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IAF chopper crash: Probe rules out sabotage, bad weather prime reason

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NEW DELHI: No technical snag or sabotage and bad weather leading to a phenomenon called Controlled Flight Into Terrain (CFIT) is believed to have been identified as the prime reason for the crash of the IAF helicopter near Coonoor that killed CDS Gen Bipin Rawat and 13 others, people familiar with the developmen­t said on Wednesday.

Chief of Air Staff Air Chief Marshal VR Chaudhari and Air Marshal Manvendra Singh who headed the tri-service investigat­ion into the crash apprised Defence Minister Rajnath Singh on the findings of the probe on Wednesday.

The people cited above said the investigat­ors have ruled out any possibilit­y of technical snag or sabotage in the crash of the Russian-origin twin-engine Mi-17V5 helicopter that was flying from Sulur airbase to Wellington on December 8. According to experts, the CFIT refers to a phenomenon when an aircraft under control is piloted into the ground, water or other terrains largely due to bad weather or pilot error. The CFIT generally takes place in bad weather conditions or when a flight is landing.

There is no official comment on the probe report either by the Indian Air Force or by the defence ministry.

According to the IATA (Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n), CFIT refers to accidents in which there was a collision with terrain, water, or obstacle, without indication of loss of control of the aircraft.

“The critical distinctio­n in these types of accidents is the fact that the aircraft is under the control of the flight crew,” it said. The Federal Aviation Administra­tion of the US government described CFIT as an unintentio­nal collision with terrain (the ground, a mountain, a body of water, or an obstacle) while an aircraft is under positive control.

“Most often, the pilot or crew is unaware of the looming disaster until it is too late,” it said. The people cited above said a sudden cloud cover could have resulted in the CFIT. “At times, a pilot may lose situationa­l awareness when there is a visual disruption,” said an aviation expert.

Visuals of the helicopter captured by locals before the crash had shown that the chopper was flying at a low altitude. The chopper had crashed around eight minutes before its scheduled landing at Wellington.

The people said the probe team examined all likely scenarios for the crash including possible human error or whether it was a case of disorienta­tion by the crew when the helicopter was preparing for landing. Gen Rawat’s wife Madhulika, his defence advisor Brigadier LS Lidder, staff officer to the Chief of Defence Staff, Lt Col Harjinder Singh and decorated pilot Group Captain Varun Singh were among 13 others killed in the crash near Coonoor in Tamil Nadu.

Air Marshal Singh, who headed the probe team, is currently serving as Air Officer Commanding-in-Chief of the Bengaluru-headquarte­red Training Command of the IAF.

 ?? ?? File picture of the helicopter crash near Coonor last month
File picture of the helicopter crash near Coonor last month

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