Gurkha breaks hunger strike after Britain launches pensions probe
Former member of British army's Nepali regiment ends fast as parliament agrees to investigate greivances
A former Gurkha ended a two-week hunger strike on Thursday after lawmakers in the UK launched a probe into pension and other rights for the Nepalese soldiers who serve in the British army.
Gyanraj Rai, 55, had been camped out opposite Prime Minister David Cameron’s Downing Street office in London threatening to starve himself to death.
Earlier this week around 1,000 ex-Gurkhas marched past Downing Street to highlight their call for better pension, benefits and health care rights.
Lawmaker Rob Wilson from Cameron’s Conservative party brokered a deal between campaigners and parliamentarians to end the protest.
A cross-party commission will take written and oral evidence before reporting its findings, which will be considered by the government next year.
Actress Joanna Lumley, a fervent supporter of the Gurkhas’ cause, gave Rai a glass of fruit juice with which he broke his hunger strike.