UK Parliament / Open data

Situation in the Red Sea

Proceeding contribution from Grant Shapps (Conservative) in the House of Commons on Wednesday, 24 January 2024. It occurred during Debate on Situation in the Red Sea.

As ever, my hon. Friend raises an excellent point. That is what Operation Prosperity Guardian is all about: that taskforce enables shipping to be protected to an extent. He may be getting at the broader point of whether individual ships should be protected. The view that the world has taken is that Prosperity Guardian provides an umbrella to shipping more widely. The sheer volume of ordinary traffic through the Red sea means that we need that US-led international taskforce for the security of the Red sea and the gulf of Aden.

This is incredibly important. After all, we are part of defending the international rules-based order in the actions that we are taking. Last week, I was onboard HMS Diamond—which is right at the heart of the issue in the Red sea—talking to our brave sailors who are out there protecting our critical sea lanes. The House will know that this is the first Royal Navy ship’s company for 32 years who have fired in anger—or in self-defence, in their case. It was fascinating to talk to them about their experience and to witness their professionalism in dealing with this challenge.

It really did not have to be this way. We worked hard to warn the Houthis off. At the start of the year, the world sent a very clear message to the Houthis: “End your illegal and unjustified actions. Stop risking innocent lives. Please stop illegally detaining vessels and crews. Cease threatening the global economy.” All those warnings fell on deaf ears, and eventually enough was enough.

Type
Proceeding contribution
Reference
744 c350 
Session
2023-24
Chamber / Committee
House of Commons chamber
Situation in the Red Sea
Monday, 29 January 2024
Written corrections
House of Commons
Notes
Answer corrected on 29 January 2024 at 744 cc7-8MC.
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