Following the Foreign Secretary’s update to Parliament on the UK’s efforts in support of Ukraine, Jonathan Djanogly welcomes sanctioning of Russian oligarchs’ private jets and calls for it to be extended to banning insurance for Russian yachts and jets which would have a worldwide application.
Following the Prime Minister’s statement to the House of Commons on the UK’s response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Jonathan Djanogly tells MPs that over the last 14 years the UK and EU have been complacent with regard to Russia and we must never let that happen again.
Jonathan Djanogly intervenes in a debate to pledge his support for relatives of a British family tragically caught up in the 2002 Gujarat riots and his support for their calls for an inquest and the return of the family’s remains.
Jonathan Djanogly criticizes the Bill as failing to define ‘animal sentience’ and raises concerns that the Bill does not have exemptions on the grounds of religious rights, cultural traditions and regional heritage, which are included in the equivalent EU legislation.
Jonathan Djanogly welcomes the signing of the free trade agreement between the United Kingdom and Australia and asks the Secretary of State about the projected numbers of workers likely to be going backwards and forwards, and the sectors they are likely to be involved with
Jonathan Djanogly for a statutory right to protest to be set out in the Bill, thereby removing any presumption of illegality, with guidance to help both police and organisers understand their respective powers and obligations, and he calls for a separate body to set any conditions on a public protest so that police are not in the position of both setting the conditions and enforcing their own conditions.