September 14, 2008
Lansing, Mich.- The Department of Military and Veterans Affairs will host a
remembrance ceremony on Friday, Sept. 18 at 1:30 p.m., in the State Capitol
Rotunda to mark National POW/MIA Recognition Day.
POW/MIA Recognition Day is a day when the nation pauses to remember those
U.S. military members and civilians who remain missing from past and current
wars, while the search continues each day to find those who are not accounted
for. In Michigan we remember Army Reserve Soldier, Sgt. Ahmed K. Altaie, of
Ann Arbor, who was listed as missing/captured in Iraq on Oct. 23, 2006 and
remains so.
On this solemn day, the POW/MIA flag flies over the White House, the Michigan
Capitol, and veteran's war memorials nationwide as a pledge to account for
the missing U.S. service members. Missing Michigan service members include:
361 from the Korean War, 53 from the Vietnam War, four from the Cold War, and
one Soldier from Iraq, Sgt. Altaie.
In addition, 4,400 American military personnel remain missing from WWI;
78,000 from WWII; more than 8,000 from the Korean War; 1,753 from the Vietnam
War; 128 from the Cold War; one from the Persian Gulf War; one from the Iraq
War; and one from the war in Afghanistan.
The public is welcome to attend the ceremony.
--End--
Media Advisory
Media is invited to attend. The 2009 POW/MIA poster is available for
download in .pdf format from the Defense Prisoner of War/Missing Personnel
Office website at www.dtic.mil/dpmo/. For more information about the
ceremony contact Capt. Corissa Barton at 517-481-8137.