
04-07-07, 21:30
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former OC MLU, AKA 'Jif' - sadly no longer with us
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Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Posts: 5,400
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SIX MORE HAVE FALLEN.....
RIP to the lads and heartfelt condolences to their families and chums.
Quote:
CTV.ca News Staff
Updated: Wed. Jul. 4 2007 1:48 PM ET
A roadside bomb has killed six Canadian soldiers and an Afghan interpreter in the Panjwaii district of Afghanistan.
Brig.-Gen. Tim Grant, commander of Task Force Afghanistan, confirmed the deaths during a news conference Wednesday in Kandahar.
He said the soldiers -- who have not been identified pending notification of next of kin -- were travelling in an RG-31 Nyala armoured vehicle with the interpreter when they were struck by an improvised explosive device.
All the vehicle's occupants were killed.
"We're greatly saddened by the loss of these great young Canadians, exceptional young men," Grant said.
"The attack on us and our Afghan colleagues, however, will not diminish our resolve and our determination to bring to Afghanistan a peaceful land for the children of this country."
The attack happened about 20 kilometres southwest of Kandahar while the soldiers returned to their forward operating base west of Kandahar city, after conducting a joint operation with the Afghan National Army.
Grant told reporters the RG-31 is considered one of the safest vehicles in the Canadian fleet, and was driving on a road that the military has used regularly over the past month.
When asked what steps the military is taking to reduce deaths caused by IEDs, Grant said troops are finding and disarming IEDs more often than not.
"When IEDs are successful they get reported. What doesn't get reported is ... the many number of times where we neutralize IEDs -- when they're pointed out to us by locals, or we find them ourselves. We dismantle them and we exploit them, so we can learn how to defeat them," Grant told reporters.
"We're not perfect, and we do miss some, as we've seen today. But the battle against the Taliban and the battle against their choice of weapons . . . is successful."
CTV's Paul Workman, reporting from Kandahar, said the deadly attack is sure to heighten tension among Canadian troops.
"For many of these soldiers the rotation is almost over. They're thinking about getting on those airplanes and going home to see their families and no one wants to be a late casualty, and that's what we've seen today," Workman told CTV Newsnet.
With the most recent deaths, 66 Canadian military personnel and one diplomat have now been killed in Afghanistan.
Earlier violence
Earlier Wednesday, AP reported that three separate clashes left 20 militants and one police officer dead in Afghanistan.
The gun battles were sparked after militants attacked several checkpoints in Ghazni province in Afghanistan's south, the province's police chief told The Associated Press.
The fighting left 13 militants and one police officer dead.
In separate gun battles in Zabul province on Tuesday, U.S.-led coalition forces fought with suspected Taliban militants in the province's Shahjoy district.
Seven militants were killed and six others were wounded in those battles, according to a spokesperson for the province's governor.
More than 2,400 people have been killed so far this year in Afghanistan, including civilians, militants and troops according to an AP tally.
With files from The Associated Press
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SUNRAY SENDS AND ENDS
:remember :support
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