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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament 19 March 2026 [Draft]

19 Mar 2026 · S6 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Invasion of Ukraine
Kerr, Stephen Con Central Scotland Watch on SPTV

I am pleased to follow Kevin Stewart in giving his last address to the Scottish Parliament. Of course, I wish him all the very best. He is right, as were Murdo Fraser and Kenny Gibson, to highlight the response of the communities of Scotland and the resilience of the Ukrainian people. Ukraine is fighting for its survival and our freedom. It is right that we take this time in Parliament to place on record our solidarity with the Ukrainian people and with the brave men and women of the Ukrainian armed forces defending their country.

We should be in no doubt about what this war is. It is not a misunderstanding or a border dispute—it is a criminal and illegal invasion, ordered by Vladimir Putin. He has behaved not as a statesman but as a gangster. The destruction of cities, the deaths and injuries of tens of thousands of civilians and the displacement of millions are the direct consequences of his aggression.

In recent months, the scale of the attacks has intensified. Ukrainian cities are being subjected to mass drone and missile strikes night after night, with hundreds of drones in a single wave, dozens of missiles fired in one barrage, power stations destroyed, homes flattened, children killed, and families left in the winter without heat or electricity. Those are not legitimate military targets. The attacks are acts of terror directed at a civilian population. Let us not forget that against that brutality stands the extraordinary courage of the Ukrainian people. We should also remember the many Ukrainian women and children who came here to Scotland, as has been mentioned, at the beginning of the conflict, and how the communities of Scotland have stepped forward.

Britain has the right—and has been right—to stand firmly with Ukraine. The training given by British forces and the equipment supplied has mattered enormously, but this is not the moment for any slackening of that commitment. Ukraine’s security is bound up with our national interest. Indeed, the war in Ukraine is teaching us a hard lesson that drone warfare at scale is now the method of choice in such conflicts. It has also taught us the critical importance of air defence and the need to provide munitions in serious quantities.

That is the reality. Those lessons must be learned quickly. Britain must increase defence spending. We must expand our munitions production and invest in systems that defend our homeland against mass drone and missile attack. We should be stockpiling drones and strengthening ground-based air defences. In time, Britain will need its own equivalent of an iron dome.

However, it is not just about equipment but about people. We need to encourage more young Scots into the defence industry, engineering, advanced manufacturing and apprenticeships in the high-technology drone sector that is reshaping modern warfare. Those are skilled, high-value jobs for the young people of Scotland and they are critical to our national security.

That is why the Scottish National Party’s position is, at times, frustrating, to be frank. Warm words about Ukraine mean little if there is hesitation about the industrial effort that is required to produce the munitions and equipment that Ukraine needs. These are serious times and they demand serious politics.

The international community must remain firm. Sanctions on Russia must not weaken. There are suggestions in the light of tensions in the middle east that oil and gas sanctions should be released. That would be a profound mistake. It would be a betrayal of our values. Russia’s war must not be financed by the revenue that sanctions were designed to constrain. The only way to protect peace is to be strong in the face of aggression. Britain must stand—we must stand—firmly beside Ukraine until the war ends in a just peace and their victory because aggression must never be rewarded.

In the same item of business

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
The next item of business is a members’ business debate on motion S6M-20434, in the name of Kenneth Gibson, on approaching the fourth anniversary of Russia’s...
Kenneth Gibson (Cunninghame North) (SNP) SNP
I thank Ross Greer, Paul Sweeney and my Scottish National Party colleagues, who signed my motion to enable this debate to take place.I welcome the members of...
Murdo Fraser (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con) Con
I associate myself entirely with everything that Kenny Gibson is saying. He might be coming on to talk about the support that people in Scotland are showing ...
Kenneth Gibson SNP
I absolutely agree with that very welcome intervention. Indeed, it means that I no longer have to cover that part of my speech, because Mr Fraser has touched...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
Before we move to the open debate, I encourage members who wish to participate to make sure that their cards are in and that they have pressed their request-...
Kevin Stewart (Aberdeen Central) (SNP) SNP
I thank Kenny Gibson for securing the debate. This is likely to be my last speech in this place.Last month marked four years since Putin’s full-scale invasio...
Stephen Kerr (Central Scotland) (Con) Con
I am pleased to follow Kevin Stewart in giving his last address to the Scottish Parliament. Of course, I wish him all the very best. He is right, as were Mur...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
Before I call the next speaker, I encourage the cabinet secretary to put his card in. I call Jamie Hepburn.13:07
Jamie Hepburn (Cumbernauld and Kilsyth) (SNP) SNP
I pay tribute to and thank my friend Kevin Stewart for his many years of public service and wish him all the best for the future.I am also grateful for the o...
Colin Beattie (Midlothian North and Musselburgh) (SNP) SNP
I thank Kenny Gibson for securing this members’ business debate; however, I am saddened that it is still necessary. The brutal and illegal full-scale invasio...
Paul Sweeney (Glasgow) (Lab) Lab
I congratulate Mr Gibson, the member for Cunninghame North, on securing today’s debate with his members’ business motion, which I was pleased to sign.More th...
Willie Coffey (Kilmarnock and Irvine Valley) (SNP) SNP
I thank Kenny Gibson for bringing this debate to the chamber, four years on from the start of the conflict. It is perhaps a sign that four years have passed ...
The Cabinet Secretary for Constitution, External Affairs and Culture (Angus Robertson) SNP
I thank colleagues for their thoughtful contributions to this debate. The Scottish Parliament speaks with one voice in solidarity with Ukraine. If one was wa...
Murdo Fraser Con
I have written to the cabinet secretary about Tayside and Strathearn Help for Ukraine, which is still being overwhelmed with donations from people across Sco...
Angus Robertson SNP
I hear the concerns that Murdo Fraser has raised. I will look very closely and as sympathetically as I can at the correspondence.After he intervened earlier,...
Stephen Kerr Con
Does the cabinet secretary agree that the seized assets that belong to Russian oligarchs and other friends of Putin should be put immediately at the disposal...
Angus Robertson SNP
The simple answer is yes, and we should be getting on with it. I appeal to the European Union in particular to look at that matter closely. I also take the o...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Liam McArthur) LD
That concludes the debate, and I suspend this meeting of the Parliament until 2 o’clock.13:35Meeting suspended.14:00On resuming—