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Memorial visits to Kandahar by the families of Canadian soldiers killed in Afghanistan will continue, but they'll be financed by non-public funds, the Department of National Defence said Wednesday.

A DND spokeswoman said the visits, which had been briefly in limbo, won't be billed to the taxpayer. The exact details of who will pay for the trips weren't immediately available.

The military has planned a family visit this month and another in March.

In recent years, the Canadian Forces has flown families of soldiers to Kandahar airfield so they can see where their loved ones fought and lived and died.

Etched into a memorial in the base's Canadian compound are the images of the 154 soldiers, two aid workers, a journalist and a diplomat who have died as part of the Afghan mission.

The family flights were not clearly defined in spending guidelines.

But the military suspended the practice this week after DND discovered it has been paying out millions of dollars in benefits without proper authorization.

The embarrassing gaffe was revealed Tuesday by the military's second-in-command, who promised to quickly push for a rewrite of regulations to include a host of items that have cost the treasury "tens of millions of dollars" over the last five years.

"We've got to stop. We've got to sort it out as soon as possible," Vice-Admiral Bruce Donaldson, the vice chief of defence staff, told a snap news conference at National Defence headquarters.

The benefits fall into four general categories, including bonuses for out-of-country postings, separation allowances for soldiers with long-term assignments away from families, travel costs and expenses paid for relatives of soldiers killed overseas.

Up to 7,000 members of the regular and reserve force receive these perks regularly, but Vice-Adm. Donaldson said it should have minimal impact on troops in Afghanistan. Many of the housing and travel benefits involve reservists who've been called up to replace full-time soldiers posted overseas.

Officials at Kandahar airfield are not aware of any Canadian soldiers serving in Afghanistan who have been affected by the spending freeze, said Captain Annie Djiotsa, a spokeswoman for Task Force Kandahar.

"We are not aware of any member being affected at this point," she said. "We await further guidance."

A spokesman for Defence Minister Peter MacKay says the department will continue transporting next of kin to repatriation ceremonies until the accounting rules are cleared up.

"Any next of kin travel or transport to repatriation ceremonies will be covered by DND during the period that the CF works this out," Jay Paxton said.

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