The resolution of the Council of Ministers published creates the Mission Structure for the Recovery of Pending Processes at the Agency for Integration, Migration and Asylum (AIMA) and authorises the recruitment of the two mission teams of a maximum of 100 specialists, 150 assistant technicians and 50 operational assistants.
The diploma provides that the structure will end its functions, on June 2, 2025.
In the diploma, the Government highlights the country's challenges with immigration, such as the large backlog of regularisation processes and the inability of services to respond, a situation that it says poses a serious problem with regards to the dignity of immigrants seeking Portugal, leaving them in a situation of lack of legal protection and social vulnerability.
It was this ineffectiveness of the institutions responsible for granting documentation to foreign citizens that contributed to the fact that there are currently around 400,000 regularisation processes in the national territory pending analysis.
AIMA has been the target of complaints from precarious workers who say they have permanent roles in the organisation, complaints that received the solidarity of AIMA unions, according to statements to Lusa two weeks ago.
The president of the AIMA Workers' Union, Artur Girão, asked for the situation of cultural mediators who have been in precarious employment conditions to be analysed on a case-by-case basis, while Manuela Niza, from the recently founded Union of Migration Technicians (STM), asked for a response from the guardianship to the problem.
The resolution establishes that the new 300 workers to be hired to support AIMA will be recruited through protocols with public or private entities, through four contractual modalities; mobility, employment contract with a fixed or uncertain term, transfer of public interest, or service provision contract.
I will not be holding my breath here. First, find the folks who actually want to work for AIMA.
Second, what about the ones who have already left or who want to leave this bungled agency.
AIMA will only be “fixed” when they get rid of the top handlers. Had years to get this running smoothly, but nope.
And we all wait…. Sad
By A V from Algarve on 11 Jul 2024, 13:24
All focus is on AIMA and rightly so but the Dept of Justice is equally as bad. I decided to skip residence renewal delays(!!) and apply for citizenship. All paperwork submitted and accepted by the DoJ, online as well! But after the first success my solicitor says it takes 2 years plus to get the passport. 2 years!!! What does the DoJ do to take so long after all documents correctly submitted and accepted in a month! 2 years to consider what exactly? Any answers gladly received. A burgeoning government everyday less productive and more costly to taxpayers. Decentralise and get into the 21st century!
By Matthew from Other on 12 Jul 2024, 09:58
Please learn from Dubai look at how their government removes bureaucracy...everything gets done in minutes fast to make citizens and residents happy
By Riya from Porto on 15 Jul 2024, 06:32
In all this urgency to regularize those who came on Tourist Visa, AIMA has totall forgotten those who came through proper channel (e.g., D7 visa). Most importantly, there has been no vacancy for family reunification since past 20 months. How about taking out a few thousand vacancies for family reunification? A few thousand is nothing compared to the hundreds of thousands of cases of "regularization." Those who came through Consulates (e.g., D7) applied for residence permit only because there was a legal right to family reunion. Be human and professional.
By G Raja from Lisbon on 01 Aug 2024, 15:02