French MP Christine Arrighi Condemns “Irresponsible” Rally Ban, Affirms Support for Iran’s Resistance
French MP Christine Arrighi addresses the 2026 Free Iran World Summit on June 20, 2026
Written by
Mehdi Oghbai
PARIS — French Member of Parliament Christine Arrighi issued a sharp critique of the French government’s decision to ban the planned Free Iran rally, labeling the move both “humanly and diplomatically irresponsible.” Addressing the Free Iran 2026 World Summit in Paris on June 20, the President of the Parliamentary Committee for a Democratic Iran questioned the integrity of the ban, suggesting it was a capitulation to pressure from Tehran.
Arrighi, who represents a coalition of international parliamentarians, dismissed claims that the rally posed a risk to public order, citing the peaceful nature of similar events in Berlin and previous years in Paris. She directly challenged the French government’s narrative, asserting that while the Ministry of Foreign Affairs denied requesting the ban, the decision ultimately empowered the Iranian regime’s agenda.
“France, my homeland, will have to look at things differently… and will in any case have to bow before the Resistance and all those who are here and embody it,” Arrighi stated.
Affirming her commitment to the NCRI, Arrighi praised Maryam Rajavi’s Ten-Point Plan as the framework for a future secular, democratic republic. She lauded the courage of the Iranian people and the Resistance Units, characterizing the regime’s attempts to stifle these gatherings as evidence of its mounting fear and inherent weakness. “You are already there,” she declared to the activists, expressing her conviction that the movement’s democratic vision will prevail.
A translated version of Christine Arrighi’s speech follows:
.@ChArrighi: These words are: no to war, no to complacency, and no to endless, recurring negotiations. But yes to the uprising, yes to the liberation of the Iranian people supported by the brave #MEKResistanceUnits to overthrow this brutal regime. https://t.co/xWcCsMEA10
— NCRI-FAC (@iran_policy) June 20, 2026
Dear Iranian women and Iranian men, dear friends of Ashraf 3 over there, so many of you watching us and fighting.
Dear friends of the Iranian Resistance.
Ladies and gentlemen, who have come from all over the world for this historic event.
Beyond my duties as a French deputy and president of the Parliamentary Committee for a Democratic Iran, if I have the immense honor of addressing you today, it is on behalf of all the sister committees from different parliaments in Europe and North America who have their representatives here.
We speak different languages, and we certainly, I am even sure of it, have diverse political sensitivities.
But we all have in common that we have dedicated ourselves, each and every one of us in our respective countries, to the liberation of the Iranian people.
To the liberation of the Iranian people from the yoke of a ruthless religious dictatorship.
A people who have suffered for so many years the torments of a bloody repression and war.
We all have in common working for the establishment of a secular and democratic republic in Iran, with a particular focus on the role of women in political leadership—which is also one of the reasons for my membership in the Parliamentary Committee for a Democratic Iran.
At a time when the complex Iranian question is in an international deadlock and finds no real solution in the endless conflict between the mullahs’ regime and the major powers of all sides, this immense demonstration could not better demonstrate that the Iranian people have their say.
These are the words we hear from Iran through the executions of the brave activists of the Resistance Units, and of the young insurgents arrested after the horrific massacre of last January that shocked us all.
These words mean “no” to war. It is “no” to complacency and to endless negotiations that are constantly reconsidered—and the latest one will be as well.
Christine Arrighi a rappelé cet après-midi : quand on interdit une manifestation pacifique à Paris, de 100 000 personnes, contre les exécutions en Iran, les mots « Liberté, Égalité, Fraternité » inscrits sur les frontons de nos mairies sonnent creux.@Clem_Autain pic.twitter.com/FqudZ3iZjf
— Aladdin Touran (@AladdinTouran) June 20, 2026
But “yes” to the uprising. “Yes” to the liberation of the Iranian people, supported by their independent Resistance, to overthrow this brutal regime.
This is what Maryam Rajavi has never ceased to declare for more than twenty years, and what all of us, the parliamentary committees, have supported in order to bring your voice to the policymakers of our countries.
It is for these reasons that we have supported her Ten-Point Plan for a free Iran.
Your demonstration is, above all, an embodiment of the hope that the people, united in their diversity, carry in a common front of solidarity for the overthrow of all forms of dictatorship and the restoration of a democratic and secular republic.
This is what we strongly support within our ranks and in the ranks of the various political groups in the French National Assembly and in all parliaments worldwide.
So today, gathered here in Paris by the tens of thousands, you embody this free Iran.
Let us continue to act to erase the darkness of the mullahs, so that a bright future may come for the children of the homeland of Iran.
I was supposed to deliver these words today at Place Vauban. But, as you know, this demonstration was banned.
So, I tell you, my heart aches for my France.
My heart aches for my France, my France, the homeland of human rights.
My heart aches for my France, which bears on the pediment of all its town halls these three words: Liberty, Equality, Fraternity. These three words for which, for years, the Iranian people have been fighting, and which we should support today more than ever.
So, we are told that this demonstration was banned because of a [risk of] disturbance to public order.
In an opinion piece published by La Tribune, French parliamentarians including @ChArrighi, @postbadandrech, and @phgosselin urge the formation of a broad, unified opposition to support a democratic transition in Iran.https://t.co/RbFEnuZUsS
— NCRI-FAC (@iran_policy) April 11, 2026
Two years ago, I participated in a joyful demonstration in the streets of Paris, without there ever being any mention of a potential disturbance to public order.
Not long ago, there was a demonstration in Berlin which demonstrated that fighting Iranian women and men who seek to [drive out] the mullahs’ regime can gather without any disturbance to public order.
So, where do these words come from, which justified the police prefect’s order?
This is the question I am asking the French government today.
Because indeed, even though these discussions had been underway for more than two months, the route had been defined, then redefined, then escorted, then negotiated, and while we were waiting for a final receipt, just a few minutes before [its issuance], the ban arrived.
And we learned from the press that moments before, the French Minister of Foreign Affairs spoke with the Iranian Minister of Foreign Affairs, and the Quai d’Orsay said these words: “We never requested the ban on this demonstration.”
But of course—thank goodness, Jean-Noël Barrot, that you did not request the ban on this demonstration.
You did not request it because it was the Iranians who requested it, it was the mullahs who requested it; but you, you decided it.
And frankly, today, in the situation in which the Iranian people find themselves, banning such a demonstration [in] support [of] this people whom the mullahs want to crush in Iran is truly—both humanly and, I say it, diplomatically—irresponsible.
Because France will have to renew diplomatic ties with Iran.
And it is obvious that it is not with the mullahs’ regime that France will have to renew diplomatic ties, even though the war has stopped.
France will have to build [bonds], support, and help all those who gathered not so long ago at the National Assembly—even though they do not necessarily speak the same language or defend exactly the same political views—who gathered despite their differences to present a united front against this bloody regime.
"We also know that all dictatorships will one day collapse. This is what history tells us. They collapse from inside, from the pressure of the world, from the resistance of people like you," French MP @ChArrighi said during the #ParisFreeIranRally #NCRIAlternative pic.twitter.com/muGTv4mNaM
— NCRI-FAC (@iran_policy) February 8, 2025
So, France, my homeland, will have to look at things differently, and will in any case have to bow before the Resistance and all those who are here and embody it, because tomorrow, the day after tomorrow, in any case, it is you who will be in power.
So, I say tomorrow, the day after tomorrow, but in reality, I think it is starting today—you are already there.
And it is because you are already there, and the mullahs’ regime knows it, that in its feverish state [and] faced with a weak government—and I say this, weighing my words—[it] has tried and is trying to prevent all of your demonstrations.
So, rest assured, I know it deep down inside myself: you are in power.
Not really in [the conventional sense of the term], but the reality is that you are, and soon we will be able to accompany you, and you will be able to welcome us to Iran.
Thank you.