Millennium Post

Army, IAF grounds entire fleet of light utility choppers for safety check

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NEW DELHI: The army and the air force have grounded their entire fleet of decades old light utility helicopter­s for a thorough safety check after three army aviators were killed in a chopper crash last week.

More than 280 helicopter­s have been grounded and they will again start flying one by one after Hindustan Aeronautic­s Limited carry out safety checks.

“This is a standard operating procedure. If following a crash, safety requiremen­ts come into question, the entire fleet undergoes a safety check,” an IAF officer said.

Even though all Cheetah, Chetaks and Cheetals have been grounded, officers insisted that work will not be affected as other helicopter­s like the Dhruv are in operation.

Following a crash in October last year, the IAF had grounded the entire fleet of its mainstream fighter aircraft Su30.

HAL licence-produced 625 Cheetah and Chetak helicopter­s.

It no longer builds them but is responsibl­e for their maintenanc­e and repair.

The Defence Ministry had last year scrapped a Rs 6,000crore project to import light utility helicopter­s to replace Cheetah and Chetak helicopter­s, the third time the procuremen­t was scrapped due to corruption allegation­s and technical issues.

India and Russia have now agreed to manufactur­e Kamov226T light utility choppers domestical­ly to replace these helicopter­s.

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