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Neil Griffiths: Fight must continue for the rights of Gurkhas

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Published Date: 30 April 2009
IN recent years I've completed seven 200-mile trans-Scotland marches with serving Gurkhas to raise funds for their impoverished forebears who receive no pension from those they served so faithfully, the British. We raised £800,000.
The sum's enormous size tells me all I need to know about Scotland's respect and fondness for the wee men from the high Himalayas. The huge fury generated by last week's Home Office announcement that nearly all Gurkhas who retired before 1997 have no
right to live in the UK has confirmed it.

The Home Office claims these Gurkhas do not have sufficient links with Britain to be entitled to stay here. Let's get this right: Gurkhas who have served the Crown, put their lives at risk to fight for our liberty and safety, and won 13 VCs in the process, are not welcome in the UK if they left the Army before 1997?

How can you give the same group of people different rights because of a date? The Government claims that it was in 1997 that the Brigade of Gurkhas moved from Hong Kong as if this was of mystic importance, whereas Gurkhas have been based at Church Crookham since the 1960s.

Last year, a High Court ruled that preventing Gurkhas from staying in the UK was illegal. The minister last week was at his weakest trying to explain how his department had overturned the law of the land. There was a theoretical possibility, he warned, that 100,000 Gurkhas and dependents could settle here. Perhaps he hadn't noticed that nearly all of Europe has a theoretical right to live here too.

Meanwhile, fundamentalists such as Abu Qatada are free to stay, free to claim benefits and free to mouth their poison at our whole way of life. Even by the British government's traditional standards, it's an utter disgrace.

I have an e-mail from Joanna Lumley who says the campaign for equal rights for all Gurkhas, on par with British Army troops, will continue. A former Gurkha had written to her saying he has no fear any more as he knows the hearts of the British people will not let him down.

• Neil Griffiths, Royal British Legion Scotland




Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 30 April 2009 8:43 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

tree,

Edinburgh 30/04/2009 09:07:39
Surely now Gurkhas who served with the British Army, and their families must be allowed in? If not, it makes a mockery of the democratic process, and we have "Brown, the wee dictator" in power instead of an elected government.
2

,

30/04/2009 15:58:13
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
3

Ima Stoner,

HIGH street, Edinburgh 01/05/2009 12:01:34
To fight and lay your life on the line for Britain and then get treated like sh*t is unforgiveable. Meanwhile, we have Albanian gangsters, Eastern European beggars and other foreign criminals getting to stay here and get all the benefits going - not to mention the fact that the Poles can send money home to Poland for their (alleged) children! This government stinks and I'm glad the backbenchers saw sense. Joanna Lumley for Prime Minister!
4

plord,

edinburgh 01/05/2009 19:12:21
Our Government spend millions protecting themselves and buying second homes, then object to soldiers who put their lives at risk serving in our military from living in the UK.
The true spirit of the rule changes was shown by the 20 year rule, a rule that would/could only be applied to officers and warrant officers and not the ordinary riflemen. Class war? divide and conquer? Remember this is the labour party. shown to be amoral, small minded tossers. Did I mention Greedy, lying, I'm all right jack, obsequies curmudgeons?
I'll vote for them after they join the TA and take a wage cut to the UK average and start listening to their constituents.

 

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