News of the people, by the people, for the people

Singapore's Gurkha Contingent likely to guard Trump-Kim summit

by: Christino Jefrey
8 June, 2018

Singaporean police Gurkha Contingent will be securing the historic summit between US President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un later this month.

A Reuters report quoting diplomats familiar with VIP security in the Singapore stated that while both leaders will bring their own personal security teams, elite Singaporean police, including its Gurkha Contingent, will be securing the summit venue, roads and hotels.

 The Gurkhas, who have a low-profile presence in Singapore, were more visible than usual at the weekend as they secured the Shangri-La Hotel for a security conference that included Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, U.S. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis and other regional ministers, according to the report.

 

 As per the report, the Gurkhas, recruited by the Singapore police from the hills of faraway Nepal, were kitted out in body armor, Belgian-made FN SCAR combat assault rifles and pistols in leg holsters at the conference, in what some security experts believed was a dry run for the U.S.-North Korea summit.

 Despite all the advanced weaponry, the Gurkhas do not prepare for battle without the Khukuri and according to custom the khukri must draw blood every time it is unsheathed.

 “They are among the best Singapore can offer, and I am sure they will be involved (in the summit),” said Tim Huxley, an expert on Singapore’s armed forces at the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS), “They remain very much a substantial and frontline force, and the demands of this kind of event are precisely the sort of special operation that the Gurkhas are trained to handle.”

However, a spokesman for the Singapore police declined to comment on the deployment of the Gurkhas or their numbers.

 The IISS Military Balance says 1,800 Gurkhas serve in the Singapore police, across six paramilitary companies.

 A legacy in part of the British colonial era and more recent pragmatic Singaporean leadership, Singapore’s Gurkhas are linked to a British tradition that has recruited and paid for elite regiments of soldiers from Nepal for more than 200 years.

 Beaten back by the Gurkhas in the 19th century Anglo-Nepalese War and admired for their valor and fighting skills, the colonial British then began to recruit them. Now Gurkhas serve in the British, Indian and Nepalese armies, as well as in Brunei and Singapore.

They have fought in both world wars as well as the Falklands conflict and, more recently, in Afghanistan.




http://bit.ly/2JivQ6s

Top Stories

33 kg gold smuggling case: Police raid Mohan Agrawal’s house

Police on Friday carried out a raid at the house of Mohan Agrawal, the main investor of 33 kg gold, at Anamnagar in the Capital.

9 June, 2018

NOC Managing Director Khadka resigns

8 June, 2018

Singapore's Gurkha Contingent likely to guard Trump-Kim summit

8 June, 2018

Abandoned 'ghost village' in China becomes overgrown

9 June, 2018

The unexpected philosophy the icelanders live by

10 June, 2018

Balloons that could replace satellites

10 June, 2018