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Topic: 3 more soldiers from 2 VP killed in action (Read 505 times)
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Guy Lagassé
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Three Canadian soldiers killed, 5 wounded in Zhari
Three Canadians soldiers have been killed and five wounded during an insurgent attack in Afghanistan Wednesday morning.
03/09/2008 1:07:22 PM
CTV.ca News Staff
The soldiers from the Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry were on a security patrol in a light armoured vehicle (LAV) when they came under attack, said Brig. Gen. Denis Thompson.
Following are the names of those killed:
Cpl. Andrew Grenon Cpl. Mike Seggie Pte. Chad Horn "The brave soldiers killed today were coming to the end of their tour and it saddens me to think of their loved ones awaiting their return later this month," Thompson said.
He released few details about the attack except to say the soldiers were not killed by an improvised explosive device, but by a direct attack in Zhari district of Kandahar province.
Of the five soldiers wounded in the attack, one is in critical condition, one is in serious but stable condition, two are considered to be in good condition and one has been treated and released, Thompson said.
The Princess Pats are based in Shilo, Man.
In total, 96 Canadian soldiers and one diplomat have now been killed in Afghanistan.
RIP my Brothers
Guy L.
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Guy Lagassé
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Sad thing they were due to go home this month... Short timers.
Guy
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David Payne
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Regrets to three more families and friends.
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Guy Lagassé
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And the families of the 2 critical guys...
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Mike Blais
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A ROYAL CANADIAN "NEVER PASSES A FAULT"
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RIP
VP
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1RCR 1977-79 Depot (Italy PL), B Coy, Mortars, Pioneers, D Coy (CFB London) 3RCR 1979-82 M Coy, Pipes & Drums, Sigs, Mortars. (CFB Baden-Soellingen) 1RCR 1982-88 Mortars. Dukes, Cyprus-Welfare NCO 84-85, Injured, WO&Sgts Mess, (CFB London) 1988-92 Med-remuster to HELL/ 35 DU, CFB Baden 1992 Medical release. God Bless you all!
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Buzz Gomes
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My Regrets and Prayers to the families and friends.
Buzz
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1964-1968- 2 QOR Calgary, Cyprus 1968-1971- 2 CDO Edmonton 1971-1975- 3 Mech CDO Germany, A Coy Mor 1975-1983- 1 RCR London, Bn Tpt,C Coy, B Coy, Recce 1983-1985- RCR Battle School 1985-1990-1 RCR, B Coy, Dukes, Recce, Cyprus 1990-1992- OMD HQ Ottawa, G3 Trg 1992-1993- LMD HQ London, G3 Trg 1993-2007-4 RCR, RSM Retired CWO
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jgilligan
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My sincerest condolences to their families and friends and wishes for a speedy recovery to the wounded .
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ranrad
Ron [Andy] Andrews
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My condolences to all our brothers, and their families and friends..may those wounded ,recover fully.. and THANK YOU TO YOU ALL FOR YOUR DEDICATION , SERVICE AND SACRIFICE... my heart is very heavy...GOD BLESS YOU ALL... ranrad
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RCAF,CAF, converted RCR?,1RCR 74-77 CD: SSM (Nato);CPSM,;UN-Cyp.; UN- Golan
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Jim Hickson
CWO H.J. Hickson, MMM, CD. (Retd)
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My sincerest condolences to their families and friends.
Jim
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1961-Depot San Lenorado 1962-1st Bn RCR Ex Gagetown 1962-JR NCO Course Grad 19 Oct 1962-1965 Germany B-C-D-A Coy (Revecated Nov 64) 1965-1967 Sigs Pl Cyprus Prom CPL 'til xmas and C of Drums 1967-1973 Cpl, MCpl, Sgt, Sigs, D Coy 1973-1977 CFOCS Chilliwack Prom WO 1977-1982 UEO, Sigs, Pl WO RECCE, CSM B&A Coy, 1982-1984 SIT School 1984-1988 Career Manager (Prom CWO 1986) 1988-1990 RSM 1RCR 1991-1995 CWO Adm(Per) - C Of S 1995-1999 Base CWO Wainwright 1999-Retired
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watts
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MY CONDOLENCES TO THE FAMILY AND FRIENDS.
PRO PATRIA RANDY
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Fred Deadman
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My sincerest condolences to our lost brothers in arms and to their next of kin
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1RCR 78-82,B Coy, C Coy, E Coy morpl RSS 48th Highlanders Construction Engineers 82-93 (retired) CFB London/CFB Toronto/CFB Chilliwack/CFB Trenton/CFS Alert/UNFCYP/CFB Suffield/CFB London retirment
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Mike Blais
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A ROYAL CANADIAN "NEVER PASSES A FAULT"
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Fallen young soldiers' bodies return to Canada from Afghanistan
CFB TRENTON, Ont. — Family members, dignitaries and members of the Canadian military lined the tarmac at CFB Trenton, Ont., on Saturday night to pay tribute to three young soldiers killed in a brazen Taliban attack in Afghanistan.
Pte. Chad Horn and Cpls. Andrew Grenon and Mike Seggie were killed in an ambush Wednesday while conducting a security patrol in the volatile Zhari district.
Five other soldiers were wounded in the attack.
The deaths bring to 96 the number of Canadian soldiers killed during the Afghanistan mission since 2002.
The direct fire attack that killed the soldiers, all in their early 20s, shows the insurgency has become "more sophisticated," Canada's new ambassador to Afghanistan said in a recent interview.
"Its timing has improved, its overall strength has improved," Ron Hoffman said Friday.
"That's obviously something that we have to take very seriously."
A direct fire attack on a small combat outpost last month in neighbouring Panjwaii district was responsible for the death of Master Cpl. Erin Doyle. It came weeks after nine U.S. soldiers were killed when insurgents tried to overrun an outpost in the northeastern province of Kunar.
Insurgents have also stepped up attacks on both fuel and food convoys in recent months and even waged a massive assault on Kandahar's Sarposa jail in June that freed hundreds of prisoners, including many suspected insurgents.
Grenon, Seggie and Horn, now the faces of such attacks, are being remembered by family and friends as eager warriors who were proud of their mission and who died doing what they loved.
Grenon firmly believed in Canada's mission and was doing "heroes' work," his family said in a statement.
In a poem Grenon wrote in November 2006, halfway through his first tour of Afghanistan, the soldier wrote of seeing "hate, destruction and depression," but also of seeing "love, warmth, kindness and appreciation."
"Why do we fight?" Grenon wrote in the poem released by his family. "Because, if we don't fight today, on THIS battlefield, then our children will be forced to face these monsters on our own battlefield. I fight because I'm a soldier. I fight because I'm ordered. I fight, so my children won't have to."
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1RCR 1977-79 Depot (Italy PL), B Coy, Mortars, Pioneers, D Coy (CFB London) 3RCR 1979-82 M Coy, Pipes & Drums, Sigs, Mortars. (CFB Baden-Soellingen) 1RCR 1982-88 Mortars. Dukes, Cyprus-Welfare NCO 84-85, Injured, WO&Sgts Mess, (CFB London) 1988-92 Med-remuster to HELL/ 35 DU, CFB Baden 1992 Medical release. God Bless you all!
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Mike Blais
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A ROYAL CANADIAN "NEVER PASSES A FAULT"
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THE AFGHAN MISSION: REPATRIATION CEREMONY
Standing guard over the return of fallen sons From Trenton to Toronto, hundreds of ordinary Canadians turn out to pay their respects to three soldiers killed in a Taliban ambush
CHRISTIE BLATCHFORD
September 8, 2008
TRENTON, ONT. -- Killed yesterday by a roadside bomb, Sergeant Prescott Shipway is the 97th Canadian soldier to die in Afghanistan.
His name appears in the book I wrote last year about Canadian soldiers, Fifteen Days.
Like Captain Jon Snyder and Sergeant Jason Boyes, who respectively died June 7 and March 16 this year, Sgt. Shipway was alive when the book was written and first published.
Though I didn't know any of the three, they made the book either because of something exceptional they did, or because the comrades I did know, and was interviewing, found them exceptional and sang their praises. Print Edition - Section Front
Section A Front Enlarge Image The Globe and Mail
Sgt. Shipway, for instance, was then a member of Alpha Company, 1st Battalion, Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry, the soldiers who were the bomb babies of that 2006 rotation.
Assigned to a wretched and now-defunct platoon house called Gumbad which was reachable only by two roads, they were sitting ducks and were constantly being blown up. On June 21 that year, a re-supply convoy carrying Captain Martin Larose, a francophone exchange officer from the Vandoos who was the company's second-in-command, and a beloved soldier named Corporal Ryan Elrick, hit a huge bomb.
Cpt. Larose's ankles were smashed to bits in the blast, but it was Cpl. Elrick who was most seriously wounded.
Sgt. Shipway, a section commander with 3 Platoon, swung into action. While waiting for a chopper, he got on the satellite phone and spoke to a doctor back at Kandahar Air Field, who talked him and a couple of other soldiers through the difficult task of getting tourniquets on the bloodied remnants of Cpl. Elrick's legs. They saved, if not the young man's legs, his life, and the sergeant was mentioned in dispatches for his stellar and composed conduct that day.
And now Sgt. Shipway, on his second tour to Afghanistan, is dead himself.
They are the shadows on my heart, these soldiers. I didn't know them in the flesh (though I remember Capt. Snyder's sunlit face) but I know well some of those who served alongside them, and feel oddly connected to them all. It is part of the enduring hold the Canadian soldier has upon me. I can hardly bear reading or watching any news about the troops, and neither can I stop.
I want to go back to Kandahar for a fifth time, yet fear going back because it won't be the same. I haven't even been able to read my own book, now out for a year, and it took weeks before I could even look at the pictures.
Ridiculously, I miss people I hardly know.
So it was that I drove to Canadian Forces Base Trenton on Saturday for only the second repatriation ceremony I've ever attended, asked to come by a relative of one of the three soldiers killed last week in a Taliban ambush.
The CF Airbus carrying the bodies of Corporals Andrew Grenon and Mike Seggie and Private Chad Horn touched down at 6:48 p.m.
The ceremony is always brief, and this was no different.
The caskets, carefully wrapped in Canadian flags, were brought off the plane one at a time, carried to a waiting hearse, at which point grieving relatives were led on to the tarmac and over the sound of the idling engines, three separate sets of wrenching sobs could be heard.
First came Cpl. Grenon of Windsor (I might have been in his presence too; in 2006; he was on his second tour), then Cpl. Seggie of Winnipeg and Pte. Horn of Calgary. All were members of the 2nd Battalion, Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry based in Shilo, Man.
Collectively, the three young men - respectively 23, 21 and 21 - lived a grand total of 65 years, what used to be the normal retirement age in this country.
There were individual mourners older than that on the tarmac, including an old man with a mauve hanky who tried mightily but could not stop weeping or wiping his face. There was a baby in a stroller - I think Mike Seggie's little nephew, Carson, with his soother - and two wheelchairs and at least one pregnant young woman, dozens of crying boy cousins, mothers wearing sunglasses on pale faces, military dads and uncles like Jim and Tom Seggie, former long-serving Patricias themselves, standing ramrod straight and saluting the caskets.
Unusually, because the battle group led by the 2PPCLI is ending its tour in Afghanistan, also on the plane were 108 returning troops in their desert camos, some of whom would have fought alongside the dead soldiers.
Greeting the dead and the living were Governor-General Michaëlle Jean, Defence Minister Peter MacKay, former governor-general Adrienne Clarkson, who is now the honorary colonel-in-chief of the Patricias, and Chief of Defence Staff General Walt Natynczyk.
An hour and 35 minutes later, the official ceremony was over, the hearses and long line of black funeral cars speeding off the tarmac.
This is when the real repatriation began.
Lined along the fence ringing the air field were hundreds of ordinary Canadians, who waited quietly, without the ability to see anything of what transpired, to pay their respects to the soldiers.
The cortege had a 15-minute head start on me, but by driving at breakneck speed, I was able to catch up with it pretty quickly and get close enough to its tail end that I was able to see what the families would have seen.
Dozens of overpasses along Highway 401 to Toronto were still ablaze with lights and people, Canadian flags and homemade signs.
In small towns and cities - Port Hope, Cobourg, Newcastle, Newtonville, Courtice, Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax and Pickering - and all the way through to the Don Valley Parkway, where the cortege heads south to the coroner's office downtown, there is now a format for such occasions.
The local fire departments send out some trucks, which park on the overpasses; at either end, traffic comes to a halt. Side roads - in some places even the sides of the 401 itself - fill with cars as people park and make their way to the bridges so that they will be seen. Well-used banners and flags are hung from the overpasses, so that they too will be seen.
Everyone understands very well the importance of being visible to the families in the black cars in the speeding cortege.
On Saturday night, the sun was down but not quite gone, a half-moon in the clear, rosy sky, the people on the overpasses just silhouettes to those of us below, slowing to watch. They were providing a civilian version of what in military jargon is called over-watch, solemnly presiding over the safe return of their sons.
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1RCR 1977-79 Depot (Italy PL), B Coy, Mortars, Pioneers, D Coy (CFB London) 3RCR 1979-82 M Coy, Pipes & Drums, Sigs, Mortars. (CFB Baden-Soellingen) 1RCR 1982-88 Mortars. Dukes, Cyprus-Welfare NCO 84-85, Injured, WO&Sgts Mess, (CFB London) 1988-92 Med-remuster to HELL/ 35 DU, CFB Baden 1992 Medical release. God Bless you all!
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ranrad
Ron [Andy] Andrews
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Thank you for being there Christie, and your report, and yes you are a part of the family, and will be now forever..and may God Bless these heroes and their families and friends.. and thank you to you all for taking the time , and expense to go out and escort these heroes home for their last ride...ranrad
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RCAF,CAF, converted RCR?,1RCR 74-77 CD: SSM (Nato);CPSM,;UN-Cyp.; UN- Golan
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jgilligan
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Living in Alberta is great but the only drawback is not being in Trenton when one or more come home with an escort be-cause you want to be there . This ladies book was well worth the read as a matter of fact it was so good I loaned it out and there it was ... gone . Well I just hope that it gets passed a-round to the none military crowd and they be-gin to get it .
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Fred Deadman
ALWAYS A ROYAL
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I know what you mean im in woodstock and i cant get up there either. sure wish i could.
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1RCR 78-82,B Coy, C Coy, E Coy morpl RSS 48th Highlanders Construction Engineers 82-93 (retired) CFB London/CFB Toronto/CFB Chilliwack/CFB Trenton/CFS Alert/UNFCYP/CFB Suffield/CFB London retirment
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