Designed by
Carl Gauthier and
Fraser Herald Cathy Bursey-Sabourin, the South-West Asia Service Medal is in the form of a nickel-plated
gunmetal disc with, on the obverse, the
Latin words
ELIZABETH II DEI GRATIA REGINA (Elizabeth II, by the Grace of God, Queen) and, separated by maple leaves,
CANADA, all surrounding an
effigy of
Queen Elizabeth II wearing the
George IV State Diadem, symbolizing her roles as both
fount of honour and
Commander-in-Chief of the Canadian Forces. On the reverse is a depiction of the
Lernaean Hydra transfixed by a Canadian sword, all circumscribed by the words
ADVERSUS MALUM PUGNAMUS (we are fighting evil). This medallion is worn at the left chest, suspended on a 31.8-millimetre-wide ribbon coloured with vertical stripes in tan (representing the theatre of operations), red (recalling the blood spilled on 11 September 2001), and black (evoking the shock of the attacks on
New York and
Washington), symmetrically flanking a white central stripe (indicating peace). Should an individual already possessing a South-West Asia Service Medal be awarded the
medal bar for combat service, he or she is granted a claspin nickel-plated gunmetal with raised edges and bearing the word
AFGHANISTANfor wear on the ribbon from which the original medal is suspended. ==Eligibility and allocation==