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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Chopper crash kills India’s defence chief, 12 others

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NEW DELHI: India's Defence Chief Bipin Rawat, his wife and 11 other people were killed after a military helicopter they were travelling in crashed in southern India on Wednesday, the Indian Air Force said.


Rawat, 63, was appointed as India's first Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) by Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government in late 2019.


The accident took place around noon near the town of Coonoor, and the dead include four crew members of the Mi-17V5 helicopter, the Air Force said in a tweet.


"There are three to four dead at the crash site but we don't know the identities," a fire department official in Coonoor said.


"Some of the injured have been taken to the hospital," he said, adding around two dozen fire brigade vehicles were at the scene to douse a fire. Rawat and his wife were on board along with other officers and were headed to the Defence Services Staff College, a senior army officer said.


Videos broadcast on Indian news channels showed a fiery wreck at the crash site in a dense forested area near the college in Nilgiris district. Media reports said the chopper took off from Sulur Air Force Station on Wednesday afternoon.


Rawat comes from a military family with several generations having served in the Indian armed forces.


The general joined the army as a second lieutenant in 1978 and has four decades of service behind him, having commanded forces in Indian-administered Kashmir and along the Line of Actual Control bordering China.


He is credited with reducing insurgency on India's northeastern frontier and supervised a cross-border counter-insurgency operation into neighbouring Myanmar.


Rawat was chief of the 1.3 million-strong army from 2017 to 2019 before his elevation to defence services chief, which analysts said was to improve integration between the army, navy and air force.


He is considered close to the Modi government and turned heads last month when he reportedly made an approving reference to "lynching terrorists" in the contested territory of Kashmir.


The Mi-17 helicopter, which first entered service in the 1970s and is in wide use by defence services around the world, has been involved in a number of accidents over the years.


Fourteen people died in a crash last month when an Azerbaijani military Mi-17 chopper went down during a training flight.


In 2019, four Indonesian soldiers were killed and five others wounded in central Java in another training accident involving the aircraft.


India's air force said an inquiry was underway into Wednesday's accident. - AFP


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