WE GOT IT WRONG, CHIEF OF DEFENCE STAFF ADMITS ABOUT THE KANDAHAR MEMORIAL. IT WON’T BE MOVED, BUT IT WILL BE MORE ACCESSIBLE SO THAT ‘ANYBODY WHO WANTS TO VISIT THAT MEMORIAL CAN VISIT.’
Family of dead, comrades not invited to event
TORONTO • Canada’s top soldier has acknowledged the anger many Canadians felt about the way the Kandahar memorial was unveiled in Ottawa last week — in a shroud of secrecy, without the families of the dead soldiers present, and with ongoing limited public access.
In an interview from Brussels, Gen. Jon Vance promised Wednesday to make it right. “We’ll turn this around,” Vance said. “Where we want to get to is that anybody who wants to visit that memorial can visit.”
The monument, with black plaques featuring each of Canada’s military and civilian war dead, stood for years at Kandahar Airfield in Afghanistan. It was moved to Canada after the combat mission ended in 2011. Other than a tour of the country, it had been languishing in a warehouse until now.
Last week, the opening of the Afghanistan Memorial Hall occurred without public notice or invitations either to relatives of the dead depicted on the plaques or to wounded veterans. Only days later did the Department of National Defence make the opening public.
“To ensure a dignified, dedication service, a quiet, limited service was held in honour of those we have lost,” the department said. “The decision to hold a humble, internal event was made by senior leadership to ensure proper reverence.”
Jimmy Collins, a former Canadian Forces sergeant who lost several platoon members in a roadside bomb blast in Kandahar province in 2009, called the approach ridiculous and embarrassing.
“It upsets me because it seems like the federal government is slowly trying to make everyone forget about the conflict in Afghanistan, the people who served there and their families,” Collins said.
Sandra Lang, whose daughter Michelle Lang has a plaque on the memorial as the only Canadian journalist killed in Afghanistan, said “very disappointed” barely describes how she and her husband feel. “We can’t understand how the bureaucracy came up with this misguided plan,” Lang said.
Vance, who attended the opening, denied any attempt to hide the war effort. The aim, he said, was to get the memorial up and running as quickly as possible.
“It was a beautiful ceremony but it was absent the families and the wounded,” Vance said. “It happened. We need to now come up with a way to ensure accessibility.”