My schoolboy economics tells me this is the wrong strategy.
Raising interest rates is a good tool when "normal" inflation (i.e. too much money chasing too few goods) is evident. It takes money from consumers, tempering demand, and easing price increases.
This is not normal inflation. It has been principally caused by high energy costs (both domestic and industry) and high fuel costs (with a bit of supply chain probems thrown in) . These feed through to prices for all consumer goods. The problem is, people have not got "too much money" as they have when traditional inflation is evident. The sharp rises in fuel and (particularly) energy costs has left many people struggling. All that will happen now is what money they have got will go on increased fuel and energy costs, their discretionary spending will have to reduce as a result and recession will be the end product. Raising interest rates, in these circumstances, will do nothing to quell inflation as energy and fuel consumption is not something that individuals and industries can readily reduce. The answer to the problem lays way back in the past when successive governments began contracting out the nation's energy supplies when they had perfectly good sources at home. It won't be cured by increasing interest rates by half a point.