Six members of the French group CitizenGo were arrested by Paris police this week for through the city in a bus calling for a halt to attacks on Christians, highlighting the mockery of the Last Supper at the opening ceremony of the ongoing Summer Olympics.
On August 6, CitizenGo posted on X saying that their activists had to spend a night in jail simply for driving the bus around Paris:
The French police @prefpolice escorted our bus out of Paris shortly after unjustly arresting us. They are tyrannical, anti-Christian bullies. It’s absurd. #Paris2024 #Christianity https://t.co/4SNSuhvEjW pic.twitter.com/6WTM7OlGAq
— CitizenGO (@CitizenGO) August 6, 2024
According to their lawyer, French prosecutors argued they did not have permission for a protest. However, simply driving a vehicle with a slogan on it does not qualify as an organized protest, and the lawyer says the prosecutor “pushed the law to its limits to stop the bus and limit their free speech.”
CitizenGo says the entire incident was “anti-Christian political and ideological persecution.”
Reports claim that three of those arrested were female, and police forced them to undress. The pretext for the humiliating search was that they may have been concealing drugs. They were also placed into custody without any food or water. Upon release, the Christians and their bus were escorted out of Paris.
The mockery of the Last Supper at the Olympic opening ceremony featured transgenders and drag queens in the place of Jesus Christ and his Apostles, prompting widespread controversy and condemnation across the globe.
Former President Donald J. Trump called the opening ceremony “a disgrace.” Olympic organizers issued a quasi-apology for offending people, but American Roman Catholic Bishop Robert Barron rejected its formulation as “woke duplicity.”