Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Army set to deploy fleet of armed choppers in NE

- Rahul Singh rahul.singh@hindustant­imes.com

ARMY SOURCES SAID THE DHRUV MKIV SQUADRON WITH 10 INDIGENOUS­LYBUILT HELICOPTER­S WAS LIKELY TO BE FUNCTIONAL IN TWO TO THREE MONTHS

Beefing up its force levels in the northeast to counter China, the Indian Army is all set to deploy a squadron of weaponised Dhruv advanced light helicopter­s in Assam’s Likabali town. This will be the army’s first armed helicopter unit in the region.

India has redoubled its efforts to strengthen its deployment­s in the eastern sector, with the raising of a new mountain strike corps, stationing of frontline Sukhoi-30 fighter planes, reactivati­on of advanced landing grounds, deploying supersonic cruise missiles and proposed basing of special operations aircraft.

Army sources said the Dhruv Mk-IV squadron with 10 indigenous­ly-built helicopter­s was likely to be functional in two to three months, as part of an overarchin­g plan to scale up the force’s offensive capabiliti­es in the eastern sector.

There are four weapon stations on the helicopter with a turret gun in its nose area. Weaponised Dhruv helicopter­s are equipped with air-to-air missiles, 70 mm rockets and 20 mm turret guns. Newer variants are being equipped with anti-tank guided missiles, infrared jammers and obstacle avoidance systems. The army’s aviation wing has an armed chopper squadron near Jodhpur and another unit is coming up in one of the northern states.

The army is speeding up a new mountain strike corps whose raising was kicked off in January 2014 in West Bengal’s Panagarh.

Aimed at countering China in the northeast, the government will spend around ₹40,000 crore on the new corps, 17 Corps, which is likely to be fully operationa­l by 2025. The corps will be equipped with M777s ultra light-weighed howitzers ordered from the United States in November 2016 under a $750-million contract. The contract is for 145 M777s.

Of these, 25 ready-built weapons will be supplied by the United States of America (USA) over the next two years and the remaining 120 howitzers will be produced in the country under the Modi government’s ambitious Make in India initiative.

Manufactur­ed by Britain’s defence and aerospace company, BAE Systems, the guns will be built in India in collaborat­ion with Mahindra Defence. The 155 mm/39-caliber howitzers have been bought to increase the army’s capabiliti­es in high altitude Last August, India cleared the deployment of a special version of BrahMos supersonic cruise missiles in the north-east.

Weeks after the Indian government cleared the new BrahMos regiment at a cost of ₹4,300 crore, China warned that such a move would have “a negative influence” on stability along the border.

With the death of an injured during treatment on Friday night, the death toll in Saharanpur violence has risen to three. A Rajput youth Pradeep Chauhan succumbed to injuries in a Chandigarh hospital on Friday night.

Pradeep, 25, was a resident of village Asnawali of Dehat Kotwali area and he was on way to Saharanpur on May 24 when two motorcycle borne miscreants shot at him near village Chakarheti of Janakpuri police station. He was taken to district hospital and later referred to PGI Chandigarh where he was undergoing treatment.

Additional police force has been deployed in Asnawali, the native village of Chauhan as tension has escalated in and around the village after his death. District magistrate PK Pandey and SSP Babloo Kumar are camping in the village to ensure peace in the area.

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