belgian State Secretary for Asylum and Migration

The temporary protection mechanism was triggered on 4 March 2022 – only a few days after Russian armed forces launched a large-scale invasion of Ukraine – and is due to run until 4 March 2025. The proposal to further extend the temporary protection until 4 March 2026 comes in a context of volatility of the situation in Ukraine.

The extension does not change the decision of March 2022 in terms of the categories of persons to whom the temporary protection applies.

What is temporary protection?

Temporary protection provides immediate and collective protection to a large group of displaced persons who arrive in the EU and who are not in a position to return to their country of origin.

The system alleviates the pressure on national asylum systems because applications do not have to be examined individually. People benefitting from temporary protection enjoy the same rights across the EU. These rights include:

  • residence
  • access to the labour market and housing
  • medical assistance
  • social welfare assistance
  • access to education for children

The EU’s temporary protection law sets minimum standards of protection. The actual level of assistance can vary from one member state to another.

Next steps 

The Council will formally adopt the decision to extend the temporary protection once the legal scrubbing and translation into all EU languages has taken place.

Background

Temporary protection is an EU emergency mechanism which is activated in exceptional circumstances involving a mass influx of refugees. The EU directive on temporary protection was adopted in 2001, in the aftermath of the large-scale displacement due to the armed conflict in the Western Balkans, in particular from Bosnia and Herzegovina and Kosovo. It was triggered for the first time in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

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