Battered Canadians press on with Operation Medusa
Five fallen soldiers given solemn sendoff as battle with Taliban rages on
Donald Mcarthur, The Windsor Star; with files from The Associated Press
Published: Wednesday, September 06, 2006

Canadian soldiers pay tribute to fallen comrades, WO Frank Mellish, WO Richard Nolan, Sgt Shane Stachnik and Pte Mark Graham during a Ramp Ceremony held at the Kandahar Air Field.
Photograph by : Department of Defence
KANDAHAR, Afghanistan - Canadian troops, bloodied but unbowed after suffering dozens of casualties in the opening days of Operation Medusa, pressed ahead yesterday with the offensive to drive insurgents from a stronghold west of Kandahar as the bodies of five of their fallen comrades began the long journey home.
Between 50 and 60 Taliban were killed as Canadian troops engaged entrenched insurgents and continued hammering their positions with heavy artillery, calling in bomb and precision missile strikes from coalition aircraft, said NATO officials, citing reports from the front lines and surveillance systems.
Several suspected militants were captured by Afghan security forces and an attempt by insurgents to break out of their bombarded positions and through the Canadian lines to the south was thwarted by ground troops and attack helicopters. Five Canadian soldiers on patrol suffered non-serious injuries in a mortar attack about 6:30 p.m., a military spokesman said. They were airlifted to the base hospital where three remain and two were released.
"NATO came in to fight terrorism, NATO also came in to guarantee that girls can go to school ... NATO is fighting for universal, human basic values and NATO is doing its very best and NATO will prevail," said NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer after meetings with alliance generals at Kandahar airfield.
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