Screening Workshop: From Pact Rules to Practical Rollout
2025-09-29
Frontex hosted a Screening Implementation
Workshop in Warsaw on 18–19
September, bringing together EU Member States, Schengen-associated countries,
the European Commission and EU agencies. With the new screening rules already
established, the focus was on how to put them into practice as of June 2026.
What is the Pact (in one paragraph)?
The EU Pact on
Migration and Asylum is a package of laws that sets a common European
approach to migration and asylum. It is intended to facilitate stronger border
management, faster and clearer procedures, and a framework for solidarity,
while protecting people’s rights. On 11 June 2024, the Pact was adopted,
comprising eight regulations and one directive, which will be applicable from
June 2026. Learn more on the Home Affairs website.
The event at a glance
Hosted
in Warsaw, the workshop brought together the practitioners of national
authorities with EUAA, Europol and Frontex. This
wasn’t about re-writing the rules; it was about making screening work on
the ground: who does what on site, how files move, what training is needed, and
how to keep the process fast, fair and rights-respecting.
Commission framing: implementation, not invention
The European
Commission (DG HOME) set a clear tone: the legal framework is in place;
now Member States should take the operational decisions only they can
take, such as designate sites and lead authorities, secure budgets, recruit and
train staff, and establish independent monitoring arrangements. A
forthcoming Commission committee on Schengen Borders Code will track
progress. The support provided by the agencies was welcomed and considered
relevant for the success of the implementation phase, with the agencies’ input
being essential to this process.
Panels in brief
Before
the roundtables, where Member State experts debated the implementation
process, panel one brought together EU agencies (EUAA, Frontex and
Europol), who announced the available training support and practical tools
(such as the Screening Toolbox), as well as the operational engagement
required to ensure an efficient and rights-respecting screening process.
During
panel two, meanwhile, Member State authorities from France, Cyprus
and Romania shared practical progress on the screening implementation at
the borders and inland multipurpose centres (for screening, asylum
and return), the changes being made to the legal framework and the main
challenges being considered to ensure systematic screening of third-country
nationals with the aid of interpreters and clear documentation, and integrated
flows aligned with the new legal timelines: up to 7 days for border
screening and 3 days for in-territory cases.
Challenges to be confronted
For
all the positive progress recounted by Member State representatives,
some inevitable implementation challenges remain to be worked through
together:
Information-sharing without
a common EU case management system, and how national systems embrace security
checks with use of EU and international databases.
Working
with stakeholders not traditionally involved in screening (notably
health services) and ensuring clear pathways for vulnerability and health
checks.
Scaling
mandatory screening for all irregular arrivals amid pressure on national
services, while keeping safeguards and consistency.
The
mood was pragmatic and constructive: these are implementation tasks, not
roadblocks. Shared templates, targeted training and continued coordination,
backed by EU agencies’ support, are helping countries move from plans to
practice, with several solutions already being piloted.
Fundamental rights: build safeguards in from the start
The
message from Salvador Cuenca Curbelo, representing the Frontex
Fundamental Rights Office (FRO), was clear: design in independent
monitoring, accessible legal aid and child-specific
safeguards from day one. A legal aspect to watch is how the 3-day
(in-territory) and 7-day (border) screening limits interact with
national detention law if courts view transit centres as detention;
in such cases, domestic guarantees apply alongside EU timelines.
Next steps
Preparations
are underway for the performance of the required checks on third-country
nationals, with the aim of ensuring the respect of fundamental rights. Member
States are working to ensure the necessary resources are available to guarantee
adequate capacity, that SOPs are approved in a timely manner to
facilitate coordination between the different authorities and harmonised
procedures.
The
Agencies will continue to address the challenges identified by Member
States that fall within their remit and where they can add value. The next
step is to finalise the screening toolbox. This will be done in accordance
with the Commission’s guidance following the testing phase.