Saturday, March 20, 2010

WELCOME HOME HMCS Athabaskan!

Canadian Navy destroyer HMCS Athabaskan  pulls into port in Halifax, N.S. on Wednesday, March 17, 2010, in this  image taken from video.

Canadian Navy destroyer HMCS Athabaskan pulls into port in Halifax, N.S. on Wednesday, March 17, 2010, in this image taken from video.

HMCS Athabaskan returns home after Haiti mission

Updated: Wed Mar. 17 2010 6:17:04 PM
CTV.ca News Staff

The second of the two Canadian Navy ships deployed to Haiti in the aftermath of a devastating earthquake, arrived back in Halifax Wednesday morning.

The destroyer HMCS Athabaskan was deployed to Haiti along with the frigate HMCS Halifax in January to provide light engineering help, humanitarian aid and medical assistance following the earthquake that killed about 200,000 people.

The ships left port after an unprecedented effort to prepare the crew and load supplies in just a few days -- arriving in Haiti just seven days after the quake struck.

The 225 crew members on the HMCS Halifax, which returned home on March 2 after a six week deployment, was focusing efforts in Jacmel, Haiti.

HMCS Athabaskan, with a crew of 240, was working mostly in Leogane.

Capt. Art McDonald, who was overseeing Canada's naval effort in Haiti, said the crew of the Athabaskan is returning home "having made some friends and having done a lot of good, and we come back better Canadians for it."...(more and a video interview with the Captain here)

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HMCS Athabaskan returns from 8 weeks in quake-ravaged Haiti

ALEX BOUTILIER
FOR METRO HALIFAX
March 18, 2010 1:55 a.m.

Alex Boutilier/For Metro Halifax

HMCS Athabaskan crew member Lt. Daniel Willis is welcomed home by his son Gabriel, 2, and wife Melanie.

HMCS Athabaskan returned to Halifax yesterday morning, marking the end of an eight-week mission to Haiti.

And, as Cmdr. Peter Crane put it, “mission accomplished.”

The 240-person crew was welcomed back by family and friends standing on a sunlit navy dockyard pier. As the ship pulled in, cheers and greetings were shouted back and forth between the pier and the deck.

The ship was docked outside of Léogâne, a small city near the epicentre of Haiti’s Jan. 12 earthquake. Crane said the buildings in the area were almost completely destroyed.

“The areas that we were working in were incredibly devastated,” he said. “Ninety per cent of the houses are uninhabitable.”

Upon arrival, Crane’s crew focused on delivering medical supplies, water and food to Haitians. Later, they turned their attention to building shelter, including four orphanages. Crane said while the Haiti they left had a long way to go, he was proud of the work they did.

“We have left it better,” he said. “Is it better over the long term? Don’t know. It’s too big a question to answer ... but from what we saw on the first day, on the 19th of January, when we flew over that city and when we walked around? It is in better shape.”

Crane said the mission profoundly affected his crew, so much so he decided to slightly alter the Athabaskan’s motto.

“The ship’s motto is ‘We fight as one,’ and after about three or four days in Haiti, I realized that that deserved to be modified,” Crane said. “‘We help as one.’ We flew that signal on our flag ... when we came up the harbour this morning.”


Thank you and WELCOME HOME!!!

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