Today was a day to remember a murdered colleague, Sir David Amess, and to support his wife and children as best we could. The Service at Westminster Cathedral was very poignant indeed, with many hundreds of mourners, led by the PM. A message was read out from the Pope himself, who praised Sir David for years of "devoted public service". Having never been in the Cathedral, the experience was quite something. The Service was a Requiem Mass, taken by Cardinal Vincent Nichols, the Archbishop of Westminster. There were hymns, readings and an excellent eulogy by the Rt Hon Ann Widdecombe DSG. The choir was spectacular and performed brilliantly. In all, in was the most appropriate send-off to good man who died doing his duty. I sincerely hope that all the feelings of love and sympathy provided some form of cloak of warmth to Sir David's family and friends. Back to the Commons and a quick sandwich before I headed to CR8 for the next session of our Defence Committee. This was the final session on Afghanistan and we took oral evidence from two panels. The first consisted of the distinguished US General, David Petraeus. Jeff Harrison and Sarah Jones, from Combat Stress and Help for Heroes, respectively, made up the second. It was a most interested two hours, which can be seen on Parliament TV. Meanwhile, the Health & Care Bill continued in the Chamber. I had listened carefully to this Bill for two days and could not support it on Third Reading. I abstained to mark the Government's card. The problem with this Bill was that there too many add-ons which I disagree with fundamentally, not least making the fluoridisation of our water mandatory. There were other nanny-state issues, too, which, again, I could not agree with. And, of course, there was the social care cap which had been changed and dumped on us only days before we debated it. I very much hope the Lords will look at this Bill carefully and amend it accordingly. Why my last point was not held back for the expected White Paper, I do not know. Meanwhile, over in Northern Ireland people were being urged by Stormont ministers to work from home "where possible" in a bid to curb the spread of Covid-19. Current advice already states that people should work from home where they can but ministers said they were "strengthening" that message. It follows an executive meeting about how to tackle rising infections. Ministers are also advising the public to limit their social contacts and wear face coverings in indoor settings. And, tonight, Scotland's vaccine passport system will not be extended to more venues, Nicola Sturgeon announced. The first minister had been considering expanding the scheme to cover cinemas, theatres and other hospitality venues. But she told MSPs that it would not be proportionate to do so, with case numbers having fallen slightly. Finally, the foreign secretary admitted that Parliament and the public were misled for decades about a British Airways flight which landed in Kuwait during an Iraqi invasion in 1990. The passengers and crew of BA 149 were taken hostage, with many mistreated. Newly released files reveal that the British ambassador in Kuwait warned the Foreign Office about the invasion, but BA was not told. The government kept the warning secret for three decades.