The Commission's report was unanimously adopted on 20 December 1995 by the 7 deputies who were present (out of 21; the other members had not received their notification because of a
postal service strike).
Jean-Pierre Brard, vice-chairman of the commission, considered that the propositions were "insufficient" and wanted to adopt a "special legislation" to effectively fight against dangerous
cults. He said: "This vote is thus not representative of the whole commission. If I had been present, I would have abstained." The rules of the
National Assembly say the report is still valid regardless of the number present.
Definition of "cult" The report says: "Twenty hearings were conducted in these conditions, for a total of twenty-one hours. They have allowed the Commission to take note of information, experience and analysis of people having, for various reasons, a thorough knowledge of the cult phenomenon, whether administrators, doctors, lawyers, clergymen, representatives of organizations that assist victims of cults, and of course, former members of cults and leaders of cultic associations. The Commission has also requested assistance from various agencies in an attempt to refine the best knowledge of the scope of his study." The
Minister of the Interior was the most important source of information. Given the difficulty of defining the concept of cult, the Commission decided to resume the criteria followed by the , which it considers as "a body of evidence, each of which could lead to lengthy discussions." • Threats to people: • mental destabilization; • exaggerated financial demands; • separation from one's home environment; • damage to physical integrity; • indoctrination of children; • Threats to the community: • more or less anti-social speech; • public disorder; • importance of judicial involvements; • possible diversion of traditional economic circuits; • attempts to infiltration of public powers. The Commission believes that it "was aware that neither the novelty nor the small number of followers, or even eccentricity could be retained as criteria" and explains: "The scope of its study has been voluntarily restricted to a certain number of associations gathering, usually around a spiritual leader, people sharing the same belief in a being or a number of transcendental ideas, situated or not at odds with "traditional" religions (
Christian,
Muslim,
Hindu,
Buddhist) which were excluded from this study, and on which have, at one time or another, been suspected of any activity contrary to public policy or individual freedoms." Mindful not to give a result exactly impartial, the Commission nevertheless chose these criteria to conduct a partial analysis of reality, holding the common sense that the public ascribes to the notion of cult. The published report of the Parliamentary Commission of 1995 (also known as the ), appeared on 22 December 1995.
Criticisms Controversies on the criteria and sources The criteria chosen by the (RG) to establish the dangerousness of a movement were criticized, because they are considered as vague and may include many organizations, religious or not. One of the first criticism came from
Bishop Jean Vernette, the national secretary of the French episcopate to the study of cults and
new religious movements, which stressed that these criteria can be applied to almost all religions. Moreover,
sociologists like
Bruno Étienne emphasized that the
mental manipulation should not be defined by the policemen of the (RG). The list of cults was based on the criteria defined by the RG, but without specifying which of their practices are specifically criticized. In addition, the secrecy of the work made by the RG led to questions about the presence or absence of certain organizations in the list. Étienne questioned on the presence of the
CEDIPAC SA company, formerly known as
European Grouping of Marketing Professionals (GEPM), while its activity is not in the religious field. The absence of
Opus Dei or the
Freemasons also raised questions. In addition,
Yves Bertrand, General Director of the from 1992 to 2003, spoke in 2007 about his collaborative work with the parliamentary reports on cults, and believed that
Scientology and
Jehovah's Witnesses do not deserve to be diabolized and "to put on the same level some companies of thought and genuine cultic movements that alienate the freedom of their members, the result is the opposite of the desired goals".
Controversies on the file's content Some movements have sought access to documents that led to their classification onto the list of cults by the parliamentary commission. The government refused, invoking the risk to public safety and security of the State in case of disclosure of information from . Several movements engaged in legal proceedings that lasted several years before they can access these secret documents. Jehovah's Witnesses finally succeeded in 2006, after the request was filed to the
Council of State. The first judgments on this issue were given in 2005 by the Administrative Court of Appeal of Paris after examining the documents to assess the merits of the refusal of the
Ministry of Interior, who mentioned the risk to public safety. On 3 July 2006, the Council of State rejected the appeal of the Minister of Interior and confirmed the same day the annulment of the decision of the Minister of Interior who refused to provide to the Christian Federation of Jehovah's Witnesses the documents made by the for the second report. On 18 December 2006, at a press conference in Paris, Jehovah's Witnesses released the files prepared by the for the commission on cults in 1995. According to , this work, "which was released after eight years of proceedings, only includes a form of presentation and a list their places of worship." The
Church of Scientology obtained access to documents of the , and its spokesman said: "There was nothing in the files." The
Universal Church of the Kingdom of God also obtained the right of access to the file made by the which justified its classification as cults in the parliamentary report. In a decision of 1 December 2005 validated by the Council of State, the Administrative
Court of Appeal in Paris overturned the refusal of the Minister of Interior to grant the request of the association and ordered the files release.
Lack of opposing debate The parliamentary report was strongly criticized by U.S. officials. In 1999, a report on religious freedom around the world conducted by the State Department accused it of not having heard from the groups accused and the lack of opposing debate. The French branch of
Tradition, Family Property complained about the impossibility of rectifying the report, saying: "The list established in the Report (…) contained similar unfair qualifications to certain groups falsely pinned as cults, with all appalling consequences for their members and their activities, the list being widely published in the media. But none of them had been heard. No one could get any rehabilitation or a new decision because no authority is recognized qualified to take over the case. The thing is serious in a State of law and there is concern that it may renew itself by other means."
Raffarin's , 2005 On 27 May 2005 (just before he left office), the then
Prime Minister of France,
Jean-Pierre Raffarin, issued a which stressed that the government must exercise vigilance in taking account of the evolution of the cult-phenomenon, which, he wrote, made the list of movements attached to the Parliamentary Report of 1995 less and less pertinent, based on the observation that small groups form in a scattered, more mobile and less-easily identifiable manner, making use in particular of the possibilities of spreading offered by the Internet. The Prime Minister asked his civil servants to update a number of instructions issued previously, to apply criteria set in consultation with the Interministerial Commission for Monitoring and Combating Cultic Deviances (
MIVILUDES), and to avoid falling back on lists of groups for the identification of cultic deviances. == Commission of 1999 ==