August 27, 2004
Senior Rangers critical of armed forces
"You shouldn't
be going out there without us"
GREG
YOUNGER-LEWIS
Davidee
Nowyook smiles as he returns with nine other Rangers to Panniqtuuq's hamlet
office after helping the military find two lost soldiers. (PHOTO BY GREG YOUNGER-LEWIS)
 |
Two soldiers would have
never got lost on the cold, dark tundra during a recent military exercise in
Panniqtuuq, if the army had sent Inuit Rangers with them, senior Rangers from
Panniqtuuq say.
Sgt. Simeonie Keenainak,
who joined the Rangers 11 years ago, said the soldiers should have never been
left alone without back-up from local Rangers.
"You shouldn't be
going out there without us," Keenainak said while Rangers were still scouring
the land on four-wheelers in search of the lost men. "If they dropped them
off with the Rangers, this never would have happened.
"That's the lesson
for the day."
Keenainak also criticized
how ill-prepared the two men were for a night on the land.
The two soldiers had only
raincoats and thin Goretex jackets to protect them from snow and high winds,
after they got lost in the fog on Monday night. Neither had weapons to defend
themselves from potential polar bear attacks.
The men, who had never
been to Nunavut before this month, spent 11 hours in the mountainous area south
of Panniqtuuq, without any means of making contact with the makeshift military
base, three kilometres away at Alookie School.
The soldiers were dropped
off in the area by a Griffon helicopter at around 6 p.m. to install a radio
communications device for a military exercise the next day. But the weather
changed for the worse, forcing the helicopter to abandon the men, with the understanding
that they would walk back to the community.
Officials organizing the
two-week exercise, dubbed Operation Narwhal, said Rangers were already on their
way on all-terrain vehicles when the two soldiers were dropped off, but couldn't
find the men once the fog set in.
Rangers later sent out
a rescue party but still couldn't find the missing men in the dark.
Master Corp. Robert Dialla,
who coordinated Rangers patrols for the military operation, questioned how the
men ended up on their own in the first place.
"Rangers... know what
to do," Dialla said after the men were found. "They know what hills
are dangerous, and what areas are safest.
"They're the ones
who should have been leading them [the lost men]."
Military brass later praised
the Rangers for their contribution to the rescue effort, saying that their knowledge
of the land was "invaluable" to the operation.
During the exercise, about
30 Rangers, mainly from Panniqtuuq, helped train soldiers in general land skills
and provided protection from polar bears and wolves when the army went out on
expeditions in the area.
Before the two soldiers
went missing, Col. Normand Couturier applauded the Rangers, in part for ensuring
the hundreds of military personnel respected the land during their visit.
"They know the land,
they know the environment," he said. "They know better than us, in
terms of predator control."
Corp. Brian Thomas, a career
military man from CFB Petawawa, Ont., said he was worried about polar bears
the entire time he was lost on the tundra.
Thomas, who suffered minor
frostbite and mild hypothermia from the ordeal, said he talked constantly with
his tall, smiley colleague, Master Corp. Mike Laforce to keep their spirits
up while they walked.
After about three hours
of wandering blind in the fog, the two men found a cave and huddled together
until daybreak.
When they saw a Griffon
helicopter around 5 a.m. the next morning, the two men jumped on a rock and
"waved like hell", Thomas said.
"There's nobody at
fault," Thomas said later while drinking coffee in the Alookie school gym.
"It's a weather-related incident. It's unpredictable.
"I'm just glad it's
done."
Senior military officials
said they will be investigating to find out how the two men ended up unequipped
in a potentially deadly situation.
TOP
|