Two pilots killed as Indian army chopper crashes in Bhutan
Bhutanese pilots have been training with the Indian military since 2014 as a part of an arrangement between the two countries.
NEW DELHI: An Indian military helicopter on a training mission in Bhutan crashed Friday, killing two pilots, India´s army said.
The single-engine Cheetah helicopter was on its way from Khirmu in India´s northeastern state of Arunachal Pradesh to Yongphulla in Bhutan.
One of the pilots who died was from the Indian Army while the other was from the Royal Bhutan Army.
"Ground search and rescue were launched immediately from Yongphulla. The wreckage has been located," the Indian Army said in a statement.
Bhutanese pilots have been training with the Indian military since 2014 as a part of an arrangement between the two countries.
Cheetahs are vintage planes which have been in the Indian Army for decades despite their poor safety record.
In 2016, three Indian army officers were killed when the Cheetah crashed in West Bengal state.
Another three officers lost their lives in 2014 in a similar incident involving the Cheetah in northern Uttar Pradesh.
The choppers were built by India´s Hindustan Aeronautics Limited after it signed a license agreement with French state-owned Aerospatiale in 1970.
-
Manhunt continues for suspect who killed 2 at South Carolina State University
-
Trump considers scaling back trade levies on steel, aluminium in response to rising costs
-
Trump revokes legal basis for US climate regulation, curb vehicle emission standards
-
DOJ blocks Trump administration from cutting $600M in public health funds
-
Scientists find strange solar system that breaks planet formation rules
-
Woman calls press ‘vultures’ outside Nancy Guthrie’s home after tense standoff
-
Casey Wasserman to remain LA Olympics chair despite Ghislaine Maxwell ties
-
Gigi Hadid feels 'humiliated' after Zayn Malik's 'pathetic' comment: Source