LCP reported that unidentified flying objects would be discussed inside France's National Assembly on June 29, in a colloquium organized by deputies Arnaud Saint-Martin of La France insoumise and Pierre Henriet of Horizons.
The setting is significant because France already has one of the world's most visible official civilian UAP structures, GEIPAN, under the national space agency CNES. A parliamentary venue gives the subject a public institutional frame rather than leaving it only to enthusiasts or entertainment media.
According to LCP, the stated purpose was to take stock of knowledge 'beyond fantasies.' That phrasing matters: it signals an attempt to separate folklore, belief and sensational claims from documented cases, witness reports and investigative methods.
The colloquium does not establish that any French or global case has an extraordinary origin. Its value is procedural: it shows lawmakers treating the subject as something that can be discussed through institutions, archives and scientific vocabulary.
For the archive, the event is important because it strengthens the French official-context layer. Future reporting should watch whether the colloquium produces records, recommendations or renewed attention to GEIPAN case data.
