Recruitment of children by organised crime (debate)
Madam President, Commissioner, in the last three part-sessions we have talked about threats and risks to children in the digital sphere. The contents of child sexual abuse, in one case, the cyberbullying in the last part-session and, today, the recruitment of minors by criminal organisations. This shows that we have a problem and it is a structural problem, with the risks and threats that the digital sphere poses to our children. I insist, a structural problem. We know that the use of minors for criminal activities responds to a growing convergence between organized crime, radicalization online and child exploitation. And we also know that it is not just a question of security, but of protection, prevention and cohesion. Therefore, again we have to talk about a comprehensive strategy of all the actors involved. Social networks, encrypted messaging platforms, video games online and services of streaming are increasingly used to recruit and manipulate vulnerable children. Vulnerability that lies in their isolation, in their digital dependence, but also in the use of gamification dynamics in which the criminal activity of minors is presented to them as protagonists of a video game. The digital space cannot be a permanent trap for our children, it has to be a world that they can explore in a safe way. We have to take action now.
Rights, support and protection of victims of crime (debate)
Madam President, Commissioner, thank you very much to all the Members who have taken part in this debate, to those who support our proposal and to those who have criticised this directive. I regret, however, that some of our esteemed Members have spoken more about criminals than about victims and I also regret that there is talk of ideological imposition, because I believe that it does not do justice to the work that has been done. What about ideological imposition where victims are entitled to protection from the glorification of crime? What about ideological imposition in which victims are informed in the process, that their identity is protected, that legal assistance is ensured, the right to appeal judicial decisions that affect them, the right to be heard? What ideological imposition is involved in integrating specialized services, establishing helplines and facilitating reporting? What ideological imposition is there in identifying those groups of victims most vulnerable, with special needs, and towards whom we have the obligation to offer special support? What ideological imposition is there in asserting, strictly and clearly, national competence over sexual and reproductive health services that can be offered to women victims of sexual violence? No, there is no ideological imposition. This is a directive that has been born, that has been developed and that has been able to culminate in the spirit of consensus and presided over by it. And that spirit of consensus allows us today to offer an important step forward in the protection of victims. I thank the groups and victims' associations with whom we have met. I also, of course, thank co-rapporteur Lucia Yar and all those who have participated, specifically Commissioner McGrath and his services, for the support they have given us and for their personal commitment to making it possible today for us to gather the maximum support for this directive tomorrow.
Rights, support and protection of victims of crime (debate)
Mr President, Commissioner McGrath, 10 million people become victims of crime every year in the European Union, and huge numbers of these crimes go unreported, and thus victims remain unprotected in themselves, and justice systems and law enforcement are badly affected. Also we see fragmented legislation at the national level, with uneven treatment for victims and very different standards in protection. At the same time, we know that reporting and judicial procedures may represent an extremely cumbersome task for many victims, if not a painful and stressful experience. It is against this background that the Parliament started, in the previous mandate, a long discussion and complex negotiations which have resulted in a revised directive that is highly satisfactory and makes a substantial improvement in the status of victims and the protection of their rights. For the first time, the directive introduces specific obligations for Member States to ensure that victims who suffer additional harm due to the glorification of serious criminal offences can access support and protection measures. Also, the agreement establishes a 'privacy by default' system, ensuring that victims' personal data will not be accessible to offenders unless it is strictly necessary, and that represents a substantial improvement of victims' safety and trust in judicial procedures. Member States must provide accessible, secure and user‑friendly reporting channels, including digital tools, and we do expect that this will reduce under‑reporting and enable early intervention by competent authorities. The directive provides for the establishment of EU‑wide helplines, strengthened access to effective legal assistance and development of specialised support services, including shelters, while improving the conditions for victims participating in cross‑border criminal proceedings. Victims will have the right to receive all relevant information about their case, including an offender's release and transfer, change of regime or early termination of a criminal responsibility. Judicial review will also be a right: a right to the review of decisions taken in the course of the proceedings, on the right to translation, the right to be heard and the right to legal assistance when these decisions are taken in the course of the procedure. Recital 7 was key for a final compromise, and we had to reconcile the concern and support to victims of sexual violence with a legally sound provision. I think we got this balance in recital 7: sexual and reproductive health services are mentioned in the recital, not in the operative part of the text. They are mentioned by way of example, so the directive does not intend to set up a European list of sexual and reproductive health services – they are referred to as services. The recital clearly reasserts the national competence in the choice, the definition and the delivery of these services according to national laws and constitutional frameworks, and according to Article 168(7) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union. Let me tell you that the outcome is entirely positive and satisfactory for those who have been so closely involved, as my case as rapporteur, and co‑rapporteur along with my colleague Lucia Yar. It's entirely positive, not only because I do think that it will gather huge support from the Parliament, but also it really makes a difference, a substantial improvement in the status of victims and the support they are entitled to receive.
The need for targeted criminal provisions and platforms’ responsibility to effectively address cyberbullying and online harassment (debate)
Yes. Once the interim regulation expired, the DSA is probably the only legal instrument that we can use, but it is insufficient. We need a specific regulation concerning the specific risks, threats and the measures to protect minors. That is what we are doing. But in the meantime, I think we should consider measures to prevent any legal gap in the detection and reporting of child sexual abuse online.
The need for targeted criminal provisions and platforms’ responsibility to effectively address cyberbullying and online harassment (debate)
Madam President, Commissioner, if we are having this debate today, it's because we do feel that neither the European Union nor Member States are providing the right responses, or at least are providing them in the right time. Technology seems to be outpacing us as if we were unable to address the reality of our children's digital lives. And yes, we need to to take decisions. Let me put an example, because while I am confident on the positive outcome, on the current negotiations with the Council on a permanent cease and prevention regulation, the fact is that now, at this very moment, we lack a legal framework for allowing the detection of child sexual abuse material online. Yes, we need clear definitions. We need harmonisation of criminal provisions. We need a strong enforcement of EU rules. The digital space is increasingly challenging, to say the least, for children, for their integrity, for their mental health, for their education. And we should consider a whole range of measures. Most of them can be based on actual legal instruments. Enhanced risk assessment with a specific focus on minors, specific mitigation measures, including appropriate parental controls or effective age verification mechanisms, detection measures and human content moderation are effective and accessible mechanisms that require swift action when the cyberbullying situation or CSAM material is identified or reported. If cyberbullying, CSAM, grooming and sexual distortion are entering our homes and targeting our children, it is due to a great extent to a sense of impunity of perpetrators, and that must end.
Mr President, Commissioner, less than three years ago, in Poland, a political change led by the People's Party opened the way for Poland to reverse the deterioration in its rule of law. A few days ago, in Hungary, a political change also led by the People's Party, makes it possible for it to follow that same path of full reunion with democratic values. That means that we must ask that the Commission have at least the same ambition as this Parliament demonstrates when we face the problems of the rule of law. Because, Commissioner, essential reforms for the good governance of an independent judiciary are still waiting; because the fight against corruption encounters serious obstacles in the political decisions of national governments that weaken the instruments to fight against these crimes, protect their political friends or reward them with the occupation of public institutions and companies; because we see how freedom of expression suffers through manipulation and political control of public media; when we see that the state of transposition of European law at national level has, in some cases, an absolutely regrettable situation; When the glorification of terrorism and political violence, the harassment of democratic parties and the media by violent groups returns to the streets, from an alarming sense of impunity. We therefore need the Commission's recommendations to be firm and well-defined and to be accompanied by all the capacity for action that you have as Commissioner.
Importance of consent-based rape legislation in the EU (debate)
The problem was not a law, the problem was a bad law that was promoted from his political party. Look, I've just been co-rapporteur on the new Victims Directive. What I think about all these issues is the Victims' Rights Directive that this Parliament will soon adopt and of which I am particularly proud as co-rapporteur.
Importance of consent-based rape legislation in the EU (debate)
Mr. President, if there is no consent, there is rape. But the affirmation of this principle has to lead us to do things well, also from a legal point of view, because we have, for example, in the case of Spain, a tragic experience of a bad regulation of rape and sexual assault that had to be rectified, but which meant the early release of more than a thousand rapists and sexual aggressors. This is also an experience we need to learn from in order to focus on the essential goal and not get lost in divisive narratives. We need to focus on a strong legal definition; in incentivising and facilitating reporting; improving limitation periods; strengthening victim assistance services; to provide victims with the treatment and support they deserve in such traumatic situations; to enhance the work of independent and well-trained judges and prosecutors in investigating, prosecuting and prosecuting this crime and to ensure that, until we have a harmonised definition, judicial cooperation makes it possible to avoid impunity.
Madam President, Commissioner, our rapporteur – whom I thank for her work – said that ‘corruption kills’ and indeed corruption kills democracy, corruption kills trust in institutions and corruption kills equal opportunities. We have a valuable legislative instrument that can certainly be better and more ambitious, but I want to denounce the imposture of those who criticize it for not being ambitious enough and, at the same time, stand as representatives of national sovereignty to prevent the advances that many of us wanted to have been reflected in this text. You can't be both at once. And now I do. But the work has begun, Commissioner, because it is the Commission that has to ensure that this directive is transposed in a timely manner and in a manner that is fair to its objectives; because, yes, we know that there are still too many procedures through which States circumvent the obligations arising from the fight against corruption: different ways of defining crimes, playing with limitation periods, weakening judicial and police units to fight corruption, with the abusive and unjustified use of pardons or promoting amnesties that determine the impunity of criminals and that all they do is benefit friends or political partners. Corruption is an existential challenge for democracy and for the European Union, and we must respond united, together and strong in this same commitment.
Child sexual abuse online: protect children, not perpetrators (topical debate)
Mr President, yesterday in this Chamber, we listened to the heartbreaking testimony of a mother, Jackie, whose daughter Coco fell victim to online bullying. Heartbreaking testimony, indeed, but also challenging to us as legislators. What are we going to do about it? What do we intend to do about it? Because right now there are thousands of children going through the same torture that Coco suffered. Children in isolation, in distress, in fear, who are being harassed, extorted, humiliated, bullied and abused. Children whose images as victims are being disseminated online. This is happening now, in homes that are no longer the safe environment we think they are, when sexual predators, bullies or even criminal organisations break into them through digital doors. Child sexual abuse online, radicalisation of minors online, recruitment by organised crime online. Europol reports show that terrorist actors, organised crime groups and online communities involved in child exploitation increasingly operate in the same digital spaces. As a result, minors can be targeted simultaneously for grooming, manipulation, criminal purposes, and radicalisation. So the situation of children in the digital space, in terms of risks and threats, is deteriorating seriously. And we need a whole‑of‑society approach with the strong commitment and involvement of government, industry and platforms, law enforcement, civil society and legislators. This is a simple principle that we have to translate into truly enforceable legislation: what is legal offline should be illegal online. Unfortunately, the gap is here and the gap is widening. The whole thing starts with prevention. I find it really extraordinary, to say the least, that, while we discuss about child protection online, there is no effective procedure of age verification in place yet. Yes, prevention requires detection of illegal content, content removal according to the law, early warnings. It is feasible. It is legally possible within a sound and proportionate legal architecture with a strong set of safeguards, targeted actions, clear limits and accountable technologies. We should uphold the fundamental rights of children, their dignity, their moral integrity, their right to be protected, the right to be assisted and supported. Protection of children is not an option. It is a primary obligation, and we as legislators have the opportunity and the duty to deliver. The legislation that is under negotiation now and the new proposals that we expect to be put forward by the Commission should make a real difference as a comprehensive approach to child protection, both online and offline, as a truly European framework of integral protection, in which national responsibilities are effectively articulated and reinforced with the stronger cooperation mechanisms at European level. So let me state in the strongest possible way that protecting children is not chat control. I find it absolutely regrettable and seriously misleading to speak about measures to protect children in such a dismissive and untrue way. But there may be some who advocate for a digital space with no rules, no limits and no responsibility, where hate speech spreads freely, where racism and threats go unchecked, all in the name of freedom. Certainly, that is not my option and not that of the EPP. Children deserve protection, the protection that law can and should provide. They do not deserve to turn our commitment into a political battlefield in confrontation driven by ideological prejudice or partisan political interests. Let us move beyond slogans and fear. Let us work together and deliver on our responsibility, compelled by the suffering of victims and survivors, and driven by our duty as legislators.
Proposal for a regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council amending Regulation (EU) 2021/1232 as regards the extension of its period of application (A10-0040/2026 - Birgit Sippel) (vote)
Madam President, I would like to request that the file be referred back to the committee for interinstitutional negotiations.
Restoring control of migration: returns, visa policy and third-country cooperation (topical debate)
Mr President, Madam Vice-President, in 2023 there were 400 000 irregular entries into the European Union. In 2025, 178 000. These developments show that, when the institutions of the European Union align themselves on the same objectives, we achieve results. We have seen it with the Pact on Migration and Asylum, we see it with the visa suspension mechanism or with Frontex agreements. Well, we know, however, that only one in five return orders is actually executed. And we are talking about return orders, not arbitrary expulsions; decisions taken after a legal procedure determining who can and cannot be legally on the territory of the Union. We know what are the false recipes of demagogic populisms and their dangerous lies, and we also know the positions of an irresponsible left, with the appearance of moral superiority, but without any commitment to the effective fulfillment of the law. Well, when we are discussing the Returns Regulation we have to make an appeal to responsibility, because without credible and enforceable returns there is no trust in the system, and without trust there can be no sustainable immigration and asylum policy. Let us abandon, therefore, those misguided narratives that continue to block progress with the idea that migration management and the protection of fundamental rights are separate or even conflicting areas. Not in Europe.
Situation in Venezuela following the extraction of Maduro and the need to ensure a peaceful democratic transition (debate)
Madam President, Madam High Representative, I am among those who feel no regret that an autocrat has been removed from power in Venezuela, a corrupt autocrat at the head of a repressive regime that has led to the exile of one in five Venezuelans and has led the country to unprecedented misery. But I am also among those who feel a serious concern about the possibility that the interests enunciated by President Trump and the survival interests of the Chavista regime can be aligned at the expense of the advance towards democracy that the vast majority of Venezuelans want. And, yes, we can talk about the vast majority of Venezuelans, because they expressed themselves in July 2024 in a presidential election that Nicolás Maduro simply stole. Therefore, if Maduro is not the legitimate president of Venezuela – and he is not – Mrs Rodríguez cannot be either. The legitimate representation of Venezuelans corresponds to Edmundo González and María Corina Machado and only from respect for that will can the political transition be articulated that returns the destiny of the country to Venezuelans, its protagonists.
Tackling AI deepfakes and sexual exploitation on social media by making full use of the EU’s digital rules (debate)
Madam President, the challenge, I think, is clear: we must prevent that AI becomes a child sexual abuse machine. In 2025, the international Internet Watch Foundation identified 3 440 AI videos of child sexual abuse, compared to only 13 in 2024. So in terms of policy, we need urgent action on the exploding spread of CSAM online, and that is why we are negotiating with the Council the CSAM regulation. But let's be clear, there shouldn't be double-talk on that. So our concerns must be matched by a meaningful and effective regulation. We also need strong enforcement of existing safety rules, including the DSA, to make sure that companies embed safety-by-design tools from the very beginning. And yes, we need to ensure also that the recast CSA Directive criminalises the use or possession of CSA image generators or material produced using such models and we must consider seriously an independent testing of AI systems to ensure they cannot generate CSAM. Non-consensual sexualised content, whether real or AI generated, is exploitation and an act of violence that has to be confronted and fought.
EU strategy for the rights of persons with disabilities post-2024 (debate)
Madam President, Commissioner, with this report we take an important and meaningful step for the future of disability rights in Europe, and I would like to commend the work of our rapporteur, Rosa Estaràs, along with the political groups. Over the past years, the EU strategy for the rights of persons with disabilities has made considerable progress, showing what is possible when we strongly uphold a shared commitment. The truth is clear that, despite these achievements, too many people with disabilities still face fragmented support, barriers for free movement and unequal access to opportunities. Their fundamental rights – our shared European values – are not fully guaranteed. The Committee on Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs takes note that it is necessary to continue efforts in order to address the remaining gaps relating to the free movement of persons with disabilities, and the mutual recognition of disability rights across the EU. We join the call on the Commission to present, without delay, an updated and ambitious study for the rights of persons with disabilities 2025-2030, ensuring that no one in Europe is left behind.
Madam President, Commissioner, it is indeed valuable to hold debates and organise numerous events in this Parliament on the protection of minors online. These discussions help raise awareness. But awareness is not enough. Children cannot be protected by speeches alone. And that is why, from the committee responsible for the online protection of minors, data protection, law enforcement and judicial cooperation – the LIBE Committee – I would like to deliver a clear call to action. A call to all actors, to all stakeholders. The situation of children in the online environment is seriously deteriorating on all counts, not only considering exposure to pornography, addictions, betting, self-harm, recruitment by organised crime. Well, we must work together with a strong sense of responsibility and determination and make the most of our respective positions and roles in the legislative process. Every minute we lose without producing effective legislation, every excuse we hear for not taking action, means more children harmed, more lives shattered, more lives ruined.
Enhancing police cooperation in relation to the prevention, detection and investigation of migrant smuggling and trafficking in human beings; enhancing Europol’s support to preventing and combating such crimes (debate)
Madam President, Commissioner, we must welcome the adoption of this report. It represents both a commitment to our shared security and recognition of the work that Europol and national law enforcement authorities perform. So I think the work of our rapporteur Jeroen Lenaers and the shadow rapporteurs deserves to be commended. Migrant smuggling, human trafficking – these have become highly profitable activities for organised crime. In this case, I would say that the victims are particularly vulnerable. Most of them, women and children, are exposed to all sorts of abuse. Lack of national jurisdiction or the ineffective enforcement of it makes impunity the rule. The fight against this despicable criminal business is not only about safeguarding our borders, but also about preventing and fighting massive violations of human rights. So we must ensure that our response remains as agile, innovative and resilient as the threats we face. This is a remarkable step forward, and we need to put in place more effective cooperation through data exchange, better and broader data processing, and the strengthening of operational arrangements. The business model of traffickers has to be disrupted to its roots. A clear message has to be sent – on the one hand to the criminals, as we step up our fight and our capabilities and, on the other hand, a message to reassure our citizens, a message of social responsibility, clear priorities, closer cooperation and more effective protection of our territory, which must be denied as a workplace for human traffickers.
Delayed justice and rule of law backsliding in Malta, eight years after Daphne Caruana Galizia’s assassination (debate)
Mr Agius Saliba, thank you very much for your question, because you give me the opportunity to state the following. First, I am very pleased with all the progress that is being made in strengthening judicial independence. I would still like to point out the many advances that are pending. Moreover, I believe that respect for judicial independence is incompatible with the attacks that judges are suffering in Malta for investigating these corruption cases.
Delayed justice and rule of law backsliding in Malta, eight years after Daphne Caruana Galizia’s assassination (debate)
Mr President, Madam Vice-President, today we not only remember the murder of Daphne Caruana. We also recall that the rule of law is the backbone of the European Union and we must therefore insist that the rule of law is a duty and a responsibility of the Union. If we lift the veil of the Commission's always-measured language in its rule of law report, we see that very little progress has been made. Ladies and gentlemen, eight years have passed - eight years! - and, after eight years, the instigator and mastermind of the crime is at large, and senior officials who have hindered the investigation have not been prosecuted. Eight years after the thirty-two recommendations of the Council of Europe Group of States against Corruption, only four have been adopted. Eight years later – eight years later! – the Commission tells us that there has been no progress in the protection of journalists or in media freedom. Eight years - eight years later! - after the murder, when the judges act, they are accused of political terrorism. And eight years later, people linked to the Prime Minister's Office have destroyed the floral offering in memory of Daphne Caruana. Eight years. We can talk, therefore, about what has been done, but let us talk about what has not been done in these eight years, because that will be our commitment and the best tribute to the memory of Daphne Caruana.
Changing security landscape and the role of police at the heart of the EU’s internal security strategy (debate)
Mr President, Commissioner, this is a debate, that of the central role of the police in the Union's internal security strategy, which has taken a long time to take place and that is why we have to draw conclusions. Too often we get the impression that, in defining security strategies, we simply take the police for granted, we take for granted their professional commitment, which exists. That is why we must begin by honoring a political and moral imperative, and that is to protect those who protect us. Without police, without security forces, without law enforcement agencies, there is no rule of law and no exercise of freedoms. The police in the service of democracy is the rule of law. And the truth is that there have never been so many physical, verbal and digital attacks against public safety professionals. Therefore, if we want an effective security strategy, we must strengthen the primary instrument of that strategy, which is the security forces. In this sense, the police should be considered a risky profession, and we are committed to it. We need to ensure the overall improvement of working conditions and comprehensive support services – including psychological support – for law enforcement personnel; we need to make progress in harmonising the criminal treatment of security forces and their professionals at European level; There is an urgent need to substantially improve the provision of human, material and technological resources in order to close the scandalous gap between the capacity of the police and the advantage of criminal organisations.
EU strategy with regard to Iran’s nuclear threat and the implementation of EU sanctions resulting from the snapback mechanism (debate)
Madam President, Commissioner, Iran is in serious breach of basic obligations with regard to its nuclear programme. But this is hardly news. The introduction of sanctions is therefore both welcome and long overdue. The sanctions should be meaningful, fully enforced and closely monitored. But let's not forget that this is not the issue. The real issue is the Iranian regime, which is a challenge that requires an entirely new approach of our policy towards Teheran. With the Iranian regime in place, there will be no peace in the region. The Ayatollahs took good care to destroy the Abraham Accords through their proxies: Hamas, Houthis and Hezbollah. And now, as the new opportunity for peace emerges in the region, Tehran will do whatever they can to disrupt the peace process. With the Iranian regime in place Russia will continue to have a useful ally in its aggression against Ukraine. With the Iranian regime in place, brutal repression with no legal or moral limits will continue to fall on anyone who dares to challenge the tyranny. Over 1000 people executed in the first nine months of 2025. So at this point, let me ask, why do Iranian ambassadors live so comfortably in European capitals? And why is the listing of the Revolutionary Guard as a terrorist organisation still not included in the sanctions adopted, despite the consistent and strong request from this Parliament? Dear colleagues, many Iranians inside and outside Iran risked their lives. They deserve to be supported, to be protected and to share their commitment for a free and democratic Iran.