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View Full Version : Canadian soldier in critical condition; suffered self-inflic



EvanL
02-15-2004, 02:06 PM
By Les Perreaux
Canadian Press


Sunday, February 15, 2004
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KABUL

A Canadian soldier was in critical condition with a bullet wound to the face Sunday afternoon after his rifle went off in his sleeping quarters at Camp Julien, the Canadian Press has learned.

Col. Alain Tremblay, the commanding officer of the Canadian operation in Kabul, said the man is expected to survive. He said investigators believe the shot went off while the male soldier was alone.

"Obviously if he was alone, only two options remain open," Tremblay said. "Either it was an accident, or potentially a suicide attempt."

The incident happened at 1:30 p.m. local time in the tent village where soldiers sleep at the camp.

The soldier was shot by his C-7 rifle, the common weapon carried by most Canadian soldiers on the base, Tremblay said.

Soldiers in the area ran to help the man and doctors arrived about five minutes later from the camp hospital, which is a few hundred metres away from the tent. Fifteen minutes later the soldiers was in surgery, according to the chief surgeon at camp surgeon.

A surgical team worked on the soldier through much of the afternoon at the camp hospital, restoring his air passage and stabilizing him. He is expected to recover but will need months of surgery to repair his wound, said Lt.-Col. Carl Walker, the chief surgeon at Camp Julien.

"He is very lucky to be alive indeed," said Walker. "If the bullet had been half a centimetre further back, he would have been finished for sure."

The soldier's name was not released. His family from Quebec was notified by a Canadian Forces padre Sunday morning. At Camp Julien military police combed the tent for evidence Sunday afternoon.

Soldiers at Camp Julien always have access to their weapons and ammunition and frequently clean their guns in their sleeping quarters. However, guns are not supposed to be loaded on the base.

When soldiers come back to camp from missions, they are supposed to follow a strict procedure to clear their weapons of all ammunition. The process includes pointing the barrel of the weapon into a box of sand and pulling the trigger to make sure the weapon has no ammunition in it.

Tremblay said soldiers also undergo a strict screening process, including an interview with social workers or psychologists, before they leave Canada to ensure they are mentally fit.

"It would be doubtful that there were signs," Tremblay said. "But we will review files to see if any indicators were missed."


© Copyright 2004 Canadian Press

ArmedPacifist
02-15-2004, 02:20 PM
Suicide attempt.

anonymous individual
02-15-2004, 02:59 PM
It is more likely a suicide attempt.

memphiz
02-15-2004, 03:06 PM
yeh most likely suicide
i hope he does alright

Tommy Gunn
02-15-2004, 03:12 PM
Suicide attempt.

Ditto

Nondescript
02-15-2004, 04:14 PM
Hope he'll be allright, and if it was a suicide attempt that he gets the right treatment, it is sad that these things have to happen.

I hope that his family will be alright too, it must be quite shocking to learn that their son might have tried to kill himself.

EvanL
02-15-2004, 04:17 PM
Alot of times on deployment soldiers get letters or calls from their wives or girls telling them they dont wanna be together anymore. Or they get cheated on. Either way being deployed can ruin a relationship. Hopefully this guy will be better soon. He will most definately have permanent facial disfiguirment* though.

marktigger
02-16-2004, 12:05 PM
that will depend on the track of the round and how good a max-fac team he gets to see.