Extracts from Second
reading debate (Commons) of the Birmingham Commonwealth Games
Bill
(Solihull) (Con): Part of the
arrangement made with India on shooting is that we
now have women’s T20 cricket in the Commonwealth games, and I am
sure my hon. Friend will welcome that. There is a great deal of
excitement in my constituency and around the west midlands about
making such a fantastic mark in sport...
(Redcar) (Con)(Maiden
Speech):...Thank you, Mr Deputy Speaker, and happy
Commonwealth Day. It is a pleasure to speak in this debate, and I
would like to start by mentioning Johanna Jackson who, who like me,
is a born and bred Teessider, but unlike me, won the gold for the
20 km walk in the 2010 Commonwealth games in India. Jo Jackson,
from New Marske, completed the walk in just one hour, 34 minutes
and 22 seconds, which is about the same amount of time that it
takes me to walk here from my office in Norman Shaw
North...
...A number of other new areas were formed at this time,
including South Bank, Normanby, Grangetown and Dormanstown, which
was named after the steelmaker and former Conservative candidate,
Arthur Dorman. It was these thriving towns, alongside a growing
Middlesbrough, that led the parliamentary titan and free trade
pioneer William Gladstone to call us the “infant Hercules”. From
the banks of the Tees came the industrial revolution, and
Teesside became an exporting capital that built the world. From
the Sydney harbour bridge to Lambeth bridge and from the
Indian railways to the London underground,
cities, towns and communities around the world exist today
because of Teesside steel...
(Stockport)
(Lab)(Maiden Speech):...Yesterday was International Women’s Day,
so it would be remiss of me not to mention Suffragette Square in
Stockport, which was named to commemorate four important women in
Stockport’s history: Gertrude Powicke, Elsie Plant and Hannah
Winbolt were Stopfordian women who were all active in the
suffrage movement, and Elizabeth Raffald was a pioneering
Stopfordian from the 1700s. Another woman who has inspired me is
Mrs Jayaben Desai, of Indian heritage, who
famously led the Grunwick dispute of mostly women workers, which
was a landmark strike in the fight for fairness and equality in
Britain...
...Personally, I owe so much to the trade union movement, which
has supported me throughout my working life. From courses on
workplace representation to political education, my union Unite
has always stood with me. In fact, my maternal grandfather, Mr
Awadhesh Pandey, was involved in the All India Railwaymen’s
Federation, and active in the 1974 national railway strike,
standing up for better pay and conditions for his fellow workers.
I hope to do justice to my grandfather’s memory by standing up
against exploitation. The history of our movement shows us that
we can achieve so much when we stand up collectively to fight for
what is right and just. We owe so much to the social movements
that won us fundamental rights. Yet, unfortunately, the
injustices, inequalities and exploitation that inspired these
movements remain...
To read the whole debate, CLICK
HERE
Extracts from
Commons debate on Commonwealth Day 2020
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Foreign and
Commonwealth Affairs ():...Some cynics have
suggested that it is a cliché to describe such a diverse group as
a family, but I wholeheartedly disagree. In fact, the
Government’s Front Bench is the most diverse in British history,
and there we find the reality of what the modern Commonwealth
family means for modern Britain. A number of ministerial
colleagues have to go back only one generation to show that we in
the UK are literally a product of the
Commonwealth—from India Pakistan, Sierra
Leone and, in my case, less exotically and interestingly,
Bristol...
(Brighton, Kemptown)
(Lab/Co-op):...We think, of course, of the current tension
in India and Pakistan and the
violence in Delhi over the Citizenship (Amendment) Act, but we
also think of the democratic instability we have seen in Sri
Lanka, a country I must have visited more than a dozen times, and
in Nigeria and Kenya in recent months and years. We think of the
deteriorating human rights situation in Uganda, Singapore and
elsewhere, and the dreadful impunity of the regime in Cameroon.
We think of the discrimination that continues against the LGBT
community in far too many Commonwealth countries. That is the
recent history of our Commonwealth. Of course we must celebrate
some of the progress that is made, but we must not have
rose-tinted glasses when Commonwealth citizens are being
discriminated against around the world, their human rights are
being denied them and their democratic participation is being
taken away. Therefore, it was a missed opportunity when this
Government failed to put the issue of LGBT rights formally on the
agenda at the CHOGM in April in London. It was
not only a missed opportunity, but a dereliction of our historic
duty to right our wrong...
(Glasgow North) (SNP):...If
the Government do want to strike ambitious trade deals with
Commonwealth countries, there will have to be arrangements, and
give and take, on both sides. India for example, has
already signalled that it would want to see an easing on visa
restrictions and travel opportunities. Therefore, although
Brexiteers might rejoice in the ending of freedom of movement
within Europe, the reality is that modern trade relies on the
movement of labour, irrespective of our trading
partners. People will still want to travel as a consequence of
any future trade deals that might be entered
into...
(Leicester East)
(Lab)(Maiden Speech):..We cannot talk about the present
without recognition, apology, returning what was stolen and
reparations for the past. One fifth of the billionaires in
Britain owe their wealth to the transportation of my ancestors,
because they benefited from the compensation of the equivalent of
£20 billion in today’s value for the “human property” they
somehow lost at sea. It is to our shame that Members of this
House during the mid to late 1700s represented slave plantations,
and let us not forget that British colonialism
reduced India from holding 23% of
the world economy to 4% by the time the British left...
(Ipswich) (Con):...That is
why I welcome the targets set out by the Commonwealth Heads of
Government to boost intra-Commonwealth trade to £1.5 trillion by
2030. We must be ready to play a full role in building new trade
deals with our partners on the foundations of the legal,
linguistic and cultural norms we already share. While these
important aspects are already in place, this country must also be
prepared, as I have said before in this place, to be nimble,
flexible and determined in the world as we seek to free ourselves
from the EU’s protectionist customs union. India
alone has a population of 1.3 billion, which is double the size
of the EU’s. We must have the right tools in place if we are
going to embrace our future as a truly global free-trading
nation. In the past, Belgium has often traded more to India than
we have. The European Union has been a barrier to our embracing
the growth that was happening in India. If we
are going to embrace this opportunity to trade with the
Commonwealth, we must have first-class infrastructure to support
ports such as Ipswich and Felixstowe, and to ensure that all
parts of this country share in the benefits of increased trade.
If this country is to broaden its horizons to the Commonwealth
and the world, we must also have a laser-like focus on the parts
of the country that have untapped trading potential. The new role
that we can play in the Commonwealth will be determined more than
anything by our investment and belief in places such as Ipswich
and the east of England.
A great deal of belief and investment in our town has already
been made by the great number of Commonwealth citizens and
Commonwealth-origin Brits who have made Ipswich their home, and I
also want to take this opportunity to pay tribute to them. Among
them are members of the Indian community, who
play a vital role in our town, with many dedicating themselves to
caring for others by filling many of the roles in our local NHS.
We also have a great Bangladeshi community, which has produced
some of our town’s most successful business owners and
entrepreneurs. Their care for the wider community must not be
understated either. The Bangladeshi Support Centre in Ipswich
supports not only vulnerable people from the Bangladeshi
community, but people from over 50 different nationalities across
the town.
I have been lucky during my time as an MP to have many positive
interactions with these communities, and of course that has been
aided by the common language shared throughout the Commonwealth—I
am of course referring to the language of cricket. Some Members
might have spotted that I am wearing the tie of the all-party
parliamentary group on cricket. We need to have a big screen in
Ipswich town centre for the next cricket world cup, and indeed
the next time there is an England-Bangladesh game or an
England-India game. We need to embrace the
festival of cricket to a far greater extent than we have in the
past...
(Rutland and Melton)
(Con):...The Commonwealth encompasses the 12th-richest country in
the world and the fourth poorest. It includes the world’s largest
democracy by population, India and the world’s
largest by area, Canada, which is also the only other country in
the world to call its lower House the House of Commons. The
Commonwealth Members in this Chamber will also be keen to note
that our Dispatch Boxes were a gift from our faraway friends, the
Kiwis, which I am sure will hearten my hon.
Friends the Members for Guildford () and for Mole
Valley ( ). When the Commonwealth
speaks, the world speaks...
...It is also the Commonwealth through which we can tackle
shared concerns. The Commonwealth provides a platform to tackle
the current divisive rhetoric and actions
between India and Pakistan, and it can
create dialogue to end division. Here in the UK, as many Members
have mentioned, including my hon. Friend the Member for Ipswich
(), we must tackle our not
having given the Commonwealth soldiers who served alongside us
the right they deserve to remain in this country, and they should
not face exorbitant fees to do so...
(Manchester, Gorton)
(Lab):...In many ways, I am an embodiment of the Commonwealth,
having roots in both Pakistan and India and
having grown up in Britain. The UK is hugely indebted to the
Commonwealth. The contributions made by Commonwealth communities
are colossal and vast. The military contributions made during the
second world war will never be forgotten, and their legacy must
be remembered. Indeed, my father served in the British
Indian Army. In order to keep these stories
alive, will the Minister agree that it would be a good idea to
include them as part of school curriculums?
...The Commonwealth, in all its diversity, champions
religious freedom, but the ongoing violence
in India and the discrimination
against religious minorities in many Commonwealth countries
reminds us of our shared responsibility to uphold and protect the
fundamental human right to freedom of religion
or belief. No one should be persecuted for their faith. The
upcoming Heads of Government meeting will provide a useful
platform for discussion. It is worth noting that it will take
place in Rwanda, where an unprecedented amount of human rights
violations have taken place...
To read the whole debate, CLICK
HERE