By PETER ALMOND

Last updated at 14:31 13 April 2008

They serve the same Queen, fight the same foe and lay down their lives with equal valour and sacrifice.

But when the fallen heroes of Canada and Britain come home, the welcome is very different.

At airbases in both countries there is only sombre respect.

But today The Mail on Sunday publishes extraordinary pictures that contrast the final road journeys: in Canada, there is a police escort and crowds line the route; in Britain, the hearses are denied outriders and go unremarked.

Should we show more respect to our returning war dead? Tell us your view below

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Shameful: In Canada, (above), roads are cleared and police stand to attention to welcome home fallen heroes. In Britain, (below) hearses carrying our war dead routinely get stuck in traffic without even so much as a police escort

Coffins carrying the Canadian soldiers' bodies are driven 107 miles from the airbase at Trenton, Ontario, to a coroner's office in Toronto; in Britain the trip is 50 miles from RAF Lyneham, Wiltshire, to the morgue at Oxford's John Radcliffe Hospital.

In Canada the road is cleared and a police escort of several squad cars ensures a smooth passage as onlookers pay tribute and police and fire officers salute.

But in Britain most of the journey is spent ignored and stuck in traffic – because Thames Valley Police refuse to provide an escort as they "focus on community safety rather than ceremonial roles".

Last night MP Quentin Davies, who is heading a Ministry of Defence study into strengthening public support for Britain's Armed Forces, labelled the failure to provide an escort for our war dead "despicable".

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Tale of two homecomings: The Canadians, above, were killed by a bomb near Kandahar, Afghanistan. British Marine David Marsh, 23, (below left) and Lt John Thornton, 22, were killed while on patrol in Helmand province.

Other Service personnel and police from other Forces concur.

The intensely moving pictures of the Canadian repatriation are being emailed among British soldiers and have been posted on the internet.

Canada currently has 2,500 troops in Afghanistan and has so far lost 82. Britain has lost 91 from a total of 7,800.

The series of pictures includes emotional scenes last year when six Canadian soldiers were flown home.

Captain Jefferson Francis, 36, Captain Matthew Dawe, 27, Master Cpl Colin Bason, 28, Corporal Cole Bartsch, 23, Corporal Jordan Anderson, 25, and Private Lane Watkins, 20, were killed together in their armoured vehicle by a massive roadside bomb near Kandahar.

Along the entire route, on 50 motorway bridges, at roadsides, intersections, on the sides of roads, in fields and even on the central barrier of the busy motorway, local people, firefighters and police stood to attention, Royal Canadian Legionnaires lowered flags and whole families proudly waved "We support our troops" placards.

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Sombre: The Canadian heroes, above, arrive at an airbase, while in Britain, below, the dead troops are ceremoniously carried to a hearse at Wootton Bassett

Remember or forget: In Canada, flag waving crowds cram motorway bridges, above, while the cortege carrying the British soldiers from Wootton Bassett, below, is abandoned in traffic

The spectacle was so striking that the highway, part of which was known as the Queen Elizabeth Way, has now been renamed the Highway of Heroes.

Since then, every body travelling along the Highway of Heroes has been greeted by hundreds of ordinary Canadians who often wait for hours in the bitter Ontario winter to show their respect and support.

Lieutenant Colonel Jim Legere, Provost Marshal for the 1st Canadian Air Division Headquarters, wrote of one such journey in a letter to a Toronto newspaper.

He said: "Although words cannot possibly do justice to this heart-wrenching experience, I thought it important for you to be aware of the overwhelming – and I mean overwhelming – support provided by law enforcement, fire services, ambulance services and, indeed, the public at large, for this very solemn occasion.

"I could not believe my eyes as we made the solemn journey from Trenton to the coroner's office in Toronto.

"Every on-ramp had a police vehicle blocking traffic, with members standing by the vehicles saluting.

"Entire police detachments stood along the route, saluting in front of their vehicles.

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Patriotic: In Canada, flag waving crowds line the route, while locals honour the British soldiers in Wootton Bassett, below, without a flag in sight

"Fire halls had their trucks out, with their members in full dress uniform out front paying respects to our comrades.

"People stopped their cars along the side of the road, got out and saluted or held their hands over their hearts.

"As we neared downtown, the streets were lined with crowds waving Canadian flags and paying their respects.

"The outpouring of support for our fallen heroes and their families was beyond belief."

Lt Col Legere's letter concluded: "Never before have I been as proud to wear this uniform."

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Honour: Former servicemen and women line the streets in Canada to pay their respects, above, and in Britain the hearse passes without notice, below

Highways for Heroes have been designated in other Canadian cities and many people pay their respects when a fallen soldier returns. Police escorts are the norm.

The spectacle contrasts strongly with the progress of a British cortege which The Mail on Sunday was given special permission to follow earlier this month.

Lieutenant John Thornton, 22, and Marine David Marsh, 23, both of 40 Commando Royal Marines, were killed in a vehicle explosion while patrolling in Helmand Province.

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Hand on heart: Firefighters stand by the engines to salute the hearse in Canada, but, below, the British hearse is tied down in heavy traffic

Their two black hearses and an empty spare hearse accompanying them were initially escorted by Wiltshire Police.

The cortege first passed through the village of Wootton Bassett where locals, forewarned by the RAF base, gather at the war memorial to pay their respects.

But for much of the rest of the trip to Oxford – where the bodies undergo post-mortems before being returned to their families – the hearses are on their own, led only by an undertaker's car.

They were cut up by impatient motorists at roundabouts, stuck in traffic and generally ignored by the public, their significance lost because of a lack of the gravitas that a police escort would provide.

The problem has arisen because the Wiltshire Constabulary escort – normally three motorcycle outriders and two patrol cars which stop other traffic along the route – has to "peel off" at the Oxfordshire border where the Thames Valley force area begins.

The corteges then have to fend for themselves on Oxford's notorious ring-road.

Inspector Mark Levitt of Wiltshire Police has taken up the matter with Thames Valley.

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Respect: Scores of police get out of stopped cars as the Canadian soldiers are driven past. In Britain, below, the streets remain empty

He told The Mail on Sunday: "I phoned one of the road policing managers and asked if they would continue the repatriation escorts to Oxford and he said it was not in their force policy to provide one for this type of thing."

Insp Levitt, who has helped organise the stops at Wootton Bassett war memorial, added: "We have officers who come in on their days off to help with the escort duties, because they want to show their respects to the young soldiers who died for us and are genuinely touched by the tribute and respect shown by the people of Wootton Bassett."

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Salute: As night falls in Toronto, firefighters stand to attention ahead of the cortege. In Britain, police peel off at the Thames valley border and go unnoticed

But Thames Valley Police defended their failure to provide an escort.

They say that even before April last year, when RAF Brize Norton in Oxfordshire rather than Lyneham was used for repatriating war dead, the force provided escorts only if there was an "operational need", such as large numbers of vehicles, families or people involved.

Assistant Chief Constable Brian Langston claimed that "most of the time" escorts were not required or requested.

"I've spoken to my counterpart at Wiltshire Police and I understand they provide escorts because of the people involved at the Wootton Bassett events.

"We try to provide what people say are their priorities, and so far that's been to focus on community safety rather than ceremonial roles."

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A man holds a hand to his heart on the motorway as the Canadian cortege passes, above. But the British hearse passes without so much as a wave from passers by, below

But Labour MP Mr Davies said: "It is very much to the credit of Wiltshire Police that they are stopping traffic and giving dignity and respect to those who have given their lives to this country.

"I think it is disgusting that the police in Oxfordshire do not do the same."

Thames Valley Police are, however, well versed in escort duties.

The force operates its own Protection Group which provides security for the Royal Family at Windsor Castle, escorts visiting heads of state and guards the many Government officials and other VIPs who have homes in Berkshire, Buckinghamshire and Oxfordshire.

Quentin Davies acknowledged that a Canadian-style Highway for Heroes may not be right for Britain but added: "It is very comforting to the families to know that places like Wootton Bassett have paid direct and specific tribute.

"It is very important to let the public reflect on their sacrifice. Indeed they [the families] might even feel they have been betrayed without it."

Conservative MP Patrick Mercer, a former Army colonel, said: "This is the latest breach of the military covenant.

"Even in death our men are being scorned.

"The compensation our Servicemen receive is pitiful, the shortages of body armour are scandalous, the way the Government is trying to gag coroners over the death of Servicemen disgusting.

"Now we have this. All of these things shout of shabbiness."

The Ministry of Defence refused to comment, claiming it was "a local issue".