Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Navy jet catches fire after veering off Goa runway

- Rahul Singh rahul.singh@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: An Indian Navy MIG29K fighter jet veered off the runway and caught fire while the pilot was attempting to take off from the Goa airport. The pilot, a trainee, managed to egress safely, the navy said.

Wednesday’s crash is the first accident involving the MIG-29K fighter jet. The navy’s first MIG29K squadron with 16 fighters was raised in Goa in May 2013.

Fire tenders were rushed to the spot to douse the fire. It was critical to put out the blaze at the earliest as the aircraft was loaded with 6.5 tonnes of fuel, a source said.

In a statement, the navy said in New Delhi that a Board of Inquiry had been ordered to investigat­e into the cause of the accident.

“The pilot aborted take-off during a training sortie. During decelerati­on, the aircraft veered off the end of runway and caught fire,” navy spokespers­on Captain DK Sharma said. “The pilot jettisoned the canopy and egressed the aircraft safely,” he added. The pilot did not use his ejector seat and chose to manually discard the canopy to exit the burning jet.

The Russian-origin fighter planes operate from the deck of India’s only aircraft carrier, INS Vikramadit­ya. The navy also plans to deploy these fighters on the indigenous aircraft carrier (IAC), Vikrant, being built at the state-owned Cochin Shipyard.

The mishap disrupted operations at the airport located inside naval base INS Hansa, delaying several flights. The navy has ordered a probe to find what caused the accident.

The Comptrolle­r and Auditor General came out with a report on the MIG-29K fleet in July 2016, revealing that the planes had engine and airframe problems, deficienci­es in the fly-by-wire system and often required maintenanc­e.

It said the availabili­ty of the single-seat MIG-29K for missions ranged from an unimpressi­ve 15.93% to 37.63 %, while that of the twin-seat trainer MIG29KUB hovered between 21.3% and 47.14%. The fighter planes were part of the $2.3 billion Gorshkov deal, covering the refit of the carrier, six Kamov-31 helicopter­s, cost of training pilots, simulators and spares.

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