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YELLOWKNIFE - The Yellowknife Golf course is closed for now after an unarmed missile fell off a Canadian Forces CF-18.
The CF-18 was landing in Yellowknife when the missile fell off. The jet was landing at the airport about 7 a.m. when the AIM-7 Sparrow missile dropped off. Police closed the nearby highway for over an hour. Guy Kennedy is the assistant manager of the Golf Course. Kennedy was preparing to open the course for the day when an RCMP officer rushed into the club house and told him the place had to be evacuated.
"While (the Mountie) was doing that, he was speaking on the radio to someone and said to someone on the radio that he had a visual on the missile," recalls Kennedy.
"At which point I went...'you have a visual on the missile?' And I kind a looked where he was looking out on our driving range and there was a missile out on our driving range. At that point I realized what everybody was talking about."
Kennedy says a major golf tournament has been cancelled and there is no word when golfers can return.
A military official told reporters he's never heard of anything like this happening before.
Major Rob Carter commands the 441 Squadron out of Cold Lake Alberta.
Carter's team were on en route to Inuvik, after stopping in Yellowknife to refuel.
"It's an American built aircraft and there are a number of different countries that fly them, says Carter.
"That would be a good question that we'll probably start asking now, is had this happened somewhere else?"
According to Canadian Press, five CF-18s have accidentally dropped bombs since 1990.
YELLOWKNIFE - The Yellowknife Golf course is closed for now after an unarmed missile fell off a Canadian Forces CF-18.
The CF-18 was landing in Yellowknife when the missile fell off. The jet was landing at the airport about 7 a.m. when the AIM-7 Sparrow missile dropped off. Police closed the nearby highway for over an hour. Guy Kennedy is the assistant manager of the Golf Course. Kennedy was preparing to open the course for the day when an RCMP officer rushed into the club house and told him the place had to be evacuated.
"While (the Mountie) was doing that, he was speaking on the radio to someone and said to someone on the radio that he had a visual on the missile," recalls Kennedy.
"At which point I went...'you have a visual on the missile?' And I kind a looked where he was looking out on our driving range and there was a missile out on our driving range. At that point I realized what everybody was talking about."
Kennedy says a major golf tournament has been cancelled and there is no word when golfers can return.
A military official told reporters he's never heard of anything like this happening before.
Major Rob Carter commands the 441 Squadron out of Cold Lake Alberta.
Carter's team were on en route to Inuvik, after stopping in Yellowknife to refuel.
"It's an American built aircraft and there are a number of different countries that fly them, says Carter.
"That would be a good question that we'll probably start asking now, is had this happened somewhere else?"
According to Canadian Press, five CF-18s have accidentally dropped bombs since 1990.