November 18, 2005 - 18:08
Canadian army to buy 50 light-armoured vehicles from South Africa
STEPHEN THORNE
OTTAWA (CP) - The Canadian army is buying 50 light-armoured vehicles from South Africa, and expects delivery early next year so the next deployment of soldiers can use them in Afghanistan, The Canadian Press has learned.
The $120-million purchase has been deemed an "urgent operational requirement," and will boost the safety of soldiers patrolling the dangerous region where 2,000 fighting troops are to deploy in southern Afghanistan.
In total, Defence is spending $234 million on new equipment for the mission, including new radios, hand-held satellite phones and diesel-powered all-terrain vehicles, senior government sources said Friday.
Delivery is expected in February or early March, coinciding with the start of Canada's newest mission in Afghanistan, the sources said on condition of anonymity.
The military has been using several of the Nyala mine-resistant vehicles initially purchased from South African national police since Canada first sent about 2,000 soldiers to fight the war on terrorism around Kandahar in 2002.
The area is one of the most heavily mined regions of the most heavily mined country in the world. Insurgents have also stepped up roadside and suicide bomb attacks on allied forces in the area in recent months.
Two Canadian soldiers suffered minor wounds when a roadside bomb exploded next to their armoured patrol in Kabul in September. The military has since decided to add reinforcing plates to its existing armoured vehicles.
Four of the seven Canadians who have died in Afghanistan in the last three years were killed by set explosive devices - two by anti-tank mines and one by a suicide bomber.
Billed by its makers - South Africa-based BAE Land Systems - as a "highly adaptable, multi-purpose, four-by-four," the 11-man vehicles are ballistically reinforced, jeep-like troop carriers.
"This vehicle offers a high degree of protection against vehicle mines and small arms," says one supplier, Paramount Group.
Earlier this week, the government decided to postpone the combined purchase of $12.1 billion worth of helicopters, transport aircraft and search-rescue planes.
The South African purchase is different because the vehicles are considered essential to the mission the Canadian troops are undertaking - hunting Taliban and al Qaida fighters in the desert and mountains near Kandahar.
The Nyalas are being purchased "off the shelf," without any special requirements.
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