Top Gear's Jeremy Clarkson Slammed In Argentina For 'Driving Porsche With Falklands War Number Plate'

Jeremy Clarkson 'Drove Through Argentina With A Falklands War Number Plate'
|

Jeremy Clarkson has stirred controversy in Argentina by driving through the country in a Porsche with a number plate interpreted to reference the 1982 Falklands war.

Clarkson, who was shooting for BBC show Top Gear, was filmed driving the car – with the plate H982 FKL – for a 1,350-mile journey on the Patagonian Highway.

Open Image Modal

Jeremy Clarkson was filming a Top Gear episode in Argentina along with co-presenters Richard Hammond and James May

Leading Argentinian newspaper Clarin described the issue as “highly sensitive for the Argentines… Clarkson would have had problems, no doubt.”

Argentina’s military government invaded the Falklands in 1982, citing a territorial claim dating back to Spanish colonial times.

Open Image Modal

Jeremy Clarkson was shooting a forthcoming episode of Top Gear in Argentina

The 74-day war claimed the lives of 649 Argentinians and 255 Britons.

Clarkson tackled the controversy on Twitter. He addressed the Mirror newspaper to deny earlier claims the BBC had told him “not to misbehave” while filming abroad and posted a photograph of himself standing in front of a serene landscape.

In a separate post also directed at the Mirror, he eloquently added: “You there: Fuck off. And when you get there, fuck off from there too. Then fuck off some more. Keep fucking off until you get back here.”

A spokesman for Top Gear told Huffington Post UK: “Production decided what cars they wanted for the trip and the budget per car. A production assistant bought three cars.

“An Argentinian newspaper decided that as the number plate contains the letters FKL and number 982, it must be a reference to the war. It is not. Nor did Jeremy choose or purchase the car.”

Executive producer Andy Wilman said: “Top Gear production purchased three cars for a forthcoming programme; to suggest this car was either chosen for its number plate, or that an alternative number plate was substituted for the original is completely untrue.”