On October 5, 1999, during a tour of duty with the
RCMP International Peacekeeping program, Louis Gignac, a civilian
police officer with the United Nations Mission in Kosovo, contributed
to saving the lives of seven civilian Serbs who were being attacked
by an angry Albanian mob. Cst. Gignac had been assigned to escort
a funeral procession involving 25 deceased Albanians and some
5,000 mourners. When they reached a main road and the convoy became
trapped in a traffic jam immediately beside two ethnic Serbs'
vehicles, the Albanian crowd attacked, killing two Serbs who attempted
to flee. One of the first members at the scene, Cst. Gignac was
protecting the remaining Serb victims when he became the target
of rocks and other projectiles, including a Molotov cocktail which
exploded directly behind him and set fire to his uniform. For
more than one hour, he and his colleagues formed a semicircle
around the two vehicles to shield the remaining Serbs from the
escalating violence until the French Military Forces were able
to remove them to safety.
Cst. Gignac was presented with the Star of Courage
by the Governor General on December 6, 2001.
In honour of Cst. Gignac a mine detection dog (Louis) was purchased
and trained by the Canadian International Demining Corps.
Major donors to this effort include:
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Senator Elisabeth Hubley and Dancers Against
Landmines
-
Lady Slipper Step Dancers of Kensington
-
Somerset Steppers of Kinkora and Emerald
-
Canadian International Demining Corps
-
Elmwood School
-
Dr. Norman Bethune Secondary School
-
Iroquois Ridge High School
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