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PA

India defence chief among 13 dead in helicopter crash

Bipin Rawat was India’s first chief of defence staff, a position that the government established in 2019, and was seen as close to Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

LAST UPDATE | 8 Dec 2021

INDIAN DEFENCE CHIEF General Bipin Rawat was among 13 people killed in a helicopter crash on Wednesday, raising questions over the future of military reforms he was leading.

Rawat was India’s first chief of defence staff, a position that the government established in 2019, and was seen as close to Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

The 63-year-old was travelling with his wife and other senior officers in the Russian-made Mi-17 chopper, which crashed near its destination in southern Tamil Nadu state.

Modi said Rawat was an outstanding soldier and “true patriot” who had helped modernise the country’s armed forces.

“His passing away has saddened me deeply,” the prime minister wrote on Twitter. “India will never forget his exceptional service.”

Strategic analyst and author Brahma Chellaney tweeted that Rawat’s death “couldn’t have come at a worse time” when “China’s 20-month-long border aggression has resulted in a warlike situation along the Himalayan front”.

Footage from the crash showed a crowd of people trying to extinguish the fiery wreck with water buckets while a group of soldiers carried one of the passengers away on an improvised stretcher.

Rawat was headed to the Defence Services Staff College (DSSC) to address students and faculty from the nearby Sulur air force base in Coimbatore.

The chopper was already making its descent at the time of the crash and came down around 10 kilometres (six miles) from the nearest main road, forcing emergency workers to trek to the accident site, a fire official told AFP.

An eyewitness at the scene said he had seen passengers falling from the helicopter before the crash, and that one person had crawled out from the wreckage.

The sole survivor, a captain working at the DSSC, was being treated for his injuries at a nearby military hospital, the air force said.

Rawat was chief of the 1.3 million-strong army from 2017 to 2019 before his elevation to defence services chief, which analysts said was to improve coordination between the army, navy and air force.

New Delhi is looking to increase its military effectiveness in the face of heightened tensions with China following deadly clashes in a disputed Himalayan region, as well as its longstanding conflict with neighbouring Pakistan.

“He had given a tremendous push to the integration of the three services, so his successor has big shoes to fill,” retired Lieutenant General DS Hooda, a former head of the Indian army’s Northern Command, told AFP.

“He had a tough job… we will need someone to give the same impetus that he had given so that the reforms that he started continue at the same pace.”

Career officer

Rawat came from a military family with several generations having served in the Indian armed forces.

The general joined the army as a second lieutenant in 1978 and had four decades of service behind him, having commanded forces in Indian-administered Kashmir and along the Line of Actual Control bordering China.

He was credited with reducing insurgency on India’s northeastern frontier and supervised a cross-border counter-insurgency operation into neighbouring Myanmar.

But at the same time he was a polarising figure whose willingness to make political statements put him at odds with the military’s traditional neutrality in the world’s largest democracy.

He was considered close to the Modi government and turned heads last month when he reportedly made an approving reference to “lynching terrorists” in the contested territory of Kashmir.

The Mi-17 helicopter, which first entered service in the 1970s and is in wide use by defence services around the world, has been involved in a number of accidents over the years.

Fourteen people died in a crash last month when an Azerbaijani military Mi-17 chopper went down during a training flight.

In 2019, four Indonesian soldiers were killed and five others wounded in central Java in another training accident involving the aircraft.

India’s air force said an inquiry was under way into Wednesday’s accident.

© – AFP, 2021

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    Mute Jon Hayes
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    Jul 22nd 2012, 8:30 AM

    all these people do is talk about our country’s problems – when is one of these so called leaders going to actually do something positive for the country instead of just talk about it?

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    Mute Resel
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    Jul 22nd 2012, 9:04 AM

    Corruption and the Catholic Church. Both go hand in hand anyway.

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    Mute Resel
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    Jul 22nd 2012, 9:13 AM

    Thumb me down if you wish but back it up with a comment. You can’t. Guess you’re thumbing me down as you don’t like to hear the truth.

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    Mute Donncha Foley
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    Jul 22nd 2012, 9:26 AM

    I just gave you a red thumb because it seems to push your buttons…

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    Mute Scully Pj
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    Jul 22nd 2012, 8:41 AM

    Somewhat misleading title, but sure then who has an agenda?

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    Mute dublinlad72
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    Jul 22nd 2012, 9:46 AM

    I see your point, personally I would have went for Child Abuse, Deceit & The Catholic Church.

    They all go hand in hand.

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    Mute Resel
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    Jul 22nd 2012, 9:27 AM

    Lol. Back at ya.

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    Mute Diarmuid Murray
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    Jul 22nd 2012, 9:04 AM

    Rhubarb,Rhubarb,Rhubarb!!!!

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    Mute Mad Taoiseach
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    Jul 22nd 2012, 8:46 AM

    Prominent government ministers is an oxymoron. Too early on a Sunday for this.

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    Mute Michael Fagan
    Favourite Michael Fagan
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    Jul 22nd 2012, 10:12 AM

    These talks sound very interesting, should give an insight into the mindset of the country’s leaders. Do they get published??

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    Mute Conchubhair MacLochlainn
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    Jul 22nd 2012, 1:39 PM

    The event was streamed live last year, dunno about plans for this one.

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    Mute Brian Walsh
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    Jul 22nd 2012, 12:25 PM

    If the theme of such meetings is “Reforming and Rebuilding our State” I can understand where such topics as Political Corruption and Public Sector reform would fit in to these debates. These are subjects which affect us all, but I can’t understand how “The future of the Catholic Church in Ireland” has any bearing on any of this. Surely politics and religion are seperate issues and neither should have any bearing on the other, as has happened in the past. Anyone wishing to discuss religion should do so with their priest, bishop or cardinal but not with their local politican.

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    Mute Garth Sutherland
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    Jul 22nd 2012, 2:07 PM

    The first and only way step forward is to have a total separation between (all!) religion and the state in this fair land of ours. “Freedom of Religion” also means “Freedom for ALL Religions”! As far as the State is concerned, real democracy and freedom can only be achieved when there is total freedom FROM all “Religion”! Real democracy means that religious beliefs need to be kept to the confines of our personal lives. And, most definitely not be imposed upon the majority of the populace as was the past practise here. This can only really be achieved when all religions are not permitted to, in any way, ever again have any influence on ALL the “Affairs of State”!

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    Mute Brian Walsh
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    Jul 22nd 2012, 2:36 PM

    Very well put.

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    Mute Mary Creighton Wong
    Favourite Mary Creighton Wong
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    Aug 6th 2012, 10:13 AM

    they will all go away have a jolly time talking pure crap come back a few pounds in the arses heavier and still spit the same shit to the people ….a knees up that shower are getting together for its in the blood ..nothing changes in ireland where religion and government are because truth be known there one and the same so to speak they live like paracites off each other …they both abused us and used us for their own gain …time the real truth came out and the real Ireland shows her fae and true colors …..Brave men died for Ireland and her people not for to abuse her people ……

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