The Indian Army on Tuesday set a world record of sorts as its pilots and technicians successfully recovered a helicopter which was stuck in snow at an altitude of 18,000 feet at Siachen Glacier in Jammu and Kashmir.
The helicopter was brought back safely to the Siachen base camp with the help of infantry troops deployed there. According to the official sources, an ALH Dhruv chopper, on an air maintenance sortie in the 74-km-long Siachen Glacier, developed a snag and had to be landed around a post called Khanda in January this year.
“The pilots and the chopper managed to land safely on soft snow but could not reach the helipad there,” the sources said. “Though the chopper landed safely, the overnight snow resulted in its falling sideways. Attempts were made to recover it but there was no success till July, the sources noted.
However, the attempts were successful in July this year, when the technicians and pilots of the Army ALH squadron 203 in Leh managed to put new parts on the chopper and bring it back safely to the Siachen Glacier base camp.
Former Army Aviation chief Lt Gen P K Bharali (retd) said, “I know the pilots and technicians who were involved in this operation. Knowing these people as I have headed this Army Aviation Corps for a couple of years, all I can say is that nothing is impossible for these men from Indian Army.”
Notably, the chopper was stuck at 18,000 feet and recovering it from there is a world record of sorts because India is one of the very few countries in the world who operate choppers at such high altitudes. The Cheetah and Chetak choppers which are the French-origin machines in the Indian Army fly at around 23,000 feet.
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