Portugal gives migrants, asylum seekers residency rights during coronavirus crisis

Portugal has temporarily given migrants and asylum seekers full citizenship rights as COVID-19 continues to spread across the country.

An elderly man crosses a deserted street in Lisbon.

An elderly man crosses a deserted street in Lisbon. Source: AAP

Migrants in Portugal will be treated as permanent residents until at least 1 July to ensure they have access to public services during the coronavirus outbreak.

Applicants including asylum seekers need only provide evidence of an ongoing request to qualify - granting them access to the national health service, welfare benefits, bank accounts, and work and rental contracts.

“People should not be deprived of their rights to health and public service just because their application has not yet been processed,” Claudia Veloso, spokeswoman for the Ministry of Internal Affairs, told Reuters.

“In these exceptional times, the rights of migrants must be guaranteed.”

The policy also aims to reduce contagion risk by minimizing contact between border control service staff and applicants, the statement said.
A municipal worker during the desinfection of the streets close to Belem Palace in Lisbon.
A municipal worker during the desinfection of the streets close to Belem Palace in Lisbon. Source: AAP
Portugal has reported 5,170 cases of the virus and 100 deaths, far below neighboring Spain.

Health authorities expect cases to peak at the end of May.

It was not known how many people had ongoing residency applications, but government statistics show that a record 580,000 immigrants resided in Portugal in 2019 and 135,000 people were granted residency that year alone.

Brazilians make up the majority of immigrants, official data shows, followed by Romanians, Ukrainians, Britons and Chinese.


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Published 2 April 2020 6:28am
Source: Reuters, SBS


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