Mais chez nous ? Incapable de mener la guerre à la racaille et aux narcotrafiquants qui pourrissent la vie des Français !
Continue readingNécessité urgente de protéger les minorités religieuses en Syrie

Nécessité urgente de protéger les minorités religieuses en Syrie, à la suite de l’attentat terroriste récemment perpétré contre l’église Mar Elias à Damas
Monsieur le Président, mesdames et messieurs, chers collègues, voilà plus de six mois que Bachar al-Assad est tombé, remplacé par un gouvernement issu du djihad et de l’islamisme radical. Après de longs mois, le Parlement se penche enfin sur le sort des chrétiens, logiquement persécutés. Depuis six mois, les minorités religieuses, et en particulier les chrétiens, sont en danger de mort. Leur nombre est passé de 1,5 million à environ 400 000 depuis l’an dernier. Et que fait l’Union européenne? Elle soutient un pouvoir qui, sous couvert d’alternance, laisse les mains libres aux islamistes. Le costard trois-pièces du président syrien, Ahmed al-Charaa, ne remplace pas son côté djihadiste, qu’il n’a jamais quitté. Cela vaut aussi lorsqu’il est reçu, avec tapis rouge, à l’Élysée par Emmanuel Macron – c’était le 7 mai dernier. S’il a réussi à aveugler le président français, ses troupes sur le terrain n’en perpétuent pas moins leur projet mortifère: persécutions, pillages, meurtres. Nous avions prévenu du danger mortel que représentait le soutien européen au Front al-Nosra – c’est-à-dire Al-Qaida. Par quel miracle le djihadisme est-il devenu politiquement correct à vos yeux? Au moment où, en France, s’ouvre enfin une commission d’enquête et une campagne sur l’entrisme islamiste – oui, je sais, ça fait saigner les oreilles des gauchos –, il est temps pour l’Europe de faire son examen de conscience. C’est un ancien policier qui a vu ses compatriotes exécutés par des islamistes armés de Kalachnikov le soir du 13 novembre 2015 qui vous parle, et ça m’a fait mal au bide de voir mon président recevoir un djihadiste à l’Élysée. |
Rapports 2023 et 2024 sur l’Albanie (débat)
Madame la Présidente, chers collègues, Madame la Commissaire, je ne comprends pas. Alors que mon pays, la France, est gangréné par les «narcoracailles», les narcotrafiquants, les narcoterroristes…
Continue readingMotion for a European Parliament resolution on urgent need to protect religious minorities in Syria following the recent terrorist attack on the Mar Elias Church in Damascus

Proposition de Résolution :
with request for inclusion in the agenda for a debate on cases of breaches of human rights, democracy and the rule of law
pursuant to Rule 150 of the Rules of Procedure
Silvia Sardone, Susanna Ceccardi, Roberto Vannacci, Matthieu Valet, Pierre-Romain Thionnet, António Tânger Corrêa, Afroditi Latinopoulou, Hermann Tertsch
on behalf of the PfE Group
B10‑0343/2025
Motion for a European Parliament resolution on urgent need to protect religious minorities in Syria following the recent terrorist attack on the Mar Elias Church in Damascus
The European Parliament,
– having regard to Rule 150(5) of its Rules of Procedure,
– having regard to its previous human rights resolutions on Syria,
A. whereas on 22 June 2025, during Sunday prayers at the Greek Orthodox Church of Mar Elias in Damascus, a terrorist opened fire on more than 350 worshippers, detonated his explosive vest, killing at least 25 people and injuring over 60 others, including Christian religious leaders and children;
B. whereas the Syrian Ministry of Interior initially attributed the attack to Da’esh / ISIS; whereas since the attack, the Islamist group Saraya Ansar al-Sunnah, which compromises of former Ha’yat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) members, has claimed responsibility via social media and identified the attacker as Muhammad Zain al-Abidin Abu Uthman;
C. whereas Christian and other religious and ethnic communities have suffered severe and deadly persecution across the Middle East in the aftermath of civil wars and the rise of Da’esh / ISIS; whereas it is estimated that Da’esh / ISIS still maintains between 1,500 and 3,000 active militants in Syria and Iraq, with over 9,000 fighters held in prisons in northeastern Syria;
D. whereas the interim Syrian constitution ratified in March 2025 enshrines Islamic law as a primary source of legislation, raising concerns about restrictions on individual rights, particularly those of women; whereas in June 2025, the Ministry of Tourism has enacted new restrictive legislation on women’s attire in line with Islamic teachings on female chastity;
E. whereas Syria’s Christian community remains particularly vulnerable under the transitional Islamist government, which includes former HTS members; whereas the resurgence of sectarian violence has intensified safety concerns for religious and ethnic communities;
1. Strongly condemns the 22 June 2025 terrorist attack on the Mar Elias Greek Orthodox Church and expresses solidarity with the victims’ families and loved ones; recalls that Christians are the most persecuted religious group in the world;
2. Calls for an urgent, independent investigation into the attack and for all those responsible in its planning, facilitation and execution to be held accountable; stresses the need for full cooperation and transparency from the transitional Syrian government in countering terrorism;
3. Expresses deep concern over the safety of Syria’s religious and ethnic communities; and calls for the transitional authorities to enact concrete measures to protect all religious communities as well as religious places, some of them with great historical relevance;
4. Urges the Commission and the External Action Service to include into its dialogue with the transitional authorities in Syria the protection of religious communities and the freedom of religion or belief;
5. Insists that the transitional Syrian government eradicates all components of radical Islamist ideology from its government structures and future legal framework, including its Constitution; rejects the imposition of restrictive dress codes on women;
6. Notes the conditionality and reversibility of Council Regulation (EU) 2025/1098 should the transitional Syrian government fail to meet its commitments, especially regarding human rights and political inclusivity;
7. Instructs its President to forward this resolution the institutions of the European Union and the transitional authorities in Syria.