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Resolution on the urgent need to protect religious minorities in Syria following the recent terrorist attack on Mar Elias Church in Damascus

Demand that Syrian authorities investigate attacks, protect religious freedom, and hold perpetrators accountable.

10 July 2025 European Parliament - EP-10 RSP 2025/2798(RSP) (OEIL)
Syria

Summary

The European Parliament adopted by 625 votes to 7, with 10 abstentions, a resolution on the urgent need to protect religious minorities in Syria following the recent terrorist attack on Mar Elias Church in Damascus.

The text adopted in plenary was tabled by the EPP, S&D, ECR, Renew, Greens/EFA groups and Members.

On 22 June 2025, a suicide terrorist attack on the Mar Elias Greek Orthodox Church in Damascus killed at least 25 and injured over 60, marking the deadliest attack against Christians in years. A newly formed Islamist terrorist group, Saraya Ansar al-Sunna, claimed this attack.

Parliament strongly condemned the traumatic terrorist attack against the Mar Elias Church and all threats against worship sites, some historically significant. It urged the Syrian authorities to improve safety measures and restore the Mar Elias Church.

Moreover, Members strongly condemned all attacks targeting religious and ethnic communities. They also noted with concern that many Hay’at Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) members with grave human rights violation records have assumed roles within the transitional administration, with potentially worrying implications for religious freedom. In this regard, Parliament urged the Syrian transitional authorities to facilitate swift, transparent and independent investigations into these acts and to take the necessary measures to suppress violence, ensure that those responsible for the attacks are held accountable, defend freedom of religion, and ensure the protection of all communities.

The Syrian transitional authorities are called on to present a specific timeline for organising credible, free, fair and inclusive elections. Whereas the EU is called on to set up a Syria reconstruction fund, conditional on demonstrable progress on these priorities and in coordination with relevant international institutions, that would promote interfaith dialogue, conflict resolution and reconciliation. The European Commission is urged to give priority to the Conference with Syrian civil society.

Lastly, Parliament called on the Council to maintain and impose more targeted sanctions on actors responsible for religious freedom violations in Syria.

Text adopted by Parliament, single reading

Breakdown by Political Group

PPE
176
188 members
S&D
117
19
136 members
PFE
64
10
79 members
ECR
74
79 members
RENEW
67
8
75 members
GREENS
52
53 members
GUE
36
7
43 members
NI
17
6
4
29 members
ESN
22
3
26 members

Breakdown by Country

Germany
82 / 0 / 6
France
72 / 0 / 1
Italy
71 / 0 / 0
Spain
56 / 0 / 0
Poland
50 / 0 / 0
Netherlands
29 / 0 / 0
Romania
25 / 0 / 0
Portugal
20 / 0 / 0
Czechia
19 / 0 / 0
Sweden
20 / 0 / 0
Austria
14 / 5 / 0
Belgium
18 / 0 / 0
Hungary
8 / 0 / 0
Greece
16 / 2 / 0
Bulgaria
16 / 0 / 0
Slovakia
12 / 0 / 2
Ireland
13 / 0 / 0
Denmark
12 / 0 / 0
Finland
12 / 0 / 1
Croatia
12 / 0 / 0
Lithuania
11 / 0 / 0
Slovenia
8 / 0 / 0
Latvia
7 / 0 / 0
Estonia
7 / 0 / 0
Luxembourg
6 / 0 / 0
Malta
5 / 0 / 0
Cyprus
4 / 0 / 0

Individual MEP Votes

66 MEPs
MEP Country Group Position
Marcin KIERWIŃSKI Poland PPE No vote recorded
Jaroslav KNOT Czechia PfE No vote recorded
Elena KOUNTOURA Greece The Left No vote recorded
Ondřej KOVAŘÍK Czechia PfE No vote recorded
Maximilian KRAH Germany NI No vote recorded
Andrius KUBILIUS Lithuania PPE No vote recorded
Mimmo LUCANO Italy The Left No vote recorded
Péter MAGYAR Hungary PPE No vote recorded
Thierry MARIANI France PfE No vote recorded
Costas MAVRIDES Cyprus S&D No vote recorded