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No trace of helicopter with Arunachal chief minister

The chopper was last in communication with the base when it was overflying Sela Pass, 20 minutes after taking off from Tawang, and all communication was lost after that.

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A helicopter carrying Arunachal Pradesh chief minister Dorjee Khandu and four others went missing today shortly after take off from Tawang and apprehensions grew about their fate with search operations yielding no results.

Khandu, accompanied by the sister of Tawang MLA, security officer, had taken off from Tawang at 9.56am and was to land at Itanagar at 11.30am by a Pawan Hans helicopter Eurocopter B3 craft. Tawang is about 200km from Itanagar.

The chopper was last in communication with the base when it was overflying Sela Pass, 20 minutes after taking off from Tawang, and all communications were lost after that.

There was confusion in the afternoon with claims made by Governor Gen (retd) JJ Singh first and then by the chief minister's office and defence spokesperson that the chief minister had landed safely in a place called Daporijo in Upper Subansiri district. The CM's office said the helicopter had landed in a place in Bhutan.

However later in the evening there were denials from all concerned saying helicopter has not been located and search operation was still on.

"The helicopter is missing and the search operation is still on," Union home secretary Gopal K Pillai said in New Delhi in the evening.

The Arunachal Pradesh government said that it is yet to ascertain the whereabouts of the Pawan Hans chopper which went missing since morning with the chief minister and four others on board.

Arunachal Pradesh deputy inspector general of police Robin Hibu said joint search operation for the missing copter will be conducted by army, air force and state police from tomorrow morning by air and through ground.

The five on board included crew members Captain JS Babbar and Captain KS Malick, Khandu's security officer Yeshi Choddak and Yeshi Lamu, sister of Tawang MLA Tsewang Dhondup.

Defence spokesperson Wing Commander Ranjeev Sahoo said in Shillong that two IAF Cheetah helicopters were sent for the rescue and search operations.

"They have flown from Tezpur and searched the route from Tawang to Itanagar. Because of inclement weather they had to come back after two hours of search. But they could not locate the missing chopper. If needed they would be sent again tomorrow," Sahoo told PTI.

Pawan Hans officials said in Guwahati "We have not been able to contact our pilots and unless we receive information from them, we cannot confirm any report".

Khandu, 56, who had served in the intelligence wing of the Indian Army, was sworn on April 9, 2007 as the fifth chief minister of the state, replacing Gegong Apang.

Earlier Pillai had said that search parties left from Itanagar by road to the probable site near Sela Pass. The defence ministry, army and the air force have all been alerted.

"Unfortunately because of very bad weather the flights have not been able to take off for the search in Tawang area. But as soon as weather clears, the helicopters will take off", Pillai said.

Defence ministry spokesperson in Kolkata Wing Commander Mahesh Upasani said despite inclement weather, two Cheetah helicopters have been pressed into service from Tezpur in Assam for search and rescue operations.

The request for help reached the air force at 12.30pm and the two helicopters took off within 40 minutes.

The air force has pressed into service two helicopters in search operations to locate the missing chopper. The Pawan Hans chopper was a Eurocopter B-3 and was just 4-5 months old. It was based in Itanagar.

This is the third helicopter to get into trouble in the Northeast in the last fortnight.

In the April 19 incident, a Pawan Hans helicopter crashed in the mountains of Tawang, bordering Tibet, killing all 17 people on board. The helicopter crashed not far away from the helipad and the DGCA had found that proper fire-fighting facilities could have saved lives.

In the other incident, an army helicopter crashed near Gangtok killing four occupants on board. The chief of Bhutan police in a statement to television channels denied any landing of chopper within the country’s territory.

India's ambassador to Bhutan Pavan Verma said Bhutan has not reported any landing of an Indian helicopter in its territory.

"There is no confirmation of a landing of Indian chopper in Bhutanese territory," he said.

Bhutanese personnel are carrying out a recce on the ground and the government has alerted local authorities in seven districts in the hilly country sharing the border with Arunachal Pradesh.

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