The final week before our Easter break. Mondays are always busy, not least catching up on correspondence that's come in over the weekend. At 1420 I was sitting in the Chamber waiting for Defence Questions to begin after Prayers. I had been contacted by a friend, a former member of the Welsh Guards, who was aboard RFA Sir Galahad when she was bombed during the Falklands War, regarding a Question about this event. There are still some private documents relating to this sad event and my friend and others want them made public. After the war, questions were asked about the action of the Welsh Guards leading to the bombing which unfairly damaged their reputation and they want this put right. I saw that Labour MP Jessica Morden was to raise this issue in Question One. There were several other MPs on both sides of the House who questioned the minister on what action he was taking to publicise these documents. With this topic well covered, I rose to raise the question of defence spending. The excellent Armed Forces' minister, James Heappey, answered my question, so it gave me the opportunity to thank him for his time in office after he announced he was standing down, both as a minister and as an MP at the next election. Our loss. I also pulled his leg, saying that his commitment to collection responsibility would soon be over when he could speak his mind. My question and his reply are on the website. I then remained in the Chamber for the first of two Statements. The Deputy PM, Oliver Dowden, told MPs that China had been identified as the one responsible for a wave of cyber attacks directed at politicians and institutions. However, our response was met by disbelief on both sides of the House as simply not good enough. I caught the Speaker's eye and passed on information that I'd learnt during one of our Defence Committee sessions that defence companies were finding it hard to recruit students studying AI as they were all Chinese and therefore a security risk. An uncomfortable truth. Then, back to the office, before I was enticed out into Parliament Square by a cacophony of noise which turned out to be protesting farmers. Arriving in dozens of tractors, they circled the Square, blowing horns and surrounded by supporters on foot. At 1900, I attended a private drinks do with a colleague. Plenty to chew on. The Investigatory Powers Bill went on to quite late and ended with three votes. In other news, two men were found guilty of murdering 23-year-old Cody Fisher, who was stabbed to death in a nightclub. Abroad, the United Nations Security Council passed a resolution that demands a ceasefire in Gaza for the rest of Ramadan. Israel was understandably furious. They are fighting for their lives against a terror organisation and it seems that the massacre of innocents on 7 October has all but been forgotten. Donald Trump will face the first ever criminal trial of a former US president on 15 April over alleged hush money payments to adult film star Stormy Daniels. And four men appeared in a Russian court on terrorism charges, following an attack on a concert hall in Moscow that killed more than 130 people.