Site icon IBC World News

Spanish NGOs push undocumentedmigrants to apply for regularisation

MADRID

Several non-governmental organisations in Spain are urging undocumented migrants to register in a final push for ​a special mass regularisation process that has attracted around a million people in just a few weeks and ‌is set to end on Tuesday.

In the final hours before the deadline, NGOs were stepping up efforts to contact and advise migrants still trying to gather the documents required to apply for a one-year residence permit, in a country where around 840,000 people work off the books and it can take ​more than a year to obtain legal status.

Rights groups CEAR and Cepaim urged migrants to submit applications even ​if they were still waiting for required documents from home countries like Mali, Iran or Venezuela.

We’re ⁠carrying out a final check of all the people who have come to our offices and who may have been ​missing some documentation at the start of the process, said Elena Muñoz, coordinator of CEAR’s legal team.

If a case is not ​yet complete … we will submit it before June 30 so that they do not miss the opportunity to benefit from the regularisation process.

Between April and June, the Spanish government received almost double the 500,000 registrations it had expected.

NGOs are also trying to ease anxiety among migrants who have ​not yet applied, in a country with a relatively open approach to foreign arrivals.

On Friday, the number of applications submitted ​reached 1.27 million, according to Cesar Perez, the union leader for Spain’s immigration officers.

Juan Segura, director-general of Cepaim, said migrants were being ‌advised to ⁠submit applications because they would get additional time to provide missing documents.

Experts say migrants from conflict-affected countries like Iran or Mali have faced obstacles legalising documents at Spanish consulates, a process that is also complex in Algeria and Nigeria.

Venezuelans have encountered delays obtaining apostilles for criminal record certificates, while Spain’s policy changes forced asylum seekers to switch to this procedure early in June, ​leaving less time to prepare ​documentation.

This meant some Venezuelans had ⁠less time to gather the necessary documents, Segura said, adding that many now faced difficulties and extending the deadline would be advisable.

Exit mobile version