Recommendation for a Council decision establishing a European Peace Facility
The Committee on Foreign Affairs adopted an own-initiative report by Hilde VAUTMANS (ALDE, BE) on a European Parliament recommendation to the Council and the Vice-President of the Commission / High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy concerning the Proposal of the High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, with the support of the Commission, to the Council for a Council Decision establishing a European Peace Facility.
The European Peace Facility
Members recalled that the European Peace Facility is expected to give the Union the capacity to contribute directly to the financing of peace support operations led by third countries, as well as relevant international organisations, on a global scale and not only in Africa.
The proposed Facility will replace the Athena mechanism and the African Peace Facility. It will complement the Capacity Building for Security and Development initiative by financing the costs of EU defence activities such as AU peace-keeping missions, common costs of own military CSDP operations, and military capacity building of partners, which are excluded from the EU budget.
Operations carried out under the Facility must comply with the principles and values enshrined in the Charter of Fundamental Rights and respect international humanitarian and human rights law.
Recommendations
In general, Members recommended, inter alia:
- work towards the establishment of a mechanism within the European Parliament to provide timely access, according to strictly defined parameters, to information, including original documents, on the annual budget of the European Peace Facility, amending budgets, transfers, action programmes, implementation of assistance measures, agreements with implementing actors, reports on the implementation of revenue and expenditure, as well as to the annual accounts, financial statements, evaluation reports and the annual report of the Court of Auditors;
- to agree to include access to all confidential documents in the negotiations for the updated Interinstitutional Agreement between the European Parliament and the Council concerning access of Parliament to sensitive information of the Council in the field of security and defence policy;
- to ensure that operations, action programmes, ad hoc assistance measures and other operational actions funded by the Facility will not in any way violate or be used to violate the fundamental principles laid down in Article 21 of the TEU or be used to violate international law, in particular international humanitarian and human rights law.
The committee proposed to insert a number of amendments into the proposal. It also recommended that the Vice-President of the Commission/High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy:
- consult Parliament on the recommended amendments, and to ensure that Parliaments views are taken into consideration;
- implement Parliaments views when preparing proposals for multi-year action programmes or ad hoc assistance measures, including by withdrawing proposals that are opposed by Parliament;
- submit draft Council decisions relating to the European Peace Facility to Parliament for consultation at the same time as they are submitted to the Council or to the Political and Security Committee;
- ensure complementarity with existing EU funds, programmes and instruments, the consistency of the European Peace Facility with all other aspects of the EUs external action;
- provide regular feedback to Parliament on the progress made in implementing Resolution 1325 on women and peace and security, and to consult Parliament on the recommended gender component focusing on the role of women in the prevention and resolution of conflicts;
- ensure the consistency of the European Peace Facility with all other aspects of the EUs external action, including its development and humanitarian policies.