It’s time to call a spade a spade. To any neutral observer, war crimes are being committed by Israel in Gaza. Thousands of innocent men, women and children are dead. Thousands more are injured.

A concrete city has been reduced to mounds of debris burying Palestinians, both living and dead. Bombs are raining down on hospitals and new-born babies have died as they can’t be given that most basic of things, oxygen.

Israel has a right to defend itself, but the collective punishment of the Palestinian people is beyond that. The Geneva Convention is explicitly clear and we have a responsibility to call it out. These are war crimes.

Humanitarian pauses, or whatever the latest term is for doing nothing, pose more questions than they answer. With communication shaky at best, the people of Gaza are expected to know when a four-hour pause in the mayhem begins then make the dangerous trip across Gaza with no fuel.

At the very best, they might be able to gain access to some food or water knowing that they’ll soon be facing bombs again. At least they’ll not die hungry, maybe. And if you do manage to flee your home area. When will you return? And to what?

Given the number of illegal settlements already in place is it any wonder that Palestinians might be a bit sceptical that they’ll have land to return to? That is why the SNP will force a vote on a ceasefire this week in Westminster. Our first opportunity to do so.

A ceasefire will allow a sustained period to get food, fuel, emergency services in and allow people out. Importantly, hostages too. While the Tories and Labour won’t support a ceasefire, the SNP do not stand alone.

From the UN Secretary General to the former Foreign Secretary, David Miliband, leading voices have thrown their weight behind one. Lest we forget of course, the French President too. And Sir Keir knows many in his ranks want it too.

The masters of war tell us that a ceasefire isn’t possible. But it isn’t possible when countries, like the UK, a permanent member of the UN Security Council no less, cannot muster the courage to call for it.

Let there be no doubt, this conflict is different in scale and sheer loss to all other periods of violence since Hamas took control of Gaza. But let us not forget that in those other outbreaks a ceasefire was eventually agreed.

If we give up on that quest for peace, then just what else are we prepared to give up on? It is for these reasons that we want a parliamentary vote.

My heart sank when it was put to me by a journalist that we were simply playing politics with Labour divisions on a ceasefire. If we don’t force Westminster to vote on the single biggest international human catastrophe then what’s the point of the place?

Is the SNP seriously expected to sit and do nothing? Give me a break. Just as with the Iraq war, we won’t keep schtum while Labour and the Tories allow carnage to unfold. Not a chance.

A few years ago, I visited the Franklin D Roosevelt memorial in Washington D.C. A quote of his on it read: "The structure of world peace cannot be the work of one man, or one party, or one nation... it must be a peace which rests on the cooperative effort of the whole world."

The UK is missing in action in that cooperative effort, and we intend to make them recognise it.

No matter the hatred of Suella Braverman, we will remember them


It was an honour to lay a wreath at the Cenotaph on Sunday. We remember all those who served and the immense sacrifice I can't even begin to imagine.

I think of my Grandfather who fought in WW2 and those who laid down their lives to allow us the freedoms we hold today. Freedoms that include the right to express political opinion without fear. To protest.

Now, I don't want to waste words on the mindless right-wing thugs who stormed the police lines on Saturday. Egged on by Suella Braverman they were a disgrace incomparable to anything else witnessed over the weekend.

There is a key difference between an organised protest with incidents of trouble and a planned act of aggression and violence. The actions of those morons put the quiet dignity of remembrance at risk. But only at risk.

Because at the Cenotaph on Sunday and in communities across these islands from Aberdeen to Aberystwyth, services of remembrance continued with that honour and dignity that we should always protect.

No matter the hatred that Suella Braverman, Tommy Robinson or anyone tries to stir up, we will remember them. And we will remember just what it was our forefathers fought against 80 years ago.

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Aberdeen should be given half the ticket allocation for the League Cup final

Next month Aberdeen play Rangers in the League Cup final. The game will be played at a neutral venue, our national stadium Hampden. Next joke please.

The only truth there is the game being played at Hampden. The stadium with a 'Rangers End' and where the sheep haven't been given a chance to sell an equal share of tickets.

Our footballing bodies do themselves no favours. But here's my tip, if they want a PR hit, go back to the drawing board and give the Dons a fair kick at the ball. Oh and while they're at it, get ahead of the curve and bin VAR.

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