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Results 1-20 of 118 for iraq speaker:Glenda Jackson

Oral Answers to Questions — Communities and Local Government: Iraq (12 Dec 2006)

Glenda Jackson: Did I understand my right hon. Friend correctly? Does he regard the Iraq Study Group as having absolutely no recommendations that could apply to the areas of British responsibility in Iraq? If the President of the United States accepts those recommendations in total, does that mean that the British Government will oppose that change in the strategy in Iraq? Is it not infinitely easier for a...

Orders of the Day: Foreign Affairs and Defence (22 Nov 2006)

Glenda Jackson: .... In the Prime Minister's approach to foreign policy, he is also wrong to perceive the greatest threat to the world as international terrorism. Many years ago, before a single bullet was fired in Iraq, my right hon. Friend the Member for Holborn and St. Pancras (Frank Dobson) said that the real weapons of mass destruction were poverty and AIDS. In my view, that list has been added to by...

Orders of the Day: Foreign Affairs and Defence (22 Nov 2006)

Glenda Jackson: ...s, but is it our job to tell them how to live? Surely they should be afforded the opportunity of another kind of election. Surely the possibility should be put on the table that the way forward for Iraq may be a federal state. I do not say that it is, or that that is the way that they would necessarily move forward—what I am saying is that what is being imposed from the outside upon...

Business of the House (7 Jul 2005)

Glenda Jackson: When will the House be afforded the opportunity in Government time to debate the continuing insurgency in Iraq? Bilateral relations between the United Kingdom and the United States, to which my right hon. Friend referred, may indeed be very close, but there is a clear difference of opinion within the US Executive, with one Secretary of State saying that the insurgency is in its death throes,...

Written Answers — Prime Minister: Iraq War (6 Apr 2005)

Ms Glenda Jackson: To ask the Prime Minister when he was first informed that Professor Christopher Greenwood QC had been retained by the Government to assist in relation to legal issues arising from the Iraq conflict.

Written Answers — Solicitor-General: Iraq (Legal Advice) (4 Apr 2005)

Ms Glenda Jackson: To ask the Solicitor-General pursuant to her answer of 8 March 2005, Official Report,column 1639W, on Iraq (Legal Advice), if she will publish the assistance furnished by Professor Christopher Greenwood, QC, in preparation of the Attorney-General's statement to Parliament of 17 March 2003.

Written Answers — Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs: Iraq (6 Dec 2004)

Ms Glenda Jackson: To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs if he will request that the Iraqi Ministry of Health furnish him with the (a) name, (b) location and (c) type of hospitals referred to in the paragraph Casualty Estimates in his written Ministerial Statement of 17 November, on Iraq: Casualty Estimates.

Written Answers — Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs: Iraq (6 Dec 2004)

Ms Glenda Jackson: To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs if he will request that the Iraqi Ministry of Health furnish him with a breakdown of the number of civilians killed and injured, as referred to in his Written Ministerial Statement of 17 November, on Iraq: Casualty Estimates, by (a) age, (b) gender, (c) type of injury and (d) cause of death.

Middle East and Ukraine (29 Nov 2004)

Ms Glenda Jackson: Surely the greatest threat to elections in Iraq would be a reprise of the events that unfolded in the attack on Falluja, which did more to create terrorists than anything else up to that point. What message from Sharm el-Sheikh was sent to the US Administration to ensure that in future their use of force be more proportionate than the force unleashed on Falluja? When the Foreign Secretary...

Written Answers — Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs: Iraq (18 Nov 2004)

Ms Glenda Jackson: To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs (1) if he will make a statement on Iraq, with particular reference to the situation in Falluja; (2) what emergency (a) medical supplies, (b) personnel and (c) equipment will be provided by the UK to assist those injured by coalition forces attacks upon Fallujah.

Written Answers — Defence: Iraq (18 Nov 2004)

Ms Glenda Jackson: To ask the Secretary of State for Defence pursuant to his oral statement of 27 May, on Iraq, whether the Royal Military Police personnel assisting in training the Iraqi Police Service will assist in the training of the Iraqi Prison Service.

Written Answers — Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs: Iraq (17 Nov 2004)

Ms Glenda Jackson: To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs if he will ask the US authorities in Iraq to provide immediate assistance to the International Committee of the Red Cross to enable it to have full and free access to Falluja.

Points of Order (16 Nov 2004)

Ms Glenda Jackson: ...American forces to launch an attack on Falluja. My constituents are remarkably concerned about the destruction of that city, culminating in today's reports of the murder of an injured, unarmed Iraqi civilian by US marines. Has no Minister asked to come to the House to make a statement in response to the genuine concern arising in my constituency and, I have no doubt, throughout the rest of...

Written Answers — Prime Minister: Iraq (8 Nov 2004)

Ms Glenda Jackson: To ask the Prime Minister pursuant to the answer of 27 October 2004, Official Report, column 1257W, on Iraq, when he was first informed by British military commanders of the request they had received from the US military for the re-deployment of British troops.

Written Answers — Prime Minister: Iraq (8 Nov 2004)

Ms Glenda Jackson: To ask the Prime Minister when he last discussed with Coalition allies ways of minimising civilian casualties in the course of military operations in Iraq.

Written Answers — Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs: Iraq (3 Nov 2004)

Ms Glenda Jackson: To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs pursuant to his reply of 26 October 2004, Official Report, column 1177W, if he will break down the development of Iraq's national economy, referred to in paragraph 3, page 3 of the ISG, Regime Finance and Procurement, by (a) industry, (b) banking and (c) services; what the value was of each category; and who the financial...

Written Answers — Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs: Iraq (1 Nov 2004)

Ms Glenda Jackson: To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs pursuant to his answer of 13 October 2004, Official Report, column 306W, on Iraq, if he will request US authorities to furnish him with a copy of the (a) terms of reference and (b) findings of the investigation; and if he will place copies in the Library.

Written Answers — Prime Minister: Iraq (27 Oct 2004)

Ms Glenda Jackson: To ask the Prime Minister (1) when and from whom in the Iraqi Interim Government he first received a request for British troops to be moved from their present duties in Southern Iraq to unspecified positions south of Baghdad; (2) when and with whom in the US Administration he last discussed the terms of engagement for the deployment of British troops south of Baghdad; (3) when and with...

Written Answers — Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs: Iraq (26 Oct 2004)

Ms Glenda Jackson: To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs (1) pursuant to his oral statement on Iraq of 12 October 2004, Official Report, columns 151–55, what evidence caused him to accept reports in July 2000 in the Iraq Ba'ath party newspaper Al Thawrak that claimed victory over UN sanctions; (2) what evidence caused him to accept the claim in August 2001 by the then Iraqi...

Written Answers — Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs: Iraq (25 Oct 2004)

Ms Glenda Jackson: To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs pursuant to his oral statement on Iraq of 12 October 2004, Official Report, columns 151–55, what the information was upon which he and the Prime Minister based their judgements and which he now accepts was wrong.

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