Allies rebuild Afghan bridge; Canadian engineers mentor nationals
Matthew Fisher
Montreal Gazette
12 Mar 2010
Canadian, U.S. and Afghan military engineers repaired a bomb-damaged bridge yesterday that the Taliban had attacked because it is southern Afghanistan's lifeline to Pakistan.
"This is an important route for Afghans, the Afghan army and NATO because so many people use it and that is why it has to be quickly fixed," said Lt. Muhammad Fahem, who commands a team of Afghan army engineers mentored by Canadians.
Part of the original bridge, which is located only a few kilometres from Kandahar Airfield, was destroyed on March 1 by a suicide bomber who aimed his car at a passing U.S. convoy. A U.S. soldier and four Afghans were killed in the explosion.
Afghan engineers and their mentors pieced together a 42-metre, metal "overbridge" this week at Kandahar Airfield and then moved parts of the Meccano-like structure a few kilometres to the blast site.
With the main route closed by the explosion, a huge traffic jam of Afghan cars and seriously overloaded trucks as well as armoured NATO convoys has spent the past few days inching gingerly across a mostly dry riverbed near the damaged bridge.
The attack by the Taliban had "caused a lot of issues for local national traffic between Kandahar City and Pakistan," Warrant Officer Eric Rousseau said.
If well maintained, the temporary span being erected this week would probably last many years. However, Veitch guessed that it will not be up that long before a "permanent solution" is found.
"Without the Canadians, we cannot run our military," said Pte. Nasayeed Jan, who helped assemble the temporary bridge together at Kandahar Airfield. "Before the Canadians came to help us, we did not know how to build such bridges and now we will be able to build them wherever they are needed all over Afghanistan."