Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadian military short more than 10,000 troops

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Jan, 2022 12:56 PM
  • Canadian military short more than 10,000 troops

OTTAWA - New figures show the Canadian Armed Forces are struggling with a growing shortage of personnel even as the military faces more and more demands at home and abroad.

While the military is supposed to have just over 100,000 troops at full strength, new Defence Department figures show it was short about 12,000 regular force troops and reservists at the end of November.

The shortfall is worse than at the end of 2020, when military was short about 7,000 troops as the onset of the pandemic forced recruiting centres and training schools to close for months.

The latest figures also show another 10,000 troops were unavailable for duty at the end of November because they were either untrained, sick or injured.

Revelations about the growing shortfall come as the military faces a rising number of demands internationally and in Canada, including requests from some provinces for help with the COVID-19 pandemic.

Military commanders are also struggling with what to do with hundreds of soldiers who have refused to get vaccinated despite an order to that effect from chief of the defence staff Gen. Wayne Eyre.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Hwy99 Closure at 4PM Tuesday afternoon between Lillooet & Pemberton due to heavy rainfall

Hwy99 Closure at 4PM Tuesday afternoon between Lillooet & Pemberton due to heavy rainfall
Highway 99 will be closing between Lillooet and Pemberton on Tuesday at 4pm. BC Hwy99 remains open to essential travel under 14,500kg until 4PM. Please be aware that closure may occur sooner.

Hwy99 Closure at 4PM Tuesday afternoon between Lillooet & Pemberton due to heavy rainfall

Opposition derides throne speech in House

Opposition derides throne speech in House
Conservative Leader Erin O'Toole and the NDP's Jagmeet Singh delivered their official responses to last week's throne speech, which outlines the Liberal government's priorities for the current Parliament.

Opposition derides throne speech in House

Trudeau didn't defame woman in 2018: judge

Trudeau didn't defame woman in 2018: judge
A Quebec Superior Court judge has dismissed a defamation suit brought against Prime Minister Justin Trudeau by a woman who heckled him at a 2018 rally south of Montreal. Justice Michèle Monast wrote in a decision released Monday that Diane Blain's lawsuit was ill-founded and abusive.

Trudeau didn't defame woman in 2018: judge

Economy returns to growth in Q3, StatCan reports

Economy returns to growth in Q3, StatCan reports
Statistics Canada said Tuesday the economy grew at an annual rate of 5.4 per cent in the third quarter of this year as COVID-19 restrictions eased and household spending rose.

Economy returns to growth in Q3, StatCan reports

Grace period for unvaxxed travellers ends today

Grace period for unvaxxed travellers ends today
The policy came into effect on Oct. 30, but the federal government allowed a short transition period for unvaccinated travellers who could board as long as they provided a negative molecular COVID-19 test taken within 72 hours before their trip.

Grace period for unvaxxed travellers ends today

Canada's surgical backlogs to cost more than $1B

Canada's surgical backlogs to cost more than $1B
The report included eight procedures: hip replacement, cataract surgery, knee replacement, MRI scans, CT scans, coronary artery bypass and breast cancer surgery.

Canada's surgical backlogs to cost more than $1B