1968 Indian Air Force An-12 crash

1968 Indian Air Force An-12 crash
An Indian Air Force Antonov An-12, similar to the missing aircraft.
Occurrence
Date 7 February 1968 (1968-02-07)
Summary Missing from 1968 till discovery of mortal remains of one of the victims in 2003
Crashed[1]
Site Dhaka Glacier, India
Aircraft
Aircraft type Antonov An-12
Operator Indian Air Force
Registration BL534
Flight origin Chandigarh International Airport, Chandigarh[1]
Destination Leh Airport, Jammu and Kashmir[1]
Passengers 98
Crew 4
Fatalities All [1]
Missing 94 (all) 4 remains recovered[2]
Survivors 0

On 7 February 1968, an Antonov An-12 twin engine turboprop transport aircraft of the Indian Air Force piloted by Flight Lieutenant Harkewal Singh and Squadron Leader Pran Nath Malhotra,[3][4][5] disappeared while flying to Leh Airport from Chandigarh.[2] It was While on approach to Leh the pilot decided to turn back due to inclement weather,[1] the aircraft then went missing with the last radio contact over the Rohtang pass. It was declared missing after the failure to find the wreck.

Recovery

In 2003 members of the Himalayan Mountaineering Institute who were trekking on the South Dakka Glacier came across the remains of a human body.[2][3] The body was identified as Sepoy Beli Ram, a soldier of the Indian Army who was on the flight.[6]

On 9 August 2007 an Indian Army expedition code named Operation Punaruthan-III,[7] recovered three more bodies.[8]

From 2003 till 2009 three search expeditions have been carried out with the recovery of four bodies.[2] The crash location lies at a height of about 18,000 ft 0 in (5,486.40 m), at a gradient of 80 degrees.

On 21 July 2018 the Times of India reported that a mountaineering team at the Chandrabhaga-13 peak had found a body at the Dhaka glacier base camp.[9] The team found wreckage of the plane along with the remains of a soldier on 11 July 2018.[9][10] The team leader mentioned that the expedition was on a mission to clear up the trash left behind by climbers, and that it was organised by the Indian Mountaineering Foundation and the ONGC.[10]

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.