Repression and execution of protesters, dissidents, political prisoners and religious minorities in Iran
Mr President, the mullah regime has waged a war against its own people, both inside Iran and beyond its border. It is a war against Iranian women and youth who continue to courageously stand up for freedom, dignity and democracy. The regime shuts down the internet to hide its crime from the world, but if anything should be shut down, it is the regime's machinery of repression and death. We have witnessed rising execution, brutal persecutions of religious and ethnic minorities, and violent crackdowns on journalists, human rights defenders and activists. We have also seen attacks against Iranian Kurdish political groups seeking refuge in southern Kurdistan – through missile attacks against them. Yes, actions by Israel and the United States may have violated international law, but that does not lessen the brutality of the regime in Tehran. We must increase pressure and ensure sanctions are truly enforced. We have a duty to protect innocent lives.
Recruitment of children by organised crime (debate)
Of course, everyone who is recruited by organised crime is a victim, but we also need to have the facts on the table when talking to Europol, the law enforcement that actually really works for these issues. And talking to Eurojust, they say one thing clearly and that is that all children, regardless of background, are nowadays targeted by organised crime. So to blame it only on migrants is actually doing each and every citizen of our Union the opposite of a favour, not a favour. And then it's also scapegoating constantly. So it's not an issue just related to migration. It is an issue related to each and every child that can become a victim nowadays.
Recruitment of children by organised crime (debate)
Madam President, organised crime has moved into the digital world, into the very space where our children learn, play and build their lives. We cannot accept a digital 'Wild West', where criminal networks are free to hunt for our children online. In Sweden, since 2022, wherever Charlie Weimers from the Sweden Democrats now is – under your party and your party's friends, the far-right and the right government, we have witnessed a deeply disturbing reality: criminal gangs recruiting increasingly younger children to commit acts of violence through social media. Violence is commissioned with a click. And children are not only being recruited, they are being turned into recruiters. This is what political failure looks like when society does not protect children – organised crime steps in. It is therefore important that the EU act now – we need a strong EU action plan and preventive actions, digital literacy, age verification on social media platforms, strong cross-border cooperation, more support to law enforcement and zero tolerance for tech companies profiting while children are recruited. Every day we wait, another child is at risk.
Rights, support and protection of victims of crime (debate)
Madam President, around 50 million women in the European Union, nearly one in three, have experienced physical or sexual violence in adulthood. 50 million – these are not numbers on a page, they are lives marked by fear, trauma and injustice. And for too many women, the fight does not end with escaping violence, it continues in systems that question them instead of protecting them. This is unacceptable. That is why the Victims' Rights Directive matters. Strengthening victims' rights is not charity, and it's not bureaucracy either, it is our responsibility. As former rapporteur for the gender-based violence directive and the rapporteur for the Parliament's report calling for EU consent-based rape legislation, I strongly welcome the stronger protections, better support services and improved access to justice secured in this agreement. These are not technical measures, they are lifelines because one principle must always guide us: women's rights and victims' rights cannot depend on where you live in the European Union – justice must know no borders.
Recommendation on the 81st session of the United Nations General Assembly (debate)
Madam President, colleagues, High Representative, this year's United Nations General Assembly in September comes at a time of growing geopolitical rivalry, and when autocrats around the world are undermining the rules-based international order and multilateralism. Their names are many: Putin, Khamenei, Netanyahu or, unfortunately, even Trump. Autocratic leaders act as if international law is optional, as if military power gives them impunity, as if the UN Charter can simply be ignored when it becomes politically inconvenient, as if the rules of the jungle are those to be applied nowadays. Therefore, two issues will be extra essential for us in the EU to champion at the meeting. First, mobilising respect for international law, second, accountability for war crimes and other serious violations of international law. We see this clearly in the worst conflicts around the world, be it in Ukraine, Sudan, Gaza, Syria, Lebanon or in Iran. With the current development globally, history risks repeating itself – the same history that we said 'never again' to. But it still seems like we need to remind ourselves, even in the EU. International law is not about cherry-picking. Accountability for war crimes and serious violations of international law must apply to everyone, without exception. During last year's UN General Assembly meeting, Trump openly attacked the UN in an attempt to undermine its credibility. We have seen open threats and bullying by him against European countries and territories. His creation of the so-called Board of Peace, and its broadened scope, is also one of them. That is why we have to speak out on these issues and call a spade a spade. As the S&D negotiator for this report, honestly, I don't understand the fear from the right‑wing side of the Parliament to mention it. So in closing, let me emphasise, if the European Union wants to be a credible global actor at this year's UNGA, then we must defend international law and accountability consistently without double standards and not let us be bullied into silence.
Situation in Lebanon: implementation of the ceasefire, support peace efforts and humanitarian access (debate)
Mr President, colleagues, the EU must urgently work for accountability and justice. The international community, including the EU, can't continue accepting the unlawful attacks of Netanyahu. Netanyahu will be remembered as one thing, and that is the prime minister of war – slaughtering innocent people. He claims he is attacking Hezbollah, Hamas and the mullahs of Iran. But, if that would be the case, how come so many innocent people are being killed? Because the vast majority in Palestine and in Lebanon are innocent people. What does international law mean when it's only implemented when it's convenient for some and not implemented when it's not convenient? International law came in place of the Second World War because we said that what happened then should never, ever happen to anyone. The refusal to suspend the EU-Israel Association Agreement is a shame and undermines trust in the EU. Colleagues, let there be an end to the hypocrisy. Let's suspend the EU-Israel Association Agreement.
The need for targeted criminal provisions and platforms’ responsibility to effectively address cyberbullying and online harassment (debate)
Madam President, Commissioner, colleagues, while digital spaces offer connection and learning, children and youngsters are also exposed to serious risks as cyberbullying and harassment. Cyberbullying and harassment harms mental health, confidence and safety. Tackling it must be one of our central works. We already have some of the necessary tools: we have the DSA, the Digital Services Act, we have the AI Act and the General Data Protection Regulation. They set clear protections, but they must be fully enforced. Online platforms must take responsibility and face consequences if they refuse. We also need effective age-verification systems on online platforms with a clear minimum age to better protect minors from harmful content, with strategies like Better Internet for Kids. We have a direction. Now, we need a stronger oversight, more transparency and, above all, more actions.
Mr President, colleagues, as the rapporteur for both the LIBE and the AFET opinions on the 2024 discharge, one message is clear: the European Union must remain strong, both in protecting its citizens and upholding its values, both internally and externally. On security, cross-border crime does not stop at national borders. Agencies like Europol, CEPOL, Eurojust and eu-LISA, as well as FRA, play a crucial role. They must be equipped with the tools, resources and cooperation frameworks needed to support Member States effectively, while ensuring full accountability, transparency and respect for human rights. At the same time, Europe must remain a steadfast supporter for humanitarian aid and continue taking leadership. For millions of Palestinian refugees, UNRWA is a lifeline. Supporting it is both a moral and political responsibility. It is important that all our facts are based on facts and not political convictions. A stronger Europe means delivering security with integrity, respecting fundamental rights and promoting solidarity with conviction.
Importance of consent-based rape legislation in the EU (debate)
Mr President, I sincerely do not know sometimes what to say. How hard can it be to just say yes means yes? How hard can it be? The same people on the far-right side constantly fail to understand the seriousness that women and girls are living under. It is not a new phenomenon. It's a phenomenon that has been existing all through history in all parts of society. What has changed the last years is that legislation in some Member States has actually advanced, which has meant that women and girls do dare more and more to report this kind of heinous violence. But we are not there yet, where all the women and girls who are victims of this kind of heinous violence dare to do that. That's why we need to continue advancing legislation in all our Member States. That's why we need EU-wide consent-based rape legislation now. Let me tell you, MEP Terheş and MEP Sell, and some others: all the perpetrators do not have the same colour as I, most of them or some of them, I don't know how many percentage of them, but at least what I know is that they also do have the same colour as you, MEP Terheş and MEP Sell. So stop continuing your racist propaganda. There is no evidence for it. What there is evidence for is that it's not on the streets women and girls are mainly being attacked. The dangerous place for women and girls is at home. Understand that. Colleagues, some people claim that there are no legal grounds. Let me tell you that there are actually legal grounds: Article 83(1) in the Treaty. The EU crimes are there, and in the EU crimes, sexual exploitation is included. In the Council Framework Decision 2002/584, Article 2(2) lists 32 specific areas of offence. Rape is included in it. So let's go from words to action. Only yes must mean yes and everything else must mean no.
Importance of consent-based rape legislation in the EU (debate)
Madam President, colleagues, only 'yes' means yes; we understand this principle almost everywhere in our legal systems. If someone takes your money without consent, it is theft. If someone grabs your bag without consent, it is a crime. If someone enters your home uninvited and takes what is yours, it is clearly illegal. In all these cases, the law is simple: without consent there is a violation. So why does this clarity disappear when it comes to a person's body? Why is impunity tolerated when women and girls are the main victims? Why, in part of our Union, is it still not fully recognised in law that sex without consent is rape? We are in 2026, and yet, in too many Member States, the law offers stronger and clearer protections for objects – for a wallet, a phone, a piece of property – than it does for a woman's body. That is not just a legal gap – it is a moral failure. Only 'yes' must mean yes, everywhere for everyone. During the last mandate, I had the honour to serve as a co-rapporteur for the Directive on combating violence against women and domestic violence. In that process, we fought hard to include what should be self‑evident, that rape must be defined by the absence of consent. We negotiated, we argued, we built compromises, and we came incredibly close. But at the final moment, this was blocked by a blocking minority in the Council, an unholy alliance of men: former Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orbán, former Minister of Justice Marco Buschmann in Germany and French president Emmanuel Macron. Let me be very clear: there is a legal basis in the EU law, despite what these three men and others have said. Article 83(1) of the Treaty allows us to act against sexual exploitation. If rape is not exploitation, what is exploitation? The Istanbul Convention is even clearer: it requires States to define rape based on the absence of consent, and states that consent must be given voluntarily as the result of a person's free will. These are not political preferences, they are legal and moral obligations. Colleagues, women in the European Union still face major barriers in accessing justice for rape. The vast majority of rapes are never reported, and of those that are, very few lead to conviction. Too many survivors are met with doubt and prejudice; they are questioned, not believed, and even blamed. That fear of not being believed or being shamed is one of the main reasons that so many women do not report at all. The scale of this is undeniable: 1 in 6 women in the EU has experienced sexual violence, 1 in 3 has experienced physical or sexual violence since the age of 15, and yet only 13.9 % of victims report to the police. Only 20.5 % reach out to healthcare or social services, and only 1 in 200 rapes result in a conviction in Europe. At the same time, we see a disturbing reality: online spaces where men exchange so‑called tips on how to rape, reaching tens of millions of views just in a few days. This is rape culture, and it must be replaced with a culture of consent. Because laws shape norms; consent‑based legislation is not just legal reform, it is societal change. Behind every number is a real person, a life impacted. Colleagues, it's time for only 'yes' means yes all across our Union.
Global Gateway – past impacts and future orientation (debate)
Madam President, Europe is no longer operating in a stable world. We face growing geopolitical competition and instability. The European Union must act with clarity and resolve. We must take global leadership for peace and security. Global Gateway is therefore not just another initiative: it is an important strategic tool to build strong, mutual, beneficial partnerships with Asia, Africa and Latin America. If we are serious about Europe's role, Global Gateway must become a cornerstone of our external action, positioning the EU as a credible, value‑driven partner while reducing some worrisome dependencies. This is about global leadership and it is about responsibility. Commissioner, I also want to take the opportunity to address the planned budget cut to the EU‑LAC Foundation. At a time when we should strengthen ties with Latin America and the Caribbean, we are weakening them. I would urge the Commission to reconsider it. Finally, colleagues, I do not understand how the far right here in this European Parliament keep being blind. We need more international cooperation for peace and security. Haven't you learned anything from the current global situation?
Child sexual abuse online: protect children, not perpetrators (topical debate)
Mr President, it is honestly difficult to understand how a debate on legislation about protecting children from sexual abuse has been turned into a debate dominated by the so-called 'chat control lobby'. Yes, I have seen colleagues back in 2021 who voted in favour of the temporary derogation and then changed their mind after the campaign kick started. Protecting privacy and protecting children's safety are not mutually exclusive goals. Online platforms cannot continue being a wild west. Right now, the strength of the chat control lobby has made many forget what this discussion is really about. It's about children being sexually abused online. The crimes are growing. Victims are increasing. Today's classrooms and schoolyards are not only physical spaces anymore; they are also digital spaces. For every child in Europe, we need strong and long-term legislation that protects what we should be able to agree on: the safety of our children.
EUCO and situation in the Middle East (joint debate)
Madam President, international law is not optional. The rule of the jungle cannot rule. The actions of the United States and Israel are unlawful and the region urgently needs de‑escalation to prevent further suffering of innocent people, of innocent children. There is one person, however, that I do not shed a tear for and that is Khamenei. His death may mark the beginning of a new chapter. For decades, Iran has been ruled through fear, repression and violence, and the current regime's tentacles, through its proxies, have even spread fear onto European soil. But Iran is not only its regime. Iran is a country with Persians, Kurds, Baluchis, Azeris, Arabs and many other communities, all of them who deserve the right to shape their future. The European Union must act with unity and courage. It should never take years to turn words into actions, as it did when it took over three years to label the IRGC as a terrorist organisation. That was shameful. We must now act forcefully with sanctions against this heinous regime to ensure that power ends up in the hands of the people. For Jina Amini and for all those who gave their lives for a dream that must finally become reality.
Targeted expulsions of foreign journalists and foreign Christians in Türkiye under national security pretexts
Mr President, colleagues, what we are witnessing in Türkiye is not an isolated incident. It is a pattern: a pattern of silencing journalists, a pattern of targeting minorities – be it Christians, Alawites, Kurds and many other minorities, religious, based on ethnicities – a pattern of abusing national security as an excuse to crush dissidents. Journalists are being detained, deported and intimidated: Kurdish journalists, Christian journalists, independent voices who dare to report on their truth. And now, increasingly, European journalists, Western journalists, face similar attacks, including the Swedish journalist Joakim Medin. This should concern every single one of us. This is not how a democracy behaves. This is how autocrats rule. But I also want to emphasise that this did not happen in a vacuum. For years, we in the European Union have pursued a lenient policy towards Erdoğan. We have prioritised short-term political conveniences over democratic principles. As a result, the situation has deteriorated. When the EU is weak, authoritarian leaders become stronger. We must now clearly say: enough is enough!
Systemic oppression, inhumane conditions and arbitrary detentions by the regime in Iran
Mr President, for almost 50 years, the people of Iran have lived under an Islamic regime waging a war against its own population. It's not a metaphor; it's not rhetoric; it's a real war. And when bullets are not enough, the regime pulls the plug. It shuts down the internet to isolate the people, to erase evidence, to hide its crimes. Internet shutdowns are weapons of repression. Europe cannot continue acting like the three monkeys: seeing nothing, hearing nothing, saying nothing. It took three years to call the IRGC for what it is: a terrorist organisation. What was called impossible suddenly became possible. Now we must act decisively and ensure full internet access, fully enforce sanctions, prevent their circumvention and end impunity. Responsibility to protect – R2P – does not stop at declarations: it applies to us as well. It means taking our share of responsibility, because only action is responsibility.
Presentation of the action plan against cyberbullying (debate)
Mr President, colleagues, Commissioners, thank you for this action plan. Some act as if the internet is a safe space to act in a way that they would never, ever dare to do in the offline world. Honestly, I am shocked by the behaviour of some grown-ups – even grown-ups here in this parliament – and their actions on online platforms and social media. We need to act in defence of our societies and also in defence of our children. Preventing and combating cyberbullying is our joint duty. There is no one magical solution, there are many – but it is important to take a step towards age verification on social media platforms for all our Member States. And it should cost for social media to not act. Enforcement of the Digital Service Act is essential and so is an AI act in function. We cannot let our children be taught their worth through heinous words of others – sometimes even the words of grown-ups – on online platforms. Inaction would sentence our children to live lives in despair, and I know that we can do much better than that.
Situation in Northeast Syria, the violence against civilians and the need to maintain a sustainable ceasefire (debate)
Mr President, 'Jin, Jiyan, Azadî'. 'Women, Life, Freedom'. We have all heard these words. But too few know where they came from. They are the foundation of the Kurdish‑led administration in Rojava. They are the words shouted by Kurdish female guerrillas as they stood against ISIS. When others in Syria refused to fight, when the world hesitated, the Kurdish forces of Rojava stood their ground. In the midst of war, they built something rare: self‑rule instead of tyranny. Women's leadership instead of oppression, coexistence between Kurds, Arabs and Christians instead of sectarian hatred. Those who defended us must now be defended. Yes, integration matters, but so does respect for ceasefires, so do minority rights, and so does the dignity, culture and education, of course, and all other communities of Syria. For long, this dress that I am wearing today and this Kurdish flag was banned in Syria. For Syria to become truly inclusive and truly democratic, it must respect all its communities ... (the speaker used a slogan in a non-EU language)
Human rights and democracy in the world and the European Union’s policy on the matter – annual report 2025 (debate)
Madam President, when we speak about human rights, I cannot accept that silence is still a choice in the Parliament, in our Member States and in the Commission, especially when it comes to the Kurds, whether in Turkey, Iran or Syria. The silence is constant. Right now, while we are debating global human rights, Kurds and other minorities are being slaughtered by Syrian regime forces with the support of Turkey. Thousands have been killed, more than 100 000 are displaced. And in the middle of it, the presidents of the Commission and Council travelled to Syria last week and pledged EUR 620 million to the regime, with no serious conditions on human rights or international law. If you do not care about the Kurds, then care about Europe. ISIS detainees are escaping from Kurdish jails right now. The threat is returning to even our streets here in the EU. These forces are committing war crimes, executions, torture, ethnic and religious persecutions. This is not stability. This is complicity. The EU must stop funding repression, start protecting minorities and defend Rojava.
Situation in Venezuela following the extraction of Maduro and the need to ensure a peaceful democratic transition (debate)
Madam President, Venezuela has long faced a deep political and humanitarian crisis rooted in years of authoritarian rule. Nicolás Maduro did not have democratic legitimacy, and yes, he is a dictator. The 2024 elections lacked basic guarantees, and his government has long been responsible for serious human rights violations. But this cannot justify abandoning international law and giving a green light to US unilateral military actions. Rule must always apply to all countries and in all situations, whether in Venezuela, Ukraine, Gaza, Iran, Syria or elsewhere. Selective respect for international law undermines the very order meant to protect all of us. The EU must support the opposition, put pressure on the regime and use the sanction tools. We need to help people to take power, but not through violating the multilateral structures and international law that we put in place after the Second World War. International law is here to defend all of us and ensure that people like Trump cannot claim countries like Greenland either.
Brutal repression against protesters in Iran (debate)
Mr President, there is no force more powerful than a united people who refuse to kneel. From the streets of Tehran to the plains of Fars, from Kurdistan's mountains to the Baluchistan shores, from Khorasan to Azerbaijan province, the entire country is standing up. This brutal Islamic regime must not be managed, negotiated with or normalised. It must be ended. Casting it into the dustbin of history must be our shared responsibility. To the Commission: what are you waiting for? Label IRGC as a terrorist organisation, throw Iranian diplomats out of the EU, sanction the mullahs and support the opposition. Condemnations without real words are meaningless. Act now! And to those who are exhausted, wounded and grieving: we are with you. The day is coming when the prisons are silent, when the streets belong to the people, when children learn the name of the tyrants – the mullahs – only in history books. Justice will prevail, dignity will be restored, and Iran will once and for all stand in freedom and equality for its whole population – rich, poor, middle class, Persians, Kurds, Baluchis, Baha'is, Azeris, Arabs and all others.
Tackling AI deepfakes and sexual exploitation on social media by making full use of the EU’s digital rules (debate)
Madam President, thank you very much. What crazy world do we live in? With AI tools like Grok, the threshold for creating fake nude images with sexual abuse material has effectively been erased. The result is a pandemic of involuntarily sexualised images that spread uncontrollably online. We see that many people have been affected, including politicians, but mainly women and children in our Union. Moral calls to think do not bite those who want to harm others, nor do they bite the industrial mass deployment of AI pornography. Especially when tech oligarchs like Musk and Zuckerberg make billions from deepfakes and scams thriving on their platforms. The only thing that can stop this is clear and binding legislation. I therefore honestly do not understand the position of the EPP Group and the Swedish Moderates and Christian Democrats when you crave deregulation – or, oops!, simplification, as you pretend it is – in the digital field. It's completely incomprehensible. Let us protect Europe's women and girls, not the tech oligarchs!
European Democracy Shield – very large online platform algorithms, foreign interference and the spread of disinformation (debate)
Mr President, it is unacceptable that a handful of powerful online platforms shape what our citizens see, while their algorithms amplify lies, fuel polarisation and distort public debate. The Digital Services Act gives us, yes, the tools to hold them accountable, but without enforcements it is meaningless. It is also crazy that there are people in here from the far right who are defending these platforms and their super rich friends, instead of defending our democracies. Member States have even exposed coordinated disinformation campaigns designed to interfere in EU elections and undermine trust. The European Democracy Shield must protect our people, our democracies and our elections against threats coming from the platforms Meta, TikTok, X and other spaces. With power should come accountability and responsibility, and this is something that these platforms refuse to understand and even accept. We need rapid crisis response tools, real oversight of platforms, algorithms and cooperation with fact‑checkers and civil society. Democracy will not defend itself. We must defend it and defend it now.
Implementation of the rule of law conditionality regime (debate)
Mr President, colleagues, first to the far right MEPs, yes, it is true that we have citizens in Europe that are worried about European democracy right now, but why they are afraid is actually because of you. Please stop crying over us not wanting to cooperate with you. Yes, in a democracy we are all elected, but in democracies we also choose who to cooperate with. Commissioner, frozen funds must stay frozen until real actions are taken. No bargaining, no excuses, no shortcuts. Whistleblowers must be safe. Civil societies, universities, local government must get support directly. Parliament must see everything on time, fully without delay. Europe's values are not negotiable. Our taxpayers' money must be protected at all times. No compromises and no delays. Hungary is a net recipient of EU funds, while my country, Sweden, is a net giver.
Preparation of the European Council meeting of 18-19 December 2025, in particular the need to support Ukraine, transatlantic relations and the EU’s strategic autonomy (debate)
Madam President, colleagues, let's be absolutely clear. No decisions about Ukraine can be made over the heads of the Ukrainian people. The negotiations where Russia, with support from the United States, demand that Ukraine surrender territory it has defended with extraordinary courage, is shameful. And at the same time, there are calls to weaken Ukraine's military and deny its right to choose its own future, including NATO membership. It is important that Europe secures the resources Ukraine needs to continue defending itself, using frozen Russian assets to support Ukraine is not only reasonable, it is justified given the immense destruction caused by Russian war, but it is not trustworthy to, as EPP on one hand echo the same words and amounts as us, and at the same time cooperate and legitimatise as the best friend of Putin. Colleagues, pro-European forces must unite. We must deepen our unity and take greater responsibility for our own security, not illegitimate ties with Putin's friends.
Recent developments in Palestine and Lebanon (debate)
Mr President, colleagues, I am tired – tired of cherry picking and tired of hypocrisy. Debate after debate we talk, yet no concrete actions are taken against the Israeli far-right Government. The EU-Israel Association Agreement continues as business as usual after two years of genocide in Gaza. We are told there is a ceasefire. But let's be clear: there is no ceasefire when Palestinians are still being killed every day; when children are dying because they are denied food, water and medical care. Continuing calling this a ceasefire and refusing to act doesn't make it a ceasefire. It only masks ongoing crimes. Settlements expand. Severe violence and impunity is a fact. What business as usual is contributing to is complicity. Yes, Commissioner, it is important to help out to build up Gaza again. And it is important to support the Palestinian Authority. But it is equally important to ensure that Israel stops committing its crimes; stops destroying Palestine; stops killing Palestinians; stops demolishing and confiscating EU-funded projects and structures. So I will not ask what more Netanyahu must do for the EU to act. The time for statements is over. The time for action is long overdue.