BARCELONA: More than half a million immigrants are believed to live in Spain without legal permission.
They work jobs that few Spaniards want: picking fruits and vegetables in the fields, caring for children and the elderly, cleaning homes and hotel rooms. Some wind up homeless.
The “sin papeles” (Spanish for “without papers”) are often exploited, marginalized and invisible.
Now, Spain wants to integrate them. Earlier this week, the government announced it would grant residency and work permits to all foreigners who arrived in the country before Dec. 31, 2025, have lived in Spain for at least five months, and have no criminal record.
Pedro Sánchez, Spain’s socialist prime minister, said the country was opening a legal path for “people who have, together with us, built progress in this country” in a video posted to social media Friday.
The unexpected move contrasted with harsh rhetoric and deportation efforts ramping up in the United States and other European Union countries.
Here are three people who are hoping to get their residency and work permits under Spain’s new policy.
A Colombian asylum-seeker
“A week ago, I was living with constant anxiety,” said Ale Castañeda, an asylum-seeker from Colombia whose temporary permit was about to expire in February. “I didn’t know what would happen to me, if I would be able to stay or not, if I would have to start from scratch again.”
Now, if his asylum case gets rejected, Castañeda has another legal pathway to remain in Spain. He just wants to be able to work and get access to “basic things,” like opening a bank account. One thing he wants to make clear is that he doesn’t plan to rely on public benefits.
Castañeda says he’s found odd jobs when he can but is currently out of work.
Like many of the Latin Americans who make up the majority of immigrants in Spain, Castañeda arrived legally on a tourist visa and decided to stay. A queer man, he fled discrimination in Colombia to more progressive, gay-friendly Argentina. But after right-wing, anti-woke Javier Milei was elected, the mood in the country changed and Castañeda was brutally attacked. “I just had to leave,” he said.
In Spain, he finally felt safe.
While Castañeda celebrated Spain’s immigration opening — “It’s the best news of 2026!” — he and other foreigners know that the devil is in the details. The government has shared the basic requirements but the fine print has yet to be published in the official state bulletin.
Castañeda knows how lengthy immigration procedures can be. Even the most basic step, getting an appointment at the immigration office, is such an impossible task that criminal groups are selling them for 50 euros ($60). He wonders how the government will process hundreds of thousands of applications in only a few months.
Spain’s Minister of Migration Elma Saiz vowed that her ministry will dedicate additional resources to make sure things run smoothly. “We want this to be a success,” she said.
A former architect from Chile
Paulina Valenzuela still can’t believe the news. “I still can’t stop smiling,” she told The Associated Press by phone.
A former architect, Valenzuela moved to Spain after losing her job in Chile. She’s struggled to legalize her status for the past three years, falling for costly scams and getting her immigration applications rejected twice without understanding why.
Like many educated Latinas who have moved to Spain, Valenzuela has taken up cleaning jobs to make a living. “I’ll work in anything,” she said. At one point, she was responsible for cleaning 40 apartments listed on Airbnb, an intense and stressful job that paid little, she said.
The booming tourism sector depends heavily on cheap and informal immigrant labor. A record 97 million tourists visited Spain last year and spent more than 130 billion euros. Immigrants see only a tiny fraction of that revenue.
Physically and emotionally drained, Valenzuela quit in November and has resorted to social services to get food on the table.
She’s hoping the new residency permits will lift her out of poverty. Valenzuela can’t help but be suspicious of things that seem too good to be true.
“There’s always an obstacle at the last minute,” she said. “But at least I have hope I didn’t have before.”
A struggling man from Pakistan
Hussain Dar, 30, has been in Spain for almost a year and is struggling without papers.
He left his native Pakistan, where jobs are scarce, to pursue a master’s degree in the United Kingdom.
But he was unable to stay in the UK due to its harsher immigration laws and headed to Spain. Still unable to work legally, he’s used up all his savings, sold his computer, and is now thinking of selling his phone. Late on his rent payment, he’s spent several nights sleeping on the streets.
“It’s been tough,” he told AP as he stood in an eight-hour line outside the Pakistani consulate in Barcelona this week.
Dar is among some 15,000 Pakistani citizens living in the northeastern region of Catalonia without permission, according to Murad Ali Wazir, Pakistan’s consul general in Barcelona.
One of the requirements — a certificate of clear criminal record — has swamped the consulate. The window to apply for legal residency in Spain will be short: from April and to the end of June only, Spanish officials say. To help its citizens get the required documents in time, the consulate announced it will even open on weekends.
“I didn’t expect that this country was going to be so good, the weather, the people, the culture,” Dar said. With permits, he and others will be able to work and pay Spanish taxes, contributing to the Spanish economy, he said. They’ll also be allowed to visit family back home that they haven’t seen in years, Dar said with a smile.
“Viva España! Viva Pedro Sánchez! We love that guy,” he exclaimed.
In an increasingly hostile world, migrants are hopeful as Spain moves to integrate them
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In an increasingly hostile world, migrants are hopeful as Spain moves to integrate them
- The “sin papeles” (Spanish for “without papers”) are often exploited, marginalized and invisible
- Sánchez said the country was opening a legal path for “people who have, together with us, built progress in this country”
’Considered a traitor’: Life of an anti-war Ukrainian in Russia
MOSCOW: In war-torn Ukraine, her family considers her a traitor. In tightly controlled Russia, her life is defined by solitude.
A Ukrainian living in Russia for the past 20 years, Maria — whose name AFP has changed for her safety — has for four years watched with horror as her adopted homeland waged war against her native country.
Her parents are her only family in Ukraine who still speak to her. The rest of her friends and relatives there have cut her off.
“They consider me a traitor,” Maria, 48, told AFP.
Her nephew, fighting for Ukraine, was wounded in combat while her son-in-law, drafted into Russia’s army, was killed.
After moving to Russia to study, Maria stayed and would regularly visit Ukraine until 2022.
Moscow’s decision to launch its full-scale military offensive on February 24, 2022 was “shocking” to her.
Maria has not seen her family in Ukraine since — unable to leave Russia as her Ukrainian passport expired.
- ‘Never see them again’ -
She is now trying to get Russian citizenship to be able to travel more freely, but is caught in a vicious bureaucratic cycle.
Russia treats anyone with links to Ukraine as suspicious and has outlawed criticism of its military campaign.
According to Maria, Ukrainians trying to get Russian nationality face interrogations about their families — and their opinion of the war.
In Moscow-controlled Ukrainian territory, Kyiv accuses Russia of handing out passports en masse, an attempt to erase the areas of their Ukrainian identity and history.
Maria told AFP she was constantly worried about her parents.
“My biggest fear is to never see them again.”
When she phones her mother, the call is interrupted by “sirens and explosions” — the soundtrack of Russia’s four-year-long military campaign.
She sometimes sees reports that Russia has struck her home city. If the phone lines to her parents are cut, she scrambles to find out exactly what districts.
Around 900,000 Ukrainian citizens lived in Russia before 2022.
Some left after Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea and more again after the Kremlin launched its 2022 offensive.
From Ukraine, some eight million fled to Europe in the first year of the war, the UN said.
At least 1.2 million — mainly from eastern Ukraine — fled to Russia, the UN said, but it has not published data on how many are still there.
Kyiv has accused Moscow of blocking and complicating travel to Russia by Ukrainians. Going through Russia is the only way for them to visit relatives in parts of Ukraine that Russia has captured and claims as its own.
- ‘Huge fear’ -
Along with forcing millions out of their homes, the war has killed hundreds of thousands of soldiers, tens of thousands of civilians and decimated much of eastern and southern Ukraine.
When her Russian son-in-law was drafted into Russia’s army in 2022, Maria was torn.
“On the one hand, I felt sorry for him as it was forced,” she said, recounting how he cried as he did not want to fight.
“On the other, I felt angry that he is going there to kill my relatives.”
Her nephew was at the front on the Ukrainian side at the same time and she had a “huge fear” they would face each other across the battlefield.
“This thought that he (my son-in-law) could go and kill my nephew horrified me,” she said.
When it was her son-in-law that ended up being killed, she had to comfort her daughter.
“He was her first love and we still cannot believe it as there was no burial, the body was not recovered.”
Maria tried to talk about it with her parents in Ukraine.
“I tried to tell them that I feel sorry for my son-in-law. But they said: ‘We don’t. He made his choice’.”
After that, Maria fell into depression, turning to a psychologist.
In Russia, where criticism of the campaign is banned, she was surrounded by supporters of the war.
In Ukraine, her relatives “did not want my support or compassion.”
“I became a black sheep.”
“We (Ukrainians in Russia) are not guilty of anything, we do not support (the offensive). We are worried for them and every strike, every bombing, affects us too,” she added.
- ‘Ukrainian songs’ -
Maria decided to stop actively reading news about the war, finding it “too hard that I can’t help my relatives.”
But the conflict has affected all corners of life in Russia — even splitting the beauty salon outside Moscow where she works.
“Many clients moved abroad because they did not support the military campaign,” Maria said.
Others “stopped coming to me, just because I am from Ukraine and I do not support this war.”
Her social circle shrank.
Urged on by officials and pro-war zealots, the Soviet-era practice of denunciations has skyrocketed in Russia during the war and Maria mostly prefers to be alone.
“It’s more comfortable for me because I know that I will not betray myself and not denounce myself.”
Her strategy for living among supporters of the war?
“I sing songs, Ukrainian songs, in my head” when listening to people publicly back the offensive.
As the war approaches the four-year mark, Maria has little optimism.
“I would like the war to end tomorrow,” she said.
“But I understand it’s not realistic, as each leader has his demands and nobody wants to compromise. No one cares about the people suffering.”
A Ukrainian living in Russia for the past 20 years, Maria — whose name AFP has changed for her safety — has for four years watched with horror as her adopted homeland waged war against her native country.
Her parents are her only family in Ukraine who still speak to her. The rest of her friends and relatives there have cut her off.
“They consider me a traitor,” Maria, 48, told AFP.
Her nephew, fighting for Ukraine, was wounded in combat while her son-in-law, drafted into Russia’s army, was killed.
After moving to Russia to study, Maria stayed and would regularly visit Ukraine until 2022.
Moscow’s decision to launch its full-scale military offensive on February 24, 2022 was “shocking” to her.
Maria has not seen her family in Ukraine since — unable to leave Russia as her Ukrainian passport expired.
- ‘Never see them again’ -
She is now trying to get Russian citizenship to be able to travel more freely, but is caught in a vicious bureaucratic cycle.
Russia treats anyone with links to Ukraine as suspicious and has outlawed criticism of its military campaign.
According to Maria, Ukrainians trying to get Russian nationality face interrogations about their families — and their opinion of the war.
In Moscow-controlled Ukrainian territory, Kyiv accuses Russia of handing out passports en masse, an attempt to erase the areas of their Ukrainian identity and history.
Maria told AFP she was constantly worried about her parents.
“My biggest fear is to never see them again.”
When she phones her mother, the call is interrupted by “sirens and explosions” — the soundtrack of Russia’s four-year-long military campaign.
She sometimes sees reports that Russia has struck her home city. If the phone lines to her parents are cut, she scrambles to find out exactly what districts.
Around 900,000 Ukrainian citizens lived in Russia before 2022.
Some left after Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea and more again after the Kremlin launched its 2022 offensive.
From Ukraine, some eight million fled to Europe in the first year of the war, the UN said.
At least 1.2 million — mainly from eastern Ukraine — fled to Russia, the UN said, but it has not published data on how many are still there.
Kyiv has accused Moscow of blocking and complicating travel to Russia by Ukrainians. Going through Russia is the only way for them to visit relatives in parts of Ukraine that Russia has captured and claims as its own.
- ‘Huge fear’ -
Along with forcing millions out of their homes, the war has killed hundreds of thousands of soldiers, tens of thousands of civilians and decimated much of eastern and southern Ukraine.
When her Russian son-in-law was drafted into Russia’s army in 2022, Maria was torn.
“On the one hand, I felt sorry for him as it was forced,” she said, recounting how he cried as he did not want to fight.
“On the other, I felt angry that he is going there to kill my relatives.”
Her nephew was at the front on the Ukrainian side at the same time and she had a “huge fear” they would face each other across the battlefield.
“This thought that he (my son-in-law) could go and kill my nephew horrified me,” she said.
When it was her son-in-law that ended up being killed, she had to comfort her daughter.
“He was her first love and we still cannot believe it as there was no burial, the body was not recovered.”
Maria tried to talk about it with her parents in Ukraine.
“I tried to tell them that I feel sorry for my son-in-law. But they said: ‘We don’t. He made his choice’.”
After that, Maria fell into depression, turning to a psychologist.
In Russia, where criticism of the campaign is banned, she was surrounded by supporters of the war.
In Ukraine, her relatives “did not want my support or compassion.”
“I became a black sheep.”
“We (Ukrainians in Russia) are not guilty of anything, we do not support (the offensive). We are worried for them and every strike, every bombing, affects us too,” she added.
- ‘Ukrainian songs’ -
Maria decided to stop actively reading news about the war, finding it “too hard that I can’t help my relatives.”
But the conflict has affected all corners of life in Russia — even splitting the beauty salon outside Moscow where she works.
“Many clients moved abroad because they did not support the military campaign,” Maria said.
Others “stopped coming to me, just because I am from Ukraine and I do not support this war.”
Her social circle shrank.
Urged on by officials and pro-war zealots, the Soviet-era practice of denunciations has skyrocketed in Russia during the war and Maria mostly prefers to be alone.
“It’s more comfortable for me because I know that I will not betray myself and not denounce myself.”
Her strategy for living among supporters of the war?
“I sing songs, Ukrainian songs, in my head” when listening to people publicly back the offensive.
As the war approaches the four-year mark, Maria has little optimism.
“I would like the war to end tomorrow,” she said.
“But I understand it’s not realistic, as each leader has his demands and nobody wants to compromise. No one cares about the people suffering.”
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