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Search for MiG-29 wreckage, pilot on: IAF

The Indian Air Force (IAF) said today it was still searching for the pilot and the wreckage of a MiG-29 jet that crashed in the inhospitable Himalayan terrain of Lahaul Valley in Himachal Pradesh.

Updated on: Oct 20, 2011 03:03 PM IST
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The Indian Air Force (IAF) said on Thursday it was still searching for the pilot and the wreckage of a MiG-29 jet that crashed in the inhospitable Himalayan terrain of Lahaul Valley in Himachal Pradesh.

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HT Image

"The search operation would continue till the wreckage is found. We have deployed a Dornier, an AN-32 and Chetak helicopters," Flight Lieutenant Priya Joshi, spokesperson for IAF's Western Air Command, told IANS over phone from New Delhi.

The pilot, who had taken off from Adampur near Jalandhar in Punjab on Tuesday night, was on night flying training when disaster struck, she said.

It crashed in the mountains of Lahaul and Spiti district, adjoining Ladakh region of Jammu and Kashmir.

The IAF Thursday renewed its search after a day-long operation the previous day.

"Four choppers were pressed into service in Bharmour (Chamba district) and Chokhang mountains (Lahaul Valley) Thursday morning," said Lahaul and Spiti Deputy Commissioner Rajeev Shankar.

The search operation is now focused on the high passes between the Kugti wildlife sanctuary and the Chobia Pass, located at an altitude of 5,000 m above sea level.

"The entire mountain range in the interiors of Lahaul and Spiti is treacherous, and it's really difficult to trace the wreckage as the hills are quite steep and gorges are narrow," Shankar said.

An IAF AN-12 aircraft with 102 defence personnel on board, including six crew members, crashed on the 17,400-feet-high Dakka glacier in the Chandrebhaga ranges in Lahaul and Spiti Feb 7, 1968. Only four bodies were recovered.

 
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