Mentions:
1: Rishi Sunak (Con - Richmond (Yorks)) That is non-negotiable and a fundamental condition for peace in the region. - Speech Link
2: Rishi Sunak (Con - Richmond (Yorks)) It is a non-negotiable and fundamental condition for peace in the region. - Speech Link
3: Alec Shelbrooke (Con - Elmet and Rothwell) Its direct influence in Yemen is having an impact on shipping through the Red sea. - Speech Link
4: Rishi Sunak (Con - Richmond (Yorks)) Gentleman knows, it was Hamas, yet again this weekend, who rejected the latest round of negotiations - Speech Link
Mentions:
1: Lord Ahmad of Wimbledon (Con - Life peer) We urge all sides to seize the opportunity and engage with negotiations to reach an agreement as soon - Speech Link
2: Baroness Smith of Basildon (Lab - Life peer) the unimaginable suffering on both sides, it has been deeply disappointing that successive rounds of negotiations - Speech Link
3: Lord Ahmad of Wimbledon (Con - Life peer) October, they had started negotiating with the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia a ceasefire and a solution to Yemen - Speech Link
4: Lord Ahmad of Wimbledon (Con - Life peer) solution is a pathway to peace. - Speech Link
Mentions:
1: Baroness Cox (XB - Life peer) Blessed are the peacemakers, who not only speak words of peace, but make peace, for they shall be called - Speech Link
2: Baroness Sherlock (Lab - Life peer) , and if so how, the FCDO’s important work on human rights and FoRB is being reflected in our trade negotiations - Speech Link
3: Lord Ahmad of Wimbledon (Con - Life peer) Just a few weeks ago, we raised the plight of the Baha’i community in Yemen and Iran, the Ahmadi Muslims - Speech Link
Mentions:
1: Baroness Uddin (Non-affiliated - Life peer) debate economic equality and justice while women in Palestine, Sudan, Congo, Nigeria, Eritrea, Syria, Yemen - Speech Link
2: Baroness Anderson of Stoke-on-Trent (Lab - Life peer) Vivian Silver, a Canadian peace activist who founded Women Wage Peace, was killed on 7 October by Hamas - Speech Link
3: Baroness O'Grady of Upper Holloway (Lab - Life peer) by women and the majority of those who took strike action over the last couple of years and who led negotiations - Speech Link
Mentions:
1: Lord Ahmad of Wimbledon (Con - Life peer) This includes Hamas, the Lebanese Hezbollah, militia groups in Iraq and the Houthis in Yemen. - Speech Link
2: Baroness Smith of Basildon (Lab - Life peer) Negotiations for a humanitarian ceasefire in Gaza continue. - Speech Link
3: Lord Polak (Con - Life peer) The Houthis’ deputy foreign minister, Hussein al-Ezzi, said:“Yemen will continue to sink more British - Speech Link
4: Lord Mitchell (Lab - Life peer) That is true, but the Oslo accords and the negotiations in 2000 came very close. - Speech Link
Mentions:
1: Lord Oates (LD - Life peer) In Yemen, in DRC, in Ethiopia, in Sudan and South Sudan and in Ukraine, conflict has exacerbated a global - Speech Link
2: Baroness Bennett of Manor Castle (Green - Life peer) Secondly, the published value of UK arms sales licensed to Saudi Arabia since the bombing of Yemen began - Speech Link
3: Lord Anderson of Swansea (Lab - Life peer) Some force themselves upon us, such as the Houthi war in Yemen, and affect our shipping and food prices - Speech Link
4: Viscount Waverley (XB - Excepted Hereditary) A peace treaty will be signed one day; there is no choice. - Speech Link
5: Lord Purvis of Tweed (LD - Life peer) Nothing would do more to help these negotiations, to build trust in the area, and to win the consent - Speech Link
Mentions:
1: Lord Collins of Highbury (Lab - Life peer) recognising a Palestinian state—not wait for the end of the process but give hope so that talks and negotiations - Speech Link
2: Baroness Smith of Newnham (LD - Life peer) Finally, in all the penumbra of the situation in Israel and Gaza there is the spectre of Iran in Yemen - Speech Link
3: Lord Ahmad of Wimbledon (Con - Life peer) We are seeing Qatar play an important role in hostage negotiations. - Speech Link
4: Lord Hannay of Chiswick (XB - Life peer) which we all recognise as a state, declines to recognise Palestine as a state, and the longer-term negotiations - Speech Link
5: Lord Ahmad of Wimbledon (Con - Life peer) Our approach is that every country, every nation across those pieces, from the negotiations to the delivery - Speech Link
Mentions:
1: Jerome Mayhew (Con - Broadland) matter—but it makes space for those negotiations to take place. - Speech Link
2: Ian Paisley (DUP - North Antrim) Today, Israel faces attacks on eight fronts: Gaza, Iraq, Lebanon, Syria, the west bank, Yemen and Iran - Speech Link
3: Fleur Anderson (Lab - Putney) There can be no peace in Gaza without peace in the west bank. - Speech Link
4: Alison Thewliss (SNP - Glasgow Central) Negotiations must begin. - Speech Link
Mentions:
1: Bob Blackman (Con - Harrow East) the camp by Albanian parliamentarians, showing that the dramatic shift in opinion must be down to the negotiations - Speech Link
2: Jim Shannon (DUP - Strangford) Member for Harrow East is right to highlight the danger that Iran poses to peace in the middle east: - Speech Link
3: Wayne David (Lab - Caerphilly) Of course, the US and the UK have been undertaking surgical strikes against Houthi targets in Yemen, - Speech Link
4: David Rutley (Con - Macclesfield) Iran’s behaviour since those negotiations has made progress much more difficult, and we are working with - Speech Link
Mentions:
1: Clive Betts (Lab - Sheffield South East) the Government do to put real pressure on the Israelis to stop the unacceptable killings, enter into negotiations - Speech Link
2: David Lammy (Lab - Tottenham) adopting that position and rejecting the notion that recognition can only follow the conclusion of negotiations - Speech Link
3: Apsana Begum (Lab - Poplar and Limehouse) Will the Minister confirm whether the Government have undertaken any further military action in Yemen - Speech Link
4: Andrew Mitchell (Con - Sutton Coldfield) We are careful to ensure that our response to the Houthis in Yemen is proportionate and right. - Speech Link