Places | |
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Accession Number | REL36000.002 |
Collection type | Heraldry |
Object type | Uniform |
Physical description | Cotton, Nylon, Velcro |
Maker |
Christies, Ashfield |
Place made | Australia |
Date made | c 1991 |
Conflict |
Period 1990-1999 |
Rank brassard : Corporal J Booth, 2 Field Ambulance, Operation Provide Comfort
Cotton drill rank brassard in Disruptive Pattern Camouflage Uniform (DPCU) style with a velcro attachment to rear. The brassard is fitted with a pen storage slot. A corporal's rank patch and an 'Australia' woven cloth patch are sewn to the front of the brassard and a maker's cloth tag is sewn to the rear. The circular 'Australia' patch features a kangaroo over a green map of Australia on a yellow background and was also used for the 1993 UNTAC operation (Cambodia).
Related to the service of Corporal Julie Booth, a medic from 2 Field Ambulance who served with Operation Provide Comfort in northern Iraq and eastern Turkey in 1991. A total of 75 Australian Defence Force (ADF) personnel served in the operation in the aftermath of the First Gulf War. United Nations Resolution 688 authorised humanitarian assistance to Kurdish refugees in the Turkish/Iraq border region. Corporal Booth was one of 72 Army and 3 RAAF personnel (with expertise in medical, dental, engineering and logistics) who were deployed to the area as part of a larger force which eventually totalled 21,701 military personnel, with contributions from the United States, Great Britain, the Netherlands, France, Italy, Spain, Luxembourg, Canada, Portugal, Turkey and Belgium.