Posted AT 12:56 AM EST on 19/10/06
A typical Afghan mess ruins Canadians' day
JANE ARMSTRONG
From Thursday's Globe and Mail
BAZAR-E-PANJWAI, AFGHANISTAN The gunfight was in full swing when Canada's reconstruction team pulled into the village.
A turbaned man with streaks of blood on his tunic wandered across the parking lot. Two U.S. Marines were screaming expletive-filled orders at a pair of detainees, and Afghan army troops were massing at the gate of the compound, which is normally a school.
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Earlier discussion
Afghanistan

- The working wounded
- In Afghanistan, Canadians suffering serious injury on scale not seen since Korea
114
Lewis MacKenzie
In pictures

- Canadians under fire

- Taliban ambush in Howz-E-Madad
In video

- Becoming one of them
- Videographer Rosa Park spent three days with Canadian troops in Wainwright, Ab. and experienced life as a soldier training for deployment to Afghanistan
1
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In Pictures:
Faces of Maple Defender
- A long road to justice
- It should not have taken more than two years to find out how a Canadian soldier died in an Afghan accident.
4
Globe editorials
- Victory in Afghanistan need not be total
- The reported remarks of Britain's top commander in Afghanistan should not be taken as defeatism
16
- Sarkozy's resolve sets an example
- That the Taliban have regained some of their strength is cause to redouble Western efforts, not to abandon them
2
- Incompetence in Afghanistan
- Before he embarks on any foreign adventures, Hamid Karzai needs to clean up his own act
15
- Bernier does Karzai no favour
- Maxime Bernier did no favour to Afghan President Hamid Karzai as he attempts to establish control over his country
- Too much is wasted
- More effective international aid to Afghanistan will help reduce the Taliban's appeal to the next generation of angry young men.
- Let the commission see the evidence
- Mr. Harper should ensure that the military police complaints commissioner receives the documents it needs
- Do not misspeak to the public
- The government should not pretend - again - that what the military does is the military's business, and no one else's







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