European Peace Facility may fuel conflicts

November 19, 2020

The European Union´s proposed Peace Facility may not facilitate peace at all. In fact, it risks fuelling conflict and human rights abuses around the world if it goes through in its current form.

That´s what  40 civil society organisations with expertise on peace, human rights and the protection of civilians are warning in a joint statement.

EU Member States’ ambassadors are discussing a new funding instrument that presents a fundamental shift towards a more military approach in EU foreign policy, and risks causing large-scale civilian harm around the world.

Training military forces

The proposal for the €5 billion European Peace Facility (EPF) would fund EU-branded initiatives to train and equip foreign military and security forces. The EU could even provide these forces with lethal weapons. This would feed into the very dynamics that the EPF seeks to address.

By strengthening security forces and providing them with military equipment in conflict areas, the European Peace Facility’s funding would risk increasing human rights abuses and contribute to further violence and arms proliferation, rather than to protect civilians and search for political solutions.

Adding fuel to the fire

“The proposed European Peace Facility not only fails to address the root causes of conflict, it also risks harming civilians and fuelling violations of international humanitarian law and international human rights law,” says Drissa Traoré, Coordinator of the Joint Office of FIDH and AMDH (Association Malienne des Droits de l’Homme) in Mali.

Fix it

If EU Member States insist on adopting the EPF, they must urgently address the risks that EPF-funded assistance will do harm. PAX, together with thirty-nine other civil society organisations, calls on EU Member States to

  1. Strengthen conflict prevention and civilian harm prevention and mitigation,
  2. Exclude the transfer of lethal weapons from the proposal, and
  3. Adopt a due diligence framework to ensure the facility’s activities are conducted in accordance with international law.

“The EPF contains all the seeds of destabilisation if it provides additional weapons in the Sahel”, said Olivier Guiryanan, Executive Director of BUCOFORE in Chad. “It is paramount that the EU and its member states ensure that EPF-funded programmes do not escalate conflict but rather contribute to long-term peace.”

Read the full statement here

 

Get involved with our peace work.
Subscribe to the PAX Action Alert.