Top Stories -   

1
The casket of Master Cpl. Francis Roy is carried to a waiting hearse during a repatriation ceremony at CFB Trenton, Ont. on Wednesday, June 29, 2011. (Peter Redman / THE CANADIAN PRESS) Master Corporal Francis Roy from the Canadian Special Operations Regiment based at CFB Petawawa, Ontario died of non-combat injuries in Afghanistan June 25, 2011.

Latest Canadian Afghan casualty returns home

Viewer

CTV News Video

CTV News Extended: Motorcade arrives in T.O.
The body of Master Cpl. Francis Roy arrives in downtown Toronto following his repatriation ceremony at CFB Trenton and the motorcade journey along Ontario's Highway of Heroes.
CTV News Extended: Soldier arrives home
A motorcade rides along the Highway of Heroes in Ontario following the repatriation ceremony of Master Cpl. Francis Roy who died in Afghanistan on Saturday.
CTV News Extended: Ramp ceremony held
Master Cpl. Francis Roy has begun his final journey home after a ramp ceremony was held for the soldier at Kandahar Airfield early Tuesday.
CTV News Channel: Janis Mackey Frayer explains
CTV's South Asia bureau chief says the investigation into Master Cpl. Francis Roy's death is ongoing, and explains how authorities have ruled out foul play and enemy action, and are now looking into accidental death or suicide.

A A |  Email ThisEmail  | Print Facebook   

The casket of Master Cpl. Francis Roy is carried to a waiting hearse during a repatriation ceremony at CFB Trenton, Ont. on Wednesday, June 29, 2011. (Peter Redman / THE CANADIAN PRESS) Master Corporal Francis Roy from the Canadian Special Operations Regiment based at CFB Petawawa, Ontario died of non-combat injuries in Afghanistan June 25, 2011.

Photos

The casket of Master Cpl. Francis Roy is carried to a waiting hearse during a repatriation ceremony at CFB Trenton, Ont. on Wednesday, June 29, 2011. (Peter Redman / THE CANADIAN PRESS)

View Larger Image

Date: Thu. Jun. 30 2011 8:17 AM ET

CFB TRENTON, Ont. — Latest Canadian Afghan casualty returns home amid doubt his will be the lastThe mother of a soldier killed two years ago quietly pressed her face to the fence of an airbase on Wednesday as the remains of the latest casualty of the Afghan mission arrived back on Canadian soil.

Clutching a "support-the-troops" poster, Kathy Bulger was among hundreds of people who gathered at CFB Trenton to pay their respects to Master Cpl. Francis Roy, many hoping his would be the last death of Canada's combat mission.

"There's no words to describe today -- what it's like to be here," said Bulger, whose last visit to CFB Trenton was to stand on the tarmac and receive the remains of her son, Cpl. Nick Bulger.

"People don't understand how good the Canadian military is -- and what they've done for my family."

Bulger watched in silence as the ramp of the C-17 transport opened, and an honour guard carried Roy, a member of the country's special forces regiment, to the awaiting hearse.

Fellow soldiers found Roy, 32, mortally wounded early Saturday at a forward operating base in Kandahar city.

Investigators, who ruled out enemy action, were treating Roy's death as a suicide. An autopsy has yet to be performed.

In the twilight days of Canada's combat mission in Afghanistan, many who came out to pay their respects to the 157th Canadian to die expressed the hope they would not have to make such a trip again.

"It's a sad time, but it could also be joyous knowing that this could be our last (soldier) coming home (dead)," said Mark Allen of Prescott, Ont.

"Next time will be when all our soldiers come home (alive), which would be great."

As the hearse procession travelled along a stretch of Highway 401 that's been dubbed the Highway of Heroes, hundreds of people lined overpasses, waving flags or other supportive banners.

They waved or simply stood still as the hearse sped beneath them.

While several people said it was important to pay their respects, some were dubious that the days of grim ramp and repatriation ceremonies were over even as Canada's combat mission morphs into a three-year training mission.

"I hope it's the last one but they're still going to be there," George Cross Brighton, Ont., said on an overpass.

"It's still going to be hazardous, so I'm afraid there might be a few more (deaths) yet."

About 950 Canadian troops will stay in Afghanistan in a training capacity until 2014. All Canada's combat troops, who have spent the past years fighting and dying in the country's violent south, are to be out of the country by the end of next month.

"There'll still be boys over there," said Bulger, a resident of Buckhorn, Ont.

"And we'll keep sending parcels (to the troops there)."

Bulger's 30-year-old son died in an improvised explosive device strike almost exactly two years ago, the 121st casualty of the mission.

If Roy's death is confirmed as a suicide, he would be the second Canadian soldier to kill himself while deployed in Afghanistan in a month.

The body of Bombardier Karl Manning, 31, a native of Chicoutimi, Que., was found by fellow soldiers at a remote base near Zangabad on May 28.

Share with your social Network:

Facebook DIGG Newsvine Delicious Twitter StumbeUpon Reddit Yahoo! Buzz

 

Advertisement

Contest

CTV News

Soldiers with the Canadian Army's 1st Battalion Royal 22nd Regiment return to base on their final operation Thursday, June 30, 2011 in the Panjwaii district of Kandahar province, Afghanistan. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

Canada in Afghanistan

The latest news, photos and interactives from Canada's mission in Afghanistan.

Canadian Soldiers were injured when a Light Armoured Vehicle (LAV) Turret struck an on coming vehicle, outside Kandahar City, causing it to rotate 360 degrees wounding the two Canadian soldiers. (Cpl. Robin Mugridge / Department of National Defence)

Invisible Wounds

Angela Mulholland: Scope of injury toll in Afghanistan largely a mystery

Brain injuries among soldiers are often overlooked.

Blast-Induced Injuries

Brain injuries among soldiers serving in Afghanistan are often overlooked.

Doctor Louis-Philippe Palerme, right, from Gatineau, Quebec, is assisted by a Danish doctor, Captain Sacha Soelbeck, during a surgery at R3 MMU in Afghanistan.

Medical Advances

Soldiers survived injuries that, even 10 years ago, would have been fatal.

Cpl. Chris Klodt sits in a race chair. Klodt was shot in the neck July 7, 2006 during a Taliban ambush outside Kanadhar. The bullet was lodged in his spinal cord.

Soldiers Overcome Injuries

Wounded soldiers use sports to overcome injuries, adjust to their new reality.

Janis Mackey Frayer in Sperwan Ghar, Afghanistan

Kandahar Journal

Janis Mackey Frayer recounts sombre process of notifying next of kin.

Interactive

War Zone Medics

Lessons Learned

A number of the medical innovations that we now take for granted were conceived and tested during wartime.

Bios and Pictures

Casualties

Canadian Casualties

We remember those who lost their lives in Afghanistan since the mission began in 2002.

In Pictures

Canada's Last Days in Afghanistan

Concluding Combat

50 Pictures: Canadian troops conclude Afghan combat tour after a decade.

Kandahar transfer ceremony

Transfer Ceremony

In Pictures: Canada transfers control of Kandahar region to the U.S

Harper in Afghanistan

Harper in Afghanistan

25 Pictures: Stephen Harper meets with soldiers on his fourth Afghan trip.

Canada in Kandahar

Canada in Kandahar

30 Pictures: New tasks tackled as combat mission nears its end.

Operation Topak Shkar

Operation Topak Shkar

Canadian troops take on the Taliban in Operation Topak Shkar.

Today's Top Stories

Labour Minister Lisa Raitt appears on CTV's Power Play on Monday, May 28, 2012.

Federal government orders end to CP Rail strike

More   51 Comments 51    12 Video(s) 12

Dominic and Abby Maryk were found in Mexico four years after allegedly being abducted by their father.

Extradition sought in Winnipeg missing children case

More   4 Comments 4    3 Video(s) 3

Protesters opposing Quebec student tuition fee hikes demonstrate in Montreal, Sunday, May 27, 2012. (Graham Hughes / THE CANADIAN PRESS)

Quebec, students resume talks on tuition hikes

More   26 Comments 26    1 Video(s) 1