With immigration detention rapidly expanding across Europe and concerns mounting over human rights violations at EU borders, National Preventive Mechanisms (NPMs), international organisations, civil society actors came together at a workshop to address the challenges in monitoring detention across Europe and beyond.
Organised by the Council of Europe in the framework of the joint EU-CoE project “Support to Council of Europe for EU network of prison monitoring bodies” (the European NPM Forum), the workshop highlighted the role of NPMs in monitoring immigration detention facilities, as well as in such procedures such as forced returns. The event responded to the evolving landscape of migration control measures used by member States and the pressing need for independent oversight amid new EU migration policies and practices. The programme featured key contributions from the Council of Europe’s Committee for the Prevention of Torture (CPT), the European Court of Human Rights, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE), the European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights (FRA), offering valuable perspectives on legal standards, jurisprudence, and political engagement in the context of migration and related detention practices.

The workshop comes in the wake of the EU’s Pact on Migration and Asylum, adopted in May 2024, which mandates member States to establish adequate independent monitoring mechanisms. With over 120,000 documented pushbacks in 2024 alone, the role of NPMs is more crucial than ever.
This workshop was an opportunity to discuss these challenges openly and constructively. Participants were encouraged to share their experiences and think creatively and critically about how to collectively reinforce the impact of their work. Through interactive sessions, panel discussions, and practical tool-sharing, the event fostered meaningful exchanges and cross-border cooperation, contributing to more effective and rights-based approaches to immigration detention oversight across Europe.


