Layla Moran asks Urgent Question on Northern Gaza

Yesterday, Layla Moran was granted an urgent question in the House of Commons on the humanitarian crisis in Northern Gaza.

She said:

Over 450 days on, we all know the statistics—45,000 Palestinians killed, 100 hostages missing, 2.3 million people desperate—but I want to tell a single human story. I have previously spoken about my friend, consultant surgeon Mohamed, who operated on me when I had sepsis. His family are trapped in the Jabalia refugee camp. They are elderly and sick. One is a three-year-old girl. He has described how there are bodies strewn in the street.

I am sorry to report that death did not come knocking this weekend. Rather, it was dropped by a precision drone as Mohamed’s brother and his son walked 10 metres to get aid. The son died of a brain injury, two 13-year-old girls and their mother have shrapnel wounds, and Mohamed’s elderly father, who was already ill, is in hospital. A three-year-old, her mother and Mohamed’s mother are alone in a house with no one to help them get food.

These were obviously not militants—they were sick. They are not legitimate targets of war. There is no excuse for this. Mohamed told me it feels like they are living in “The Hunger Games,” dodging drones and scavenging for the basics. Even if they wanted to leave, how can they?

What part of international law makes any of this okay? Where is the accountability? Where is the justice? What does the Minister have to say to Mohamed, who spends his days saving lives here in the UK while his family are slaughtered overnight?

And it is not just Mohamed. People in Gaza are trapped in a doom loop of hell—hospitals decimated, and ceasefires promised and never delivered. So I press the Government again: is this really everything the UK has got? Have we deployed everything to make this stop? When will we recognise Palestine? Why have we not stopped the arms trade to Israel? And when will the Government ban trading with illegal settlements?

The frustration is palpable. Our grief is fathomless. People across the UK are looking on in horror, and the horror in Gaza must stop now.

There were nine other Lib Dem contributors:

Our foreign affairs spokesperson Calum Miller:

I pay tribute to my hon. Friend the Member for Oxford West and Abingdon (Layla Moran) for her powerful and sustained advocacy for Palestinians. Clearly, the situation in northern Gaza is utterly dire. We need to see action from the Government in the face of a dreadful and worsening situation. At the end of December, Israeli forces closed Kamal Adwan, the last functional hospital in northern Gaza, forcibly removed patients and detained its director Dr Abu Safiya. The Minister said that he has raised this matter with the Israeli Deputy Foreign Minister and the ambassador, but what consequences did he spell out to them if Israel fails to meet its obligations to protect civilians and sustain access to healthcare in northern Gaza?

The Minister also referred to Israeli airstrikes in the allegedly safe zone. I have on previous occasions asked the Foreign Secretary to look again at a full ban on arms sales. Will the Minister now do so? We will only see an end to violence with a ceasefire, so can the Minister update the House on progress towards the release of the Israeli hostages held by Hamas and a lasting ceasefire?

Finally, in the light of deep concerns about the direction that this conflict might take under the second Trump presidency and following remarks made by Israeli Government Ministers about annexation and actions on the ground in the west bank to extend illegal settlements, does the Minister agree that now is the moment to recognise Palestine on the 1967 borders?

Alistair Carmichael:

Do the Government acknowledge that what is happening in northern Gaza is a campaign of ethnic cleansing? If the Minister does not, what would he call it?

Our international development spokesperson Monica Harding:

I am pleased that the Prime Minister recently met UNRWA’s Commissioner-General Lazzarini and pledged further funding, but in three weeks legislation to ban UNRWA will come into force. Lazzarini has said that

“dismantling UNRWA will collapse the United Nations’ humanitarian response”

in Gaza and that the

“entire population…fears that their only remaining lifeline will be cut.”

He also commented that:

“Since the beginning of the war in Gaza, Israeli officials have described dismantling UNRWA as a war goal.”

Will the Minister set out what consequential steps the UK will take if that comes into effect?

Wera Hobhouse:

Many of my constituents are deeply worried about the intolerable suffering of the people in Gaza, but at this moment they are particularly worried about the ban on UNRWA, which will come into force at the end of the month. The Minister’s previous answer on UNRWA was simply not good enough. Where is the urgency to do something about this, making an assessment of what it means if no more humanitarian aid is being delivered through UNRWA?

Mike Martin:

The case for further British action to protect Gazan civilians is unanswerable. Is the Government’s moral integrity being damaged by their inaction?

Vikki Slade:

It is quite clear that the Minister is frustrated, but thoughts and prayers are just not enough. What is the Minister doing to progress the Palestinian statehood that Norway, Spain, Ireland and more than 100 other countries have all confirmed? The Foreign Secretary confirmed it would happen. What is stopping that happening now?

Andrew George:

The Netanyahu regime continues to seek to justify its cold-blooded slaughter of Palestinian people behind the dishonest façade of self-defence. While the Minister asserts that the Government are taking an even-handed approach in this regard, he will remember that only two months ago the UK military intervened to protect innocent life in Israel by intercepting bombs. Taking on board the passions in the Chamber, the question is about equivalence. What actions have the Government taken to do the same for Palestinian people in Gaza?

Jess Brown-Fuller:

Women who can get access to hospital provision in northern Gaza are undergoing C-sections without any anaesthetic, and new mothers—180 every day—are struggling to find clean water to provide formula for their new babies or continue to breastfeed, but Israel continues to restrict aid. The United Nations has made three attempts in the last three days to reach Gaza, and has been refused every time. The Minister has mentioned political solutions but seems to be avoiding consequences so I will ask the question again: what consequences can Israel expect from this Government if it continues to ignore international law and the urgent requirement to get the care that is needed for women and children in Gaza?

Richard Foord

The Minister said at the outset,

“The UK is doing all we can to alleviate this suffering”

in Gaza. Does the Minister really think that? The Government are not even tracking British components for F-35 fighter jets, which are being used in northern Gaza.

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8 Comments

  • Matthew Radmore 8th Jan '25 - 10:45pm

    Many thanks to our MPs for their sound words in defence of humanitarian law.l and basic decency.
    Disappointed that a change of government has made little apparent difference to the diplomatic posture of the UK.
    Terrifying what is to come under the next US administration.
    I fear that all is lost for Gaza and the West Bank. The world has failed yet again.
    If only our MPs were in government, there might be some hope.
    But truly that is heartbreaking and the precedent disturbing.

  • Katharine Pindar 8th Jan '25 - 11:37pm

    It is heartening to read the interventions of nine Liberal Democrat MPs in the debate on the much-needed Urgent Question placed by Layla Moran about the suffering of the Palestinian people in the north of Gaza. Humanitarian aid for the sick people displaced from almost the last hospital there must be the first urgent requirement, and the resources of UNRWA must continue to be allowed. All military support from Britain should be withheld until the attacks there and the settler violence in the West Bank are stopped, and the aim of a Palestinian state is developed after ceasefire and the return of the Hamas-held hostages to Israel. Please will Liberal Democrat MPs continue to press the Government repeatedly as you have all done in this debate, with Layla and Calum continuing to lead your much-needed demands.

  • @peterwrigley The Minister’s response to virtually all questions was to wring his hands and say how terribly the Israeli government was behaving and ministers were regularly telling them so. But when asked, as he was repeatedly, what consequences would follow from the British government he just ignored the questions. Our MPs did us proud by the collective way they stood up for human rights in this debate.

  • Everyday is a catastrophe for Palestinians and Labour’s silence and sugar coating is complicit.

  • This was a moderately good performance by Lib Dem MPs. What is absent, as I have told some of them, is a demand for positive action by HMG which would the genocide in Gaza. Saying Netanyahu “is not the Messiah, he’s a very naughty boy” hasn’t worked. We ought to have already imposed punitive sanctions on Israel as whole, not just the settlers and a few individuals, but no one in government seems to have grasped the enormity of what is happening in front of our eyes. And if we sent military jets to bring down Iranian missiles in order to protect Israeli civilians, why are we not contemplating equivalent military action against Israeli forces to protect the citizens of Gaza?

  • Judi Conner 9th Jan '25 - 12:32pm

    This pressure for government action on Gaza was powerfully presented by our MPs and must be sustained.
    At grass roots level around the country I’m finding many people who share these concerns do not identify Lib Dems as a pro-Palestinian party! Rather, some activist groups turn to the Greens and Labour to make public statements and protest for justice and rights and for demanding life-saving aid in Gaza.
    Given the core values (and policy on Palestine) of the Lib Dem Party, and given the fight for the very existence of liberalism worldwide, our MPs must continue to push and shame the government into action – and make it very clear what their party stands for. If we don’t show our integrity a lot of voters will give up on us – and who can blame them if they do?

  • John Muckley 9th Jan '25 - 8:51pm

    It is heartening to read the Lib Dem contributions to the debate but not in the least surprising to find the complete lack of coverage by the mainstream media. I am utterly ashamed of our government’s acquiescence in the Israeli lie of self defence when the whole world can see the genocide taking place.Why are they so willing to sell their souls and reputations to support these atrocities ? Please continue to oppose this pathetic, mendacious shadow of the Labour party.

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