Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 51 total)
  • "Nepalese people spend their time wandering around and sitting on park benches."
  • PeterPoddy
    Free Member

    MP Gerald Howarth has sparked more heated debate by saying Nepalese people spend their time wandering around and sitting on park benches.

    ………….

    He told Mr Wallis it was the elderly Nepalis who retired from the army in the 1970s – who “cannot speak English and do not understand our customs” – who caused problems in Rushmoor

    http://www.gethampshire.co.uk/news/s/2110972_howarth_defends_nepalis_on_park_benches_jibe

    As a resident of Rushmoor Borough, with a Nepalese social club just round the corner etc, I can confirm that the Nepalese DO spend a LOT of time outside, walking (Past our house), in the park, playing sports, chatting, socialising etc.

    And you know what? I think it’s BRILLIANT to see. I’m very flattered that they should come to serve in the British Army, and live here after they retire, (and cook curry in all our local curry houses) lovely, lovely people they are.

    There is no problem that I can see.

    v8ninety
    Full Member

    Agreed.

    philconsequence
    Free Member

    how dare members of the public spend time in public sitting on public benches!

    Harry_the_Spider
    Full Member

    “I was walking around in Aldershot on Saturday and everywhere I went there were Nepalese people just basically sitting out in the open, sitting on the park benches.”

    The bastards.

    CaptainFlashheart
    Free Member

    What a prize fin de la cloche.

    More than happy to have ’em, sitting on park benches or whatever.

    Oh, and besides, he’s going to get Lumleyed now! 🙂

    PeterPoddy
    Free Member

    Well, if we can get them to go and live in Spain, they can keep the Germans and their towels off the sunbeds I suppose……

    Phhhhhhhhhhh 🙄

    philconsequence
    Free Member

    most of the population of aldershot spends its time wandering around, not working.

    although i have noticed them there nepalese wear lots of layers… now they can’t be cold so as they’ve got brown skin i think they must be terrorists hiding something.

    EDIT…. stealing the bolts that hold the park benches together i suspect.

    scud
    Free Member

    I live in Ash Vale and I think we should do everything we can to support them, they have had nothing but a rough deal from the government and a long fight over equal pay/ pensions etc.

    They are some of the hardest working, nicest and polite people you will ever meet and as an ex-squaddie you would never hear a single complaint from any of the Gurkhas they were usually the last ones smiling when times were tough.

    konabunny
    Free Member

    “do not understand our customs”

    Savages. Park benches aren’t for pensioners (quite possibly with ornate moustaches) to sit on. They’re for teenage supercider drinkers to lounge over and write graffiti in permanent marker on.

    muppetWrangler
    Free Member

    Not a lot of Nepalese round this way but I can confirm at elderly Sikh fellas also love a good walk and a park bench.

    Harry_the_Spider
    Full Member

    I would pay good money to watch the right honourable Gerald Howarth MP try and turf a Gurkha, no matter how elderly, off a park bench.

    philconsequence
    Free Member

    They’re for teenage supercider drinkers to lounge over and write graffiti in permanent marker on.

    ahhh you’ve been to aldershot then 😀

    konaboy2275
    Free Member

    Rather than moaning about the Gurkhas wouldn’t it be easier to provide a few more benches? Or would that be too simple…

    v8ninety
    Full Member

    That article is surreal. I would go as far as to say that it is virtually undailymashable…

    PeterPoddy
    Free Member

    wouldn’t it be easier to provide a few more benches?

    Nooooo! That would make the problem WORSE! More benches = More Gurkhas sitting down!

    Peyote
    Free Member

    They’ve opened a few of the derelict shops in Aldershot too: Cool looking tailors, and they don’t half like their bling too!

    Always friendly when I encounter them on the Basingstoke Canal/Blackwater Valley route as well. Although when it gets to Blackberry-ing season they seem to always get first dibs on the best crop (probably ‘cos I don’t get there early enough though!).

    philconsequence
    Free Member

    i know i’d rather sit on a park bench next to a nepalese individual than the average aldershot citizen or the MP complaining about them that’s for sure!

    PeterPoddy
    Free Member

    Although when it gets to Blackberry-ing season they seem to always get first dibs on the best crop

    That’s not just the Gurkhas…. 😳

    🙂

    Rubber_Buccaneer
    Full Member

    Same thing in Farnborough, loads of Nepalese in groups chatting, wandering about or sitting on benches. I have to laugh, they obviously don’t even have Sky TV 🙂

    willard
    Full Member

    On a day like today, I’d like to be outside sitting on a park bench chatting to people, even if it was limited to being in Aldershot.

    Lucky buggers… It’s a nice day for that sort of thing.

    khani
    Free Member

    Oh, and besides, he’s going to get Lumleyed now!

    I’ve been dreaming of that since I was six 😳 the lucky lucky bastard!!!…

    Zulu-Eleven
    Free Member

    As someone who lives just down the road.

    **** ace – more of them please, more curry houses, more fantastic shops in the centre of the shot with lots of lovely spices and smells, lots more fantastic curry houses serving momo’s and chlli bread.

    As for the MP involved – Chuplag Chicknee Mootah! 😉

    PeterPoddy
    Free Member

    than the average aldershot citizen

    AH – HEM!!!

    philconsequence
    Free Member

    lol i said AVERAGE… your garage means you’re above average.

    MEDICAL FACT.

    i was born in aldershot, probably explained the birthmark in the shape of the Kappa logo on my chest.

    rocketman
    Free Member

    MP Gerald Howarth has sparked more heated debate by saying Nepalese people spend their time wandering around and sitting on park benches.

    What an arse 🙄

    Have been to Nepal on three occasions and sitting on a park bench socialising is a fine tradition, everyone does it.

    MSP
    Full Member

    Don’t these “Nepalese” now have British passports?

    Isn’t he basically saying that no benches are available for local people because they have other local people already sitting on them, who just happen to be ex members of a highly respected regiment in her majesty’s armed forces.

    philconsequence
    Free Member

    philconsequence – Member
    how dare members of the public spend time in public sitting on public benches!

    stop copying me MSP! although… they do say imitation is the best form of flattery…

    yunki
    Free Member

    Nepalese = blimmin’ lovely

    FACT

    PeterPoddy
    Free Member

    Phil, I managed to get a pic of you in Swinley when you took your jersey off….

    philconsequence
    Free Member

    😆

    its a motivational tattoo so people behind me try to keep up with my super gnarly riding skillz

    (i had a real moment of fear before the photo loaded thinking you were actually going to post a topless photo of me! i dont take my top off in public for a good reason)

    flippinheckler
    Free Member

    Rather Nepalese sit on public benches than a bunch of piss head teenagers or such like littering the surrounding area also.

    Alpha1653
    Full Member

    You know what? Ive got a big old smile on my face right now due to your comments above about Nepalese people. I was in Nepal last year with the Gurkhas when an MP who shall remain nameless came out to get an idea of what Nepal was like so he could advise with more authority or some other b@llocks. We almost ended in a full blown confrontation as he effectively said that everyone in Aldershot hated Gurkhas because there was too many of them in the area. However, if the comments above are anything to go by, it seems that there’s quite a bit of support for my blokes and their families. Mega.

    AYO GURKHALI!!!

    wrecker
    Free Member

    I was in Nepal last year with the Gurkhas when an MP who shall remain nameless came out to get an idea of what Nepal was like so he could advise with more authority or some other b@llocks.

    Name and indeed shame please.
    We could all learn something from the gurkhas.
    Very respectful and polite people.

    Alpha1653
    Full Member

    I must admit, he shall remain nameless mainly because, in my rage, I forgot his name. In any case, he picked the wrong set of people to wind up as one of the guys had just returned from Afghan where his guys had literally saved his life and wasn’t having anything bad said against them!

    Alpha1653
    Full Member

    Oh yeah, I have GOT to get myself one of those Gurkha lego figures!

    batfink
    Free Member

    what a total b*ll end.
    In related news: it’s noticable how many Gurkha-lookin fellas are now security guards for shops in the area. Wonder how the local tea-leafs are enjoying that!

    Alpha1653
    Full Member

    The post above reminded of this story from early last year. 1 Gurkha vs 40 robbers. Brilliant.

    Gurkhas, the Nepalese elite soldiers in the service of Britain and some of its former colonies, sometimes fight with their traditional kukri knives. One retired Gurkha was carrying his knife when a train in India that he was riding was robbed by forty men.

    The band of about 40 robbers, some of whom were travelling as passengers, stopped the train in the Chittaranjan jungles in West Bengal around midnight. Shrestha– who had boarded the train at Ranchi in Jharkhand, the place of his posting–was in seat no. 47 in coach AC3.

    “They started snatching jewelry, cell phones, cash, laptops and other belongings from the passengers,” Shrestha recalled. The soldier had somehow remained a silent spectator amidst the melee, but not for long. He had had enough when the robbers stripped an 18-year-old girl sitting next to him and tried to rape her right in front of her parents. He then took out his khukuri and took on the robbers.

    “The girl cried for help, saying ´You are a soldier, please save a sister´,” Shrestha recalled. “I prevented her from being raped, thinking of her as my own sister,” he added. He took one of the robbers under control and then started to attack the others. He said the rest of the robbers fled after he killed three of them with his khukuri and injured eight others.

    “Fighting the enemy in battle is my duty as a soldier; taking on the dacoits in the train was my duty as a human being,” said the Indian army nayak.

    bwaarp
    Free Member

    You guys should read the thread on this over at the army rumour service.

    oneoneoneone
    Free Member

    as a ex-squaddie i can honestly say that i have never met a harder working “race” of people they would never complain and where always smiling. Also they “had you back” when we was down the naffi (and the Fijians, Also a top bunch of guys and girls.)

    I think there are other people in this country that we need to worry about before we/they (i wont be taking part) kick off with the gurkhas!

    bloodynora
    Free Member

    The inscription on their war memorial near the MOD is quite apt and a fitting tribute I think.

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