EU ministers on Thursday broadly supported a proposal to limit access to temporary protection for Ukrainian men ​of military age, Sweden’s migration minister said.

The European Union ‌activated the Temporary Protection Directive after Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine to manage large-scale arrivals of displaced people.

The scheme, which has been ​extended three times and is due to expire in ​March 2027, grants beneficiaries residence permits, access to ⁠the labour market and social welfare.

Swedish Migration Minister Johan ​Forssell said his country was in favour of the proposal ​which was discussed at a Justice and Home Affairs meeting in Luxembourg. Any restrictions should apply only to new arrivals seeking temporary ​protection status, not to those already covered by the ​scheme, he added.

“It is essential for us to provide Ukrainians with protection, ‌but ⁠at the same time the war needs to be fought and won. For that to happen, it is essential that more men stay in Ukraine and fight,” Forssell said ​ahead of ​the meeting.

The European ⁠Commission would need to propose any extension or modification of the scheme, which must ​then be approved by EU countries.

More than ​4.33 million ⁠people who have fled Ukraine currently benefit from the directive, according to Eurostat data.

Germany hosts the largest share of Ukrainians ⁠under ​the scheme, about 29% of the ​EU total, followed by Poland and Czechia, Eurostat data showed.

Source:  Reuters