UK’s Brown forced to surrender on Gurkha rights

LONDON, (Reuters) – British Prime Minister Gordon  Brown suffered the latest in a series of setbacks yesterday  when he caved in to public pressure and said more retired  Nepalese Gurkha soldiers would be allowed to settle in Britain.

Brown was forced to surrender after being outflanked in a  lobbying campaign led by actress Joanna Lumley, whose father  served with the Gurkhas.

Interior minister Jacqui Smith told parliament former  Gurkhas who retired before 1997 with more than four years’  service would now be eligible to apply to live in Britain. She  said that meant up to 15,000 veterans might now apply.

Brown had suffered a parliamentary defeat last month on the  issue, his first since taking over from Tony Blair in 2007.   Lumley, 63, wiped away tears on what she called “a day for  celebration” and thanked Brown who met her at his Downing Street  residence to tell her the Gurkhas had won their battle.
“I want to pay a special tribute to Gordon Brown…a brave  man, who has made today a brave decision on behalf of the  bravest of the brave,” she told reporters outside parliament.

Brown had appeared to misjudge the public mood over the  Gurkhas, who have been fighting for Britain since 1815. Allowing  all veterans to resettle in Britain would cost 1.4 billion  pounds ($2.1 billion) and strain already stretched public  finances, the prime minister argued.

Last month, parliament backed an opposition motion to give  all Gurkha veterans equal rights to stay in Britain. The vote  was not legally binding but it fuelled a growing campaign to  force the government to change its mind.

Smith said the first Gurkhas to be given the right to settle  in Britain were those who served on or after 1 July 1997, when  their base moved to Britain from Hong Kong.

Since then, more than 6,000 Gurkhas and their families have  been given the right to live in Britain.