Los Angeles Times

Crash kills India’s military chief

General, his wife and 11 others died when helicopter went down in a ‘tragic accident,’ the air force says.

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NEW DELHI — India’s military chief, Gen. Bipin Rawat, and 12 others were killed Wednesday in a helicopter crash in southern Tamil Nadu state, the air force said.

It said in a tweet that the helicopter “met with a tragic accident.”

The dead included Rawat’s wife. The air force said one of its officers, Group Capt. Varun Singh, survived and is being treated at a military hospital.

The air force said the Mi-17V5 helicopter was on its way from an air force base to the army defense services college when it crashed near the town of Coonoor in Tamil Nadu. The cause of the crash was not immediatel­y known.

Television images from the crash site showed plumes of smoke billowing from the wreckage as local residents tried to put out the fire and remove bodies.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi said Rawat had contribute­d greatly to modernizin­g the country’s armed forces. “His insights and perspectiv­es on strategic matters were exceptiona­l,” Modi said.

Defense Minister Rajnath Singh said Rawat had “served the country with exceptiona­l courage and diligence.”

The air force said in a tweet that an inquiry has been ordered into the accident.

Rawat, 63, was the most senior official in the Indian military and the first chief of defense staff, a position created by the government in 2019. He was also an advisor to the Defense Ministry.

His primary task was to overhaul India’s military, which has struggled to modernize and improve coordinati­on among the army, navy and air force.

Rawat previously served as chief of army staff and also commanded forces in Indian-controlled Kashmir and along the frontier with China.

In 2015, Rawat oversaw Indian “surgical strikes” on neighborin­g Myanmar, when para-commandos entered the country to attack Naga rebels who had ambushed and killed Indian troops.

In 2017, he awarded a gallantry medal to an army officer who had tied a civilian to the front of his jeep in Kashmir, where rebels are fighting Indian rule. The incident sparked controvers­y within India and outside, with rights groups saying the officer used the man as a human shield against stone-throwing protesters. Rawat said the officer’s actions were within the rules because the army was facing a “dirty war” in the disputed region and had to fight using “innovative” methods.

Last month, he triggered another controvers­y by saying on television that Kashmir residents were offering to “lynch terrorists themselves” and that it was a “very positive sign.” Lynchings are illegal under Indian law. He did not provide any evidence to support his statement.

Kashmir is divided between India and Pakistan, and both claim the Himalayan territory in its entirety. Most Muslim Kashmiris support the rebels’ goal of a united Kashmir, either independen­t or under Pakistani rule.

Rawat survived an earlier helicopter crash in 2015 in the northeast state of Nagaland.

The type of military transport helicopter that crashed Wednesday is widely used in India by the army and ministers when visiting defense locations.

In 2017, an Mi-17V5 helicopter crashed in Arunachal Pradesh state, killing seven military personnel.

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