Windsor Star

Sajjan blames Iraq for hospital delays

- LEE BERTHIAUME

• Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan is blaming the Iraqi government for the fact a Canadian military hospital that was supposed to be available to treat casualties during the attack on Mosul is not yet up and running.

“There were some delays from the Iraqi government side of getting all the resources in,” Sajjan said Tuesday. “From our side, all the resources were put into place for getting all the necessary people and equipment into place.”

Sajjan was speaking from Paris, where defence ministers from about a dozen countries gathered to discuss the fight against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, as well as what to do after Mosul is liberated from ISIL.

In July, Canada pledged the hospital and 50 medical personnel specifical­ly because of the coming operation to free Iraq’s second largest city, which ISIL militants captured in June 2014.

The long-anticipate­d attack started Oct. 17. For the past week, Iraqi and Kurdish forces have been closing in on the city, supported by internatio­nal troops on the ground and aircraft overhead.

Dozens of Kurdish peshmerga fighters have been killed and many more wounded in fighting for outlying villages and territory.

Canadian special forces troops have been working with the Kurds in northern Iraq for the past two years, and the Canadian military hospital is supposed to be located in the Kurdish capital of Erbil.

Sajjan said it was “regrettabl­e” the hospital was not already in operation. But he said the issues had been resolved and the hospital should be in place soon.

“Keep in mind, the (Mosul) operation has just started,” he said.

“This is going to take some time. So our resource that we’re going to put into place is still going to be timely and needed.”

The Iraqi government temporaril­y detained a military plane in November 2015 that was carrying weapons to Canadian special forces in northern Iraq. The move came amid concerns about western support for the Kurds, who have made no secret of their desire to separate from Iraq.

The plane was released after four days.

Victory in Mosul, the extremist group’s last bastion in Iraq, would represent a pivotal moment in the antiISIL campaign.

The focus is expected to then shift to Syria, specifical­ly the city of Raqqa, which has been ISIL’s de facto capital.

THERE WERE SOME DELAYS FROM THE IRAQI GOVERNMENT SIDE.

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