The EPP Group is urging EU Member States to agree on a revision of the bloc’s long-term budget – a prerequisite to securing a new multi-billion package of financial support for Ukraine. At today’s plenary vote, the European Parliament will adopt its position on the proposed ‘Ukraine Facility’, worth a combined €50 billion through grants and loans.
“We urgently need an agreement on the Ukraine Facility so the EU’s steadfast support for Ukraine will continue smoothly. We urge Member States to do their part to ensure the successful conclusion of the revision of the EU’s long-term budget, the Multiannual Financial Framework, by the end of this year.”, reminds Petri Sarvamaa MEP, who led negotiations on behalf of the EPP Group in the Budgets Committee.
Fresh funding is desperately needed in Ukraine, a country devastated by Russia’s ongoing brutal war of aggression, acccording to the Parliament’s lead negotiator for the Foreign Affairs Committee, Michael Gahler MEP. “The Ukraine Facility combines the processes of reconstruction and EU accession. We also want to empower municipalities and regions as well as small and medium-sized businesses,” MEP Gahler said.
The Parliament will fulfil its budgetary responsibility by scrutinising the rollout of EU funds to Ukraine, as MEP Sarvamaa added, “Endorsing the rule of law, as well as other fundamental European values, will create a steady foundation for a stronger Ukraine. It will finally allow for Ukraine’s complete separation from the Russian influence. In addition, we aim to ensure that EU budget funds are used efficiently and with clear oversight and transparency. We are determined that Parliament, as one arm of the budgetary authority, plays a full role in the process”.
Source – EPP Group
S&Ds: Use frozen Russian assets from sanctions for the reconstruction of Ukraine
17/10/2023
The Socialists and Democrats call on the member states to agree on a legal basis to allow the confiscation of Russian public assets frozen by EU sanctions for the purpose of the reconstruction of Ukraine. This call is a priority for our group in the negotiations on the Ukraine Facility – a new instrument intended to provide 50 billion euros of financial support for Ukraine over the 2024-2027 period. The European Parliament is voting its position on this today in the plenary.
For the S&D Group, there is no doubt that the EU should continue supporting Ukraine, which is defending itself against Russia’s war of aggression. The country needs the EU’s assistance to continue to deliver basic public services, like schools, hospitals and pensions, as well as to work on the reforms required for future EU membership, including to strengthen the rule of law, fight against corruption and contribute to climate objectives. For the S&D Group, it is important that Verkhovna Rada, social partners and civil society are closely involved in the preparation of the EU’s financial support.
Eider Gardiazábal Rubial, S&D MEP and European Parliament’s negotiator on the matter in the EP committee on budgets, said:
“Since the beginning of Russia’s war against Ukraine the EU has mobilised funds to support Ukraine politically, economically and socially. Continuing with this support is a priority for the S&D Group and therefore, it is absolutely necessary and urgent that this new mechanism of 50 billion euros is approved. Russia has to pay for what it does to Ukraine. For this reason, Russian public assets should be confiscated in order to finance the reconstruction of Ukraine and compensate the victims of aggression. The confiscated amount would be added to the 50 billion euros of the facility to be voted on today. We count on our Ukrainian partners to create a coherent plan, together with their civil society, local and regional authorities, that is approved by the Verkohvna Rada. Our group expects a detailed list of reforms and investments with defined milestones and a clear agenda.”
Włodzimierz Cimoszewicz, S&D MEP and negotiator on the matter in the EP committee on foreign affairs, said:
“S&Ds want and will support Ukraine’s current budget needs, its reconstruction and preparation for EU membership. However, Ukraine’s needs are colossal, and the damage caused by the Russian aggressor is many times greater than the help we can provide. This is why the EU should confiscate Russian public assets frozen in our countries. The claim that this cannot be done legally is false. The aggressor does not enjoy any immunity. It would be an unforgivable mistake if we were to return money to the perpetrators of the most serious crime under international law, ignoring the needs of the victims. Let’s not forget that Russia, on its own initiative, has nationalised the assets of Western companies worth tens of billions of euros.”
Source – S&D Group
ECR Group calls for extension and strengthening of sanctions against Russia
Sanctions against Russia are not enough, according to the ECR Group in the European Parliament. In a debate on the preparation of a resolution to be adopted in November, the conservatives in the Strasbourg plenary criticised that the existing sanctions remain inefficient and are partly circumvented.
ECR foreign affairs coordinator and former Polish foreign minister Anna Fotyga addressed the plenary on behalf of the group:
“Unfortunately, 600 days after the outbreak of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, we are still discussing how to effectively curb Russia’s power to commit atrocities, war crimes and genocide. There is no question that sanctions are unprecedented and very important. But they are not enough and not sufficiently consistent. We need to broaden them. That includes the diamond trade.
“We need to expand individual sanctions. I would also like to see sanctions against countries that allow Russia to evade sanctions. That is why we also need to sanction Belarus, because Lukashenko is an accomplice of Russia. ”
According to the ECR Group, there are too many loopholes and EU companies that are still doing business in Russia. Russian funds frozen abroad should be used to provide material support to Ukraine and its economy.
Source – ECR Group (via email)