Mr Andrew Faulds: Will my right hon. Friend take cognisance of the fact that a committee of the U.N. has recommended that moral and material support should be given to the Zimbabwe Freedom Fighters? Will he take action along those lines?
Mr Andrew Faulds: What a sad decline.
Mr Andrew Faulds: On a point of order. I should be very grateful, Mr. Speaker, if you could enlighten me on a certain matter. I need a much lesser degree of enlightenment that most of the hon. Gentlemen opposite. I have always understood from older Members of the House that if an hon. Member put in a Private Notice Question and—unfortunately, from his point of view—someone else had done so before him, he...
Mr Andrew Faulds: Mr. Speaker, you restore both my faith and my spirit. In view of the fact that the claim of these men to impartiality has been invalidated by their actions, is it not quite inconceivable that they can possibly be allowed to continue in their present duties?
Mr Andrew Faulds: Are you frightened?
Mr Andrew Faulds: And all those behind you, as well.
Mr Andrew Faulds: Why call Sandys if it is a serious debate?
Mr Andrew Faulds: rose—
Mr Andrew Faulds: To back it.
Mr Andrew Faulds: By not recognising the Queen's representative?
Mr Andrew Faulds: On a point of order, Mr. Speaker. We have been forced to listen to the right hon. Gentleman's speech. Would it not now be honourable of him to tell us what convictions forced him, however reluctantly, to attend the anniversary celebrations in Southern Rhodesia House last November?
Mr Andrew Faulds: Perhaps he can tell us that.
Mr Andrew Faulds: Tell us now.
Mr Andrew Faulds: Shoddy little man!
Mr Andrew Faulds: On a point of order. I do not wish to spy strangers, but when was this right hon. Gentleman last here?
Mr Andrew Faulds: A very good maiden speech.
Mr Andrew Faulds: You are going to lose some more votes.
Mr Andrew Faulds: Hon. Members opposite are a shifty lot.
Mr Andrew Faulds: Will my right hon. Friend continue resolutely to resist the blandishments of the Opposition—the sirens were a load of old women too—when they counsel illiberalities alien to the Bitish way of life?
Mr Andrew Faulds: A rebel's consent?