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Highway of Heroes through Durham last Friday.
RIP
RIP
CALGARY - Calgarians will be waving flickering handheld paper flags this afternoon as they line the streets to honour a fallen Calgary soldier and paramedic.
The funeral for Cpl. Michael Starker is planned for 2 p.m. today at the Roundup Centre.
Anyone who wishes to pay their final respects to the 15 Field Ambulance member and Calgary EMS paramedic is called to form a "route of valour" along his final journey.
CALGARY -- Calgary's mayor says thousands of people are expected to attend the funeral of Cpl. Mike Starker, a city paramedic and reservist who was killed in an ambush in Afghanistan May 6.
Mayor Dave Bronconnier says it will be a very tough day for Starker's family, but he says it will also be tough for the emergency medical services personnel who worked with him.
Tom Sampson, the chief of Calgary's emergency medical services, says members of the public who can't make it to the funeral at the city's Round-Up Centre should line the streets to pay tribute to Starker as the procession leaves the downtown facility.
Starker, 36, was a medic with Edmonton's 15th Field Ambulance and is the 83rd Canadian soldier to die in Afghanistan since 2002.
Sampson says he was touched that people came out to pay tribute to Starker on the Highway of Heroes in Ontario when his body was returned to Canada, so hoped Calgarians could do the same.
As the casket carrying Corporal Michael Starker left the Round Up Centre, up to 3,000 people lined the streets to pay tribute to his sacrifice.
The Route of Valour was filled with people, of all ages, holding Canadian flags handed out by Calgary paramedics and police.
“I came here to pay my respects for a man who went to Afghanistan to make people’s lives better and to pay my respects for what he’s done for our country,” says Doug Cressman.
Some made it a family affair, taking the opportunity to teach the younger generation about the sacrifices made by Canadian soldiers. Sandra Vanveen brought her daughters down to watch the recessional. “We made a poster for all the soldiers who died in Afghanistan and all the other places who are fighting for our freedom and the freedom of the world,” says eight-year-old Natasha Vanveen.
Corporal Starker's military comrades marched through the streets as did fellow paramedics.
The Calgary Fire Department used two of its aerial truck to create an arch in front of City Hall with a massive Canadian flag in the middle.
Many say their prayers are now with Starker's family as they begin their long road to closure.