After these signs of hope, I turn to more traditional themes: Israel/Palestine and the Syrian Refugee Crisis.
The Syrian Refugee Crisis is affecting Jordan, Turkey, and particularly Lebanon, where there was a delicate balance between Shi'as, Sunnis and Christian groups.
As the second biggest donor to the Syrian Refugee Crisis, will the Minister confirm that we are helping the second largest number of Syrian children?
Amnesty International is right to describe the Syrian Refugee Crisis as an international failure.
The British Government have been among the most generous donors to the humanitarian response to the Syrian Refugee Crisis, and I want to place on the record my congratulations to them on their strong leadership.
My right hon. Friend the Under-Secretary of State for International Development is in Bangladesh on a departmental visit, and my right hon. Friend the Minister of State, Department for International Development, is in Berlin at a conference on the Syrian Refugee Crisis.
Given the unprecedented magnitude of the Syrian Refugee Crisis, will the Minister ensure that the UK Government are represented at that conference?
May we have a debate on the Syrian Refugee Crisis?
I was merely saying that I think this country can be proud of the contribution we have made to help to deal with the Syrian Refugee Crisis.
We will not resolve the Syrian Refugee Crisis unless there is a wider resolution to the Syrian problem.
We continue to do so, and that applies no differently when dealing with the Syrian Refugee Crisis.
Does he agree that it is extremely important that none of the aid that will be spent here as a result of the Syrian Refugee Crisis should be diverted away from Yemen at this critical time in its history?
As Members across the House will be aware, the issue has been particularly highlighted over the summer with the Syrian Refugee Crisis, and people have expressed concern about people entering this country, but also compassion for the welfare and well-being of the victims of dictators, traffickers and terrorist groups.
That is not an attack by any means on the compassion we have seen across the nation during the Recent Syrian Refugee Crisis.
We allowed the Home Secretary to make a statement about the Syrian Refugee Crisis headed, “Immigration”, which was an utterly shocking piece of bad naming, misrepresenting the true situation in the Mediterranean.
Would the hon. Gentleman not agree that the Government's approach to the Syrian Refugee Crisis, which concentrates our help on the camps and taking people from there, directly helps refugees?
Does the Prime Minister not think that his chances of securing support from the member states for his proposals - whatever the details of those may be - would be enhanced by him playing his full, proper and proportionate part in the Syrian Refugee Crisis, which certainly does not mean fewer than two refugees per constituency by Christmas?
People look at Britain's contribution, particularly our financial contribution to the Syrian Refugee Crisis, and they see that we are playing a very full role.
The Syrian Refugee Crisis is a humanitarian disaster of epic scale and biblical proportions.
In our previous debate on the Syrian Refugee Crisis, I spoke of the desperate plight of the Palestinians of Yarmouk camp caught between Daesh and Assad's forces, their only choice to stay and face near starvation and typhoid in the camp, or to chance their fate with the people traffickers, although for many even that horrific choice is unavailable as they simply do not have the funds to pay those evil people.
The House of Commons International Development Select Committee is currently conducting an inquiry into the Syrian Refugee Crisis.
We did not suddenly respond to the Syrian Refugee Crisis; we have been giving that £1 billion over the last four years.
The International Development Committee is looking at the Syrian Refugee Crisis and we plan to publish our report in early January.
At a time when all eyes are on the Syrian Refugee Crisis, the world cannot forget such crises elsewhere.
If only other EU countries were as generous to those programmes as we have been, we would ease the Syrian Refugee Crisis by a huge amount.
It is a pleasure to have the opportunity to speak in it as a member of the Select Committee on International Development, having been involved in the recent inquiry into the Syrian Refugee Crisis.
We have just heard that the demands of the Syrian Refugee Crisis have put pressure on DfID's development budget.
Some say the Syrian Refugee Crisis has had an impact on terrorist incidents across Europe and will therefore have an impact on the UK.
Can we be satisfied that the Government have reviewed their policy, given the cutbacks that have been applied in sub-Saharan Africa in order to support the Syrian Refugee Crisis?
The Syrian Refugee Crisis must be considered in the context of the wider global situation.
The Syrian Refugee Crisis was without doubt one of the defining issues of 2015, and it continues to dominate the news in 2016.
There is conflict around the world just now, and we know the scale of the Syrian Refugee Crisis, so it is easy to become immune to a figure of 165,000, but that is still a huge number of people who are suffering.
7% of GDP that goes in aid, and we also support how much has been done to help the areas affected by the Syrian Refugee Crisis in particular.
In January the International Development Committee published its first report of this Parliament on the Syrian Refugee Crisis.