Body of Canadian soldier killed by bomb begins journey home
Defence minister, top soldier attend ramp ceremony
Last Updated: Saturday, December 27, 2008 | 9:53 PM ET
CBC News
Related
Internal Links
Video
- David Common reports: Body of Canadian soldier killed by bomb begins journey home (Runs: 2:18)
- Play: QuickTime »
- Play: Real Media »
In depth: Afghanistan
- Crossroads Afghanistan
- 2009 presidential election coverage
- Country profile
- Afghanistan: Beset by war, beleaguered by poverty
- Quick facts: Afghanistan at a glance
- A narrated Google Earth tour
The military mission
- Overview: Canada's forces in Afghanistan
- One bomb, many lives
- Canadian Press interactive on a Dec. 30, 2009 IED blast that killed four Canadian soldiers and a journalist.
- Database: Canada's casualties
- Analysis: Who's paying the ultimate price?
- Joint operations
- The pros and cons of teaming up with the U.S.
Background
Photos
- On the front line
- Photos from operations inside Afghanistan
- Soldiers and civilians in Afghanistan
External links
The flag-draped casket of the latest Canadian soldier killed in Afghanistan was loaded into a military plane at Kandahar Airfield for the long journey home on Saturday.
Pte. Michael Freeman, 28, was from 3rd Battalion, the Royal Canadian Regiment based at CFB Petawawa. (DND) Pte. Michael Freeman, 28, died Friday when his armoured vehicle struck a roadside bomb in the Zhari District of Kandahar province during a security patrol around 12:45 p.m. local time.
Defence Minister Peter MacKay and Chief of Defence Staff Gen. Walter Natynczyk, who were in Afghanistan on Saturday as part of a three-day visit, attended the ramp ceremony for the fallen soldier.
"Pte. Freeman served his country bravely with pride and dedication. His sacrifice will not be forgotten," MacKay said in a statement.
Freeman, who lived in Peterborough, Ont., leaves behind his parents and a fiancée.
"He had a great sense of humour, [was] a dependable driver and member, and had the natural gift of complaining in a very nice way," a eulogist said at the ceremony.
Three other soldiers were wounded during Friday's blast but are said to be in good condition. One of them watched the ramp ceremony from a hospital bed wheeled onto the tarmac.
Freeman served with November Company, 3rd Battalion, the Royal Canadian Regiment based at Canadian Forces Base Petawawa in eastern Ontario. It was his first tour of duty in Afghanistan.
He was described as an avid golfer who staunchly believed in what he was doing.
Friends say Freeman loved to hit a bucket of balls into the barren flatlands from a makeshift driving range at the outpost where he was stationed.
They say Afghan children would eagerly retrieve the golf balls he had driven deep into the dusty plains in exchange for candy.
Lt.-Col. Roger Barrett, commanding officer of 3 RCR Battle Group, called Freeman a "very down-to-earth, typical Canadian boy.
"He was an easy-going, professional, well-liked soldier. [He] had a great camaraderie with his section mates in his platoon," Barrett said.
Chief of Defence Staff Walter Natynczyk, left, and Defence Minister Peter MacKay, right, attend Saturday's ramp ceremony for Pte. Michael Freeman in Kandahar. (Steve Rennie/Canadian Press) Freeman's death brings to 104 the number of Canadian soldiers killed in the Afghan mission since 2002. One diplomat and two aid workers have also been killed.
Roadside bomb attacks have killed seven Canadian soldiers in December alone.
MacKay, whose visit couldn't be reported until he left the country, attributed the deaths to a seasonal spike in violence — even though the number of Canadian combat casualties usually recedes over the harsh winter months in Afghanistan.
"In any insurgency, you're going to see, shall we say, hills and valleys, spikes in violence at certain times of the year," MacKay said.
"There are a number of factors, a number of cultural factors here as well. We know that the sophistication and the types of methods and the types of IEDs [improvised explosive devices] have changed as well and we've had to adapt."
Canada has about 2,500 soldiers in Afghanistan, mostly based in the south around Kandahar. The military mission is slated to end in 2011.
Also Saturday, a suicide bomb attack at a police checkpoint east of the town of Senjaray in Kandahar province killed three police officers and two civilians.
Two police officers and at least two civilians were also wounded in the attack, said Muhammad Akbar, a local police officer.
With files from the Canadian PressShare Tools
Top News Headlines
- Refugee reforms include fingerprints, no appeals for some
- New, tougher reforms to refugee legislation that hasn't yet come into force are already drawing fire from critics who say they give Canada's immigration minister too much power and risk the lives of claimants. more »
- Montreal telemarketers in fraud case still making calls
- CBC News has learned that no government agency has taken legal action to try to stop a Montreal-based telemarketing company accused of defrauding thousands of small businesses. more »
- Underwear bomber sentenced to life in prison
- A Nigerian man who tried to blow up an international flight near Detroit on behalf of al-Qaida has been sentenced to life in prison without parole. more »
- 7 MPs and their fiery quotes
- The election of a majority government was seen by some as a chance for less acrimonious politics on Parliament Hill. But the past week has seen its fair share of inflammatory rhetoric on both sides of the House. more »
Latest World News Headlines
- Honduras prison fire is world's deadliest
- The prisoners who died in the Honduran prison fire had been locked inside an overcrowded penitentiary where most inmates had never been charged, let alone convicted, according to an internal Honduran government report obtained by The Associated Press. more »
- Amnesty accuses Libyan militias of unbridled torture
- Armed militia groups in Libya have turned on one another and now rule most of the country, torturing their opponents with impunity, Amnesty International says. more »
- Iran unlikely to attack 1st, U.S. Senate told
- Iran isn't likely to start or provoke a conflict with its neighbours or the U.S., an intelligence official tells a U.S. Senate armed services committee hearing. more »
- Brian Stewart: The danger in shoving Greece too far
- How much pounding can one country take before it explodes and takes others down with it, Brian Stewart asks. more »
Dispatches »
- Syrian refugees' defiance and division Feb. 16, 2012 12:30 PM With the deadly game in Syria changing almost daily, CBC's Derek Stoffel in Turkey met militant refugees who reflect the division in the rebel forces about whether to go it alone or wait for the international community to back them against the current regime.
Connect Newsroom Blog
Toews vs. Twitter, Helping Syria & Misuse of Prescription Drugs Feb. 15, 2012 7:53 PM As violence continues in Syria, we're asking what should the world do about Syria?
- Dog kills newborn in Alberta community
- Montreal telemarketers in fraud case still making calls
- Refugee reforms include fingerprints, no appeals for some
- Bully victim's mother tells of 'suicide box'
- Honduras prison fire is world's deadliest
- Degrassi's Wheels death announced, 5 years later
- Nortel collapse linked to Chinese hackers
- 2 small earthquakes rattle Vancouver Island
- Barefoot girl's icy trek not blamed on babysitter

