Asian immigrants rally over delays in residence permits in Lisbon

Portugal’s immigration system faces severe delays, as seen in the April 7, 2025, protest of over 100 Asian immigrants in Lisbon. Residence permit backlogs, exceeding 400,000 cases, followed the dissolution of SEF and creation of AIMA in 2023. Immigrants report employment barriers, poor housing options, and emotional stress. Critics emphasize reform urgency for economic, social, and systemic stability.

Key Takeaways

• Over 100 Asian immigrants protested residence permit delays exceeding nine months in Lisbon on April 7, 2025.
• Portugal’s residence permit backlog reached 400,000 cases after SEF dissolved and AIMA was introduced in late 2023.
• Asian immigrants face barriers in employment, housing, and integration due to prolonged delays in residence permits.

On April 7, 2025, more than 100 Asian immigrants came together in a public protest in Lisbon 🇵🇹, outside the Agency for Integration, Migration, and Asylum (AIMA). These individuals, primarily from Bangladesh 🇧🇩, Pakistan 🇵🇰, and India 🇮🇳, voiced their frustration over extended delays in the processing of residence permits. In several cases, immigrants reported waiting more than nine months for updates on their applications. This prolonged delay has caused significant disruptions in their lives, leaving many unable to access regular employment, stable living conditions, or essential public services. At its core, this protest highlighted significant administrative and procedural issues in Portugal’s immigration system.

This demonstration not only throws light on the immediate difficulties faced by immigrants but also exposes deeper flaws within Portugal’s immigration processes. These flaws result not just from administrative delays but from years of systemic challenges. Furthermore, the situation bears implications for Portugal’s economy, societal integration efforts, and its image as an immigrant-friendly country.

Asian immigrants rally over delays in residence permits in Lisbon
Asian immigrants rally over delays in residence permits in Lisbon

Why Are There Delays in Residence Permit Applications?

The root causes of the delays can be traced to structural changes made to Portugal’s immigration management in late 2023. The government dissolved Portugal’s long-standing Immigration and Borders Service (known as SEF). This agency had been responsible for handling residence permits and other immigration-related procedures for many years. In its place, the authorities launched AIMA, an agency tasked with both integration and migration management, along with asylum services. While the transition aimed to streamline responsibilities and improve efficiency, the reality has revealed operational confusion and logistical hurdles.

AIMA inherited a backlog of unresolved cases from SEF when it began its work in late 2023. With an already overwhelmed workforce dealing with adjustments to a new structure, matters quickly worsened. By the beginning of 2024, the backlog had grown staggeringly to a reported 400,000 pending residence permit applications. Although the Portuguese government allocated €5.97 million in 2025 to resolve this crisis, progress has been slow. Measures included hiring sociocultural mediators and setting up dedicated centers for processing applications, but these efforts have yet to produce significant results.

The Experience of Asian Immigrants

Asian immigrants, particularly those from South Asia, are among the groups most affected by the delays. Many individuals had moved to Portugal seeking economic opportunities, but the lack of valid residence permits has created barriers that are difficult to overcome. The challenges these individuals face span multiple aspects of their lives, from employment to housing to basic legal rights.

Barriers to Finding Stable Work

Residence permits are essential for immigrants to secure legal employment in Portugal. Without these permits, many Asian immigrants are unable to enter the formal job market. As a result, they are left with no choice but to work in informal or unstable sectors. Common industries like agriculture or hospitality, which often employ immigrants from Asia, are marked by low wages and limited protections. Those without legal documentation are further exploited, as employers know they lack leverage to demand fair treatment.

Portugal’s national economy, in turn, is impacted by these delays. Many sectors that are economically crucial—such as agriculture and tourism—depend heavily on migrant labor. Employers in these industries have begun expressing concern over ongoing labor shortages, which are exacerbated by the residence permit backlog. In addition to affecting individual workers and families, these shortages hinder Portugal’s ability to achieve its broader economic goals.

Housing Struggles

Immigrants without stable employment often face difficulty securing proper housing. Discrimination in Portugal’s housing market adds yet another layer of difficulty for Asian immigrants. Many landlords are unwilling to rent to individuals without valid legal status or steady income, leaving affected migrants with few options. Consequently, many have resorted to overcrowded or substandard living conditions, which lack appropriate facilities or safety standards. These housing difficulties, combined with employment challenges, create a cascade of instability in the lives of numerous immigrant families.

Isolation and Uncertainty

Perhaps one of the most harmful effects of delayed residence permits is the mental and emotional toll it places on immigrants. Many immigrants living in legal limbo feel deeply uncertain about their future. They are unable to travel to and from their home countries to visit family, access healthcare services, or even attend to emergency situations. The inability to plan for the future—whether to improve career prospects or provide for their families—has left many individuals feeling marginalized and excluded.

The sense of isolation is worsened by recent policy changes. For example, Portugal ended its “manifestation of interest” program in mid-2024. This program previously allowed immigrants to declare their intention to reside in the country and file for residency through a streamlined process. Many South Asian workers had relied on this system as a relatively straightforward way to gain residency. Now that it is no longer available, the path to legal residency has become even more complicated, extending waiting periods indefinitely.

Official Responses: Is Change on the Horizon?

Portugal’s government has acknowledged the residence permit crisis and recognized its damaging effects on the immigrant population. Minister of Internal Administration António Leitão Amaro has stated that immigration reform remains a priority, and efforts are underway to clear the backlog. However, few concrete solutions have been implemented to provide immediate relief to immigrants stuck in the system.

In addition to financial investments in service infrastructure, AIMA is reportedly working toward implementing stricter measures for residency qualifications. New requirements mandate that applicants prove either active employment or demonstrate ongoing efforts to secure work. While designed to tighten the immigration process, such measures risk marginalizing already vulnerable groups, especially those awaiting permit decisions.

While these policy changes aim to ensure that immigration remains orderly, critics argue that they fail to account for administrative inefficiencies as the primary cause of delays. For the thousands of immigrants awaiting residency decisions, these systemic issues have not been addressed quickly enough.

The Broader Impact: What Portugal Risks Losing

The hardships caused by delays in residence permits are part of larger systemic problems. The situation demonstrates how immigration policies are intertwined with social and economic stability. Failing to address these delays places Portugal in a precarious position for several reasons.

Economic Consequences

As mentioned earlier, immigrant labor is critical to several of Portugal’s key industries. If bureaucratic barriers prevent workers from entering the labor force, these industries risk falling short of productivity targets. Delays in granting residence permits disrupt the smooth functioning of essential services, directly slowing growth in areas like tourism and agriculture.

Social Divides and Integration Challenges

Delays also contribute to social inequality and exclusion. Immigrants lack access to services and opportunities, which reduces their chances of integrating into Portuguese society. Failed integration ultimately affects a country’s ability to build a cohesive multicultural society. For Portugal, long-term challenges like these could have repercussions for its social fabric, creating divisions between immigrant groups and native-born citizens.

Lessons for Immigration Management

Portugal’s experience with administrative restructuring also highlights the wider risks governments face during such transitions. Though the dissolution of SEF and creation of AIMA aimed to improve efficiency, the ongoing backlog reveals a stark reality: transitions must be accompanied by sufficient resources, clearer planning, and effective coordination across agencies. Without addressing these core issues, future reforms in Portugal—or elsewhere—could yield similar outcomes.

Conclusion

The protest held in Lisbon 🇵🇹 on April 7, 2025, put a spotlight on the lived experiences of immigrants caught up in Portugal’s stalled residence permit process. For Asian immigrants, who often journeyed to the country seeking better economic opportunities, the administrative hurdles of the immigration system have left them stuck in a liminal space, unable to progress toward stability.

While steps have been introduced to reduce some delays, the scale of the backlog and the systemic issues behind it require urgent attention. Until the government can fully resolve these inefficiencies, the effect on individuals, the economy, and Portuguese society will continue to grow. As highlighted by VisaVerge.com, the unfolding events in Portugal demonstrate how immigration policies—if poorly managed—can have far-reaching consequences for both immigrants and the countries they wish to call home. For the affected Asian immigrants and others in Portugal, however, the hope remains that meaningful solutions are on the horizon.

For more information about residence permits and Portugal’s immigration processes, readers can visit the official AIMA website by clicking here.

Learn Today

AIMA → Portugal’s Agency for Integration, Migration, and Asylum, established in 2023 to manage migration, integration, and asylum processes.
SEF → Portugal’s former Immigration and Borders Service, dissolved in 2023 to streamline immigration procedures under AIMA.
Residence Permit → A legal document granting immigrants the right to reside in a host country for an extended period.
Manifestation of Interest → A streamlined program for immigrants declaring intent to reside in Portugal, discontinued in 2024.
Backlog → An accumulation of pending applications or tasks, notably 400,000 residence permits delayed in this case.

This Article in a Nutshell

On April 7, 2025, Asian immigrants protested in Lisbon over residence permit delays exceeding nine months. Administrative backlogs, linked to Portugal’s switch from SEF to AIMA in 2023, have disrupted livelihoods. Key challenges include accessing jobs, housing, and essential services. Critics highlight deeper systemic inefficiencies impacting both immigrants and Portugal’s economy. Reform remains urgent.
— By VisaVerge.com

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As the Chief Editor at VisaVerge.com, Oliver Mercer is instrumental in steering the website's focus on immigration, visa, and travel news. His role encompasses curating and editing content, guiding a team of writers, and ensuring factual accuracy and relevance in every article. Under Oliver's leadership, VisaVerge.com has become a go-to source for clear, comprehensive, and up-to-date information, helping readers navigate the complexities of global immigration and travel with confidence and ease.
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Concerned and disturbed...

The ineptitude of Portugal, at its VERY WORST.

A friend of ours has now waited 2 1/2years without being able to see or visit his yong family and wife. If he goes back to Mozambique, he risks not being able to return to Portugal.

Why do the government and the authorities of Portugal consider it acceptable to treat people in this totally inhumane manner, lacking integrity and completely bereft of compassion. In effect, Portugal has imprisoned thousands upon thousands of immigrants in Portugal, promising them a ‘better’ life in some way, but makes them beholden to the appalling work practices of what was SEF, and is now AIMA.
How can the government sleep at night?

My wife and I got out of Portugal after years and years of abusive, underhand and frankly, seemingly discriminatory practices by Portuguese authorities and entities. Beautiful country, yes, and great for holidays, but rotten to the core amongst many who bureaucrats who enjoy their status and position too much, and who use it as ‘power’ against the ordinary people they were elected to serve.

Our hope is that someone in government actually does something SIGNIFICANT about this disgraceful situation, and begins to free people from the torment to which the government are subjecting them. Immigrant’s lives are being ruined, and families torn apart by the indifference and callousness of government inaction and lack of genuine concern for them.

We can only but pray that hard hearts and minds and attitudes at the highest levels of governance will be broken, and that PEOPLE WILL COME FIRST. Immigrants awaiting residence permits are suffering intolerably, their lives are being destroyed and they are expected to wallow in the governmentally-created pit of despair and misery.

As ‘foreigners’ ourselves in Portugal, we saw the underlying resentment from so many Portuguese towards people arriving from other countries, particularly if they felt that they themselves could not get anything out of their arrival, in terms of financial gain or profit in some way.

Please, Portugal, release these people from your chains of heartache and despondency!
You pride yourselves as being ‘Christian’, but allowing this situation to have developed over so very many years would point to the most ‘UN-Christian’ of hierarchies and government, for which the only solution is deep repentance and swift action to help speedily address and remedy the faults of so many, over so long a period.

The consequences are NOT being felt by government, just, it seems, talked about, and some money thrown at the situation… while integrity dies and immigrants suffer…
Discrimination is alive and kicking in Portugal. Believe it…

‘Come here to this wonderful country!’, Portugal boldly proclaims.
Once here, though, it FAILS TO TAKE RESPONSIBILITY to fulfill its side of the bargain, and this article you wrote sums it al up so very well.
Thank you for having the bravery to want to expose what is a nightmare scenario for so many immigrants, and for exposing the paucity of the government’s reponse to it.