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84-year-old gurkha gets to stay in uk

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    #61
    Originally posted by sasguru


    Even Shaun got to peel potatoes for his country
    Transexual mermen are exempt.

    Comment


      #62
      Originally posted by shaunbhoy
      And what the fook would YOU know about service to this country you fecking xenophobic dimwit? I suppose the fact that the country is unlikely ever to be desperate enough to require any service you might be able to provide it means you feel immune to considering the efforts of others that due to nothing more than an accident of birth were not born here? W anker!!
      diddums... are you going to go into Uncle Albert mode?
      Last edited by Troll; 5 June 2007, 19:02.
      How fortunate for governments that the people they administer don't think

      Comment


        #63
        Originally posted by Mailman
        In essence the Ghurka's are second class soldiers.
        Mailman
        This is at the heart of the problem - are the Gurkhas mercenaries or equal partners in the British Army- & it looks like they are using the discrimination legisation to force the changes

        but the original terms of service were quite clear
        The return of Gurkhas to Nepal following the end of their service is governed by the "Tripartite Agreement" dating from 1947. This states:

        "Gurkhas are enlisted as Nepalese citizens, they remain Nepalese citizens throughout their service and they are discharged in Nepal at the end of their service."
        How fortunate for governments that the people they administer don't think

        Comment


          #64
          Originally posted by Troll
          This is at the heart of the problem - are the Gurkhas mercenaries or equal partners in the British Army- & it looks like they are using the discrimination legisation to force the changes

          but the original terms of service were quite clear
          The Gurkhas are an established part of the British Army and have been since 1947 (although their history extends back another 100 odd years further back than that).

          And being a contractor I know you will be fully conversant with contracts where sections are added that you have no control over. Somehow I doubt when India and Britain was negotiating independence that the Gurkhas actually had any say in whether they would be or not be second class soldiers in the British Army.

          BUT, I go back to an earlier posting of mine, what Im REALLY interested in is the thinking that went in to the original declined request. What weight did the moron attach to the fact this guy HAD fought for King and Country and was awarded the highest military honour in the world. How is this NOT demonstrating a link back to this country?

          Mailman

          Comment


            #65
            Originally posted by Mailman
            BUT, I go back to an earlier posting of mine, what Im REALLY interested in is the thinking that went in to the original declined request. What weight did the moron attach to the fact this guy HAD fought for King and Country and was awarded the highest military honour in the world. How is this NOT demonstrating a link back to this country?

            Mailman
            In addition to the enormous manpower made available there were many personal gestures on the part of the Minister and Court of Nepal. Large sums of money for the purchase of weapons and equipment, including money for the provision of fighter aircraft during the Battle of Britain, were presented as gifts from Nepal. Considerable sums of money were also donated to the Lord Mayor of London during the Blitz for the relief of victims in the dockland area. An equally generous response was made to a variety of appeals for aid – all this from a country which was then, and still is by western standards, desperately poor.

            The spirit of this friendship can best be illustrated by the reply made to the Prime Minister of Nepal to the British Minister in Kathmandu after the fall of France in 1940. When Britain stood alone.

            Permission was sought to recruit an additional 20 battalions for the Gurkha Brigade, and for Gurkha troops to be allowed to serve in any part of the world. This was readily granted by the Prime Minister who remarked, “Does a friend desert a friend in time of need? If you win, we win with you. If you lose, we lose with you”. The whole of the Nepalese Army was again placed at the disposal of the British Crown.
            How fortunate for governments that the people they administer don't think

            Comment


              #66
              Originally posted by Troll
              In addition to the enormous manpower made available there were many personal gestures on the part of the Minister and Court of Nepal. Large sums of money for the purchase of weapons and equipment, including money for the provision of fighter aircraft during the Battle of Britain, were presented as gifts from Nepal. Considerable sums of money were also donated to the Lord Mayor of London during the Blitz for the relief of victims in the dockland area. An equally generous response was made to a variety of appeals for aid – all this from a country which was then, and still is by western standards, desperately poor.

              The spirit of this friendship can best be illustrated by the reply made to the Prime Minister of Nepal to the British Minister in Kathmandu after the fall of France in 1940. When Britain stood alone.

              Permission was sought to recruit an additional 20 battalions for the Gurkha Brigade, and for Gurkha troops to be allowed to serve in any part of the world. This was readily granted by the Prime Minister who remarked, “Does a friend desert a friend in time of need? If you win, we win with you. If you lose, we lose with you”. The whole of the Nepalese Army was again placed at the disposal of the British Crown.
              Doesn't all this go against the spirit of your first posts?
              Hard Brexit now!
              #prayfornodeal

              Comment


                #67
                Originally posted by sasguru
                Doesn't all this go against the spirit of your first posts?
                Shushh dullard
                Last edited by Troll; 6 June 2007, 09:58.
                How fortunate for governments that the people they administer don't think

                Comment


                  #68
                  Originally posted by Troll
                  Shushh dullard

                  pot, kettle ....
                  Hard Brexit now!
                  #prayfornodeal

                  Comment


                    #69
                    Originally posted by sasguru
                    Doesn't all this go against the spirit of your first posts?
                    Its a cut and paste off google

                    Mailman

                    Comment


                      #70
                      So I conclude that all Troll's posts are random pieces of tulipe with no logic whatsoever

                      Anyway what happened to you Mailman? You don't seem to be the villaage idiot anymore. Mind you the competition has got a lot stiffer recently.
                      Hard Brexit now!
                      #prayfornodeal

                      Comment

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