Daniel Gunther
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article does not cite any references or sources. (March 2008) Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unverifiable material may be challenged and removed. |
Cpl Daniel Gunther (13 January 1969 - 1993) was a Canadian serving with the Royal 22e Régiment in Bosnia, attached to the UN Protection Force.
He was killed in 1993, but reports about his death varied, causing controversy. The army originally stated that he had been hit by a mortar while exiting his M113, but Peter Worthington of the Toronto Sun later brought the accounts of soldiers into the public eye, stating that it was an anti-tank rocket that had killed Gunther, implying it had not been a simple misfortune, but a deliberately aimed warhead that killed the Corporal driving a marked UN Peacekeeping vehicle.
He was posthumously awarded the Canadian Peacekeeping Service Medal, and was mentioned in Roméo Dallaire's award-winning novel Shake Hands with the Devil.
Canada didn't lose another soldier to hostile fire after Gunther's 1993 death until Cpl Jamie Murphy was killed in Afghanistan in 2004.