Results 1-6 of 6 for terrorism speaker:Norman Lamb
- Extraordinary Rendition (26 Jun 2007)
Norman Lamb: ...these very issues. Does he agree that apart from extraordinary renditions being morally wrong, they are wholly counter-productive given the efforts of this country and others to tackle global terrorism?
- House of Lords Reform (21 Jan 2003)
Mr Norman Lamb: ...Chamber lacks legitimacy and suffers from unrepresentativeness. However, it clearly performs its legislative functions pretty well in revising legislation. Reference has been made to the Anti-terrorism, Crime and Security Bill in 2001, and there have been many other examples. Those who argue for a unicameral system have to face the fact that, without that check and balance, we would have a...
- Written Answers — Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs: International Terrorism (21 Oct 2002)
Mr Norman Lamb: To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs (1) what assessment he has made of the involvement of Pakistan's ISI in terrorism in Kashmir; if he has raised with President Masharraf concerns with regard to ISI's alleged involvement in terrorism; and what reports he has received implicating Pakistan's ISI in terrorism elsewhere than in Kashmir; (2) what information he...
- United Nations (23 May 2002)
Mr Norman Lamb: ...then. As we debate the role of the UN today, the world seems to be a more dangerous and unstable place than it has been for a long time, as shown by the horror of 11 September, the threat posed by terrorism, the tinderbox of the middle east and the frightening heightened tension between India and Pakistan, not to mention the continuing conflicts that blight so much of Africa. That...
- United Nations (23 May 2002)
Mr Norman Lamb: ...to the UN. If what seems to be emerging is the shape of things to come, the cost of those operations must be properly shared. I turn to the role of the United Nations in the so-called war on terrorism. Resolution 1373, passed on 28 September 2001, set out a range of legally binding measures to be taken against terrorism. As we heard, a counter-terrorism committee was established to pursue...
- United Nations (23 May 2002)
Mr Norman Lamb: On the work of that committee, the UN website indicates that about 45 countries still have not responded to the initiatives to counter terrorism, although they were supposed to have done so by the end of December. Is that a concern, and what steps are being taken to address it?
