City
Epaper

Chopper crash: Inquiry rules out mechanical failure, blames spatial disorientation of pilots in clouds leading to accident

By ANI | Published: January 14, 2022 7:46 PM

The Tri-Services Court of Inquiry constituted to probe the cause of the Mi-17 V5 accident that claimed the lives of late Chief of Defence Staff General Bipin Rawat and his wife and 12 other military personnel onboard on December 8, has ruled out mechanical failure and said that entry into clouds led to the spatial disorientation of pilot leading to the accident.

Open in App

The Tri-Services Court of Inquiry constituted to probe the cause of the Mi-17 V5 accident that claimed the lives of late Chief of Defence Staff General Bipin Rawat and his wife and 12 other military personnel onboard on December 8, has ruled out mechanical failure and said that entry into clouds led to the spatial disorientation of pilot leading to the accident.

The tri-services inquiry had submitted its preliminary findings to the Defence Minister last week. The probe ruled out mechanical failure, sabotage or negligence as a cause of the accident.

According to the statement of the Indian Air Force, the cause of the unfortunate accident was attributed to the unexpected change of weather conditions in the valley.The inquiry was headed by Air Marshal Manvendra Singh, Air Officer Commanding-in-Chief Training Command.

"The inquiry team analysed the Flight Data Recorder and Cockpit Voice Recorder besides questioning all available witnesses to determine the most probable cause of the accident. The Court of Inquiry has ruled out mechanical failure, sabotage or negligence as a cause of the accident. The accident was a result of entry into clouds due to unexpected change in weather conditions in the valley," said the statement.

"This led to spatial disorientation of the pilot resulting in Controlled Flight into Terrain. Based on its findings, the Court of Inquiry has made certain recommendations which are being reviewed," it added.

The Indian Air Force (IAF) had presented a detailed tri-services inquiry report to Union Defence Minister Rajnath Singh on the Mi-17 chopper crash on December 8.

General Rawat was headed to Defence Services Staff College in Wellington to address the faculty and student officers of the Staff Course when his chopper crashed.General Rawat's wife Madhulika Rawat, his Defence Adviser Brigadier Lakhbinder Singh Lidder, Staff Officer Lieutenant Colonel Harjinder Singh, Group Captain Varun Singh and nine other armed forces personnel including the Air Force helicopter crew lost their lives in the accident.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Tri-services court of inquiryIndian Air ForceRajnath SinghLakhbinder singh lidder
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalPM Narendra Modi and Rajnath Singh Join LK Advani and Murli Manohar Joshi in BJP Margdarshak Mandal

NationalModi Cabinet 2024: Amit Shah Likely to Replace Nirmala Sitharaman As Finance Minister, Say Sources

NationalLok Sabha Election 2024: Voting Begins in Fifth Phase of Lok Sabha Polls, Several Bigwigs in Fray

NationalUttarakhand Forest Fire: Poor Visibility Due to Thick Smoke Hampers IAF’s Firefighting Efforts; See Pics and Video

NationalPoonch Terror Attack: Madhya Pradesh CM Mohan Yadav Announces Rs 1 Crore Compensation for Family of IAF Soldier Corporal Vikky Pahade

National Realted Stories

National6 feared missing as boat capsizes in Patna

NationalIAF contingent participates in combat exercise 'Red Flag' in Alaska

NationalDelhi Water Crisis: Jal Board Office Vandalised by Unidentified People in Chhatarpur Area (Watch Video)

NationalGovt's focus to create robust framework for social inclusion: Minister Virendra Kumar

NationalAmit Malviya slams K'taka Congress over fuel price hike