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2021 Indian Air Force Mil Mi-17 crash

2020s in Tamil Nadu2021 disasters in IndiaAccidents and incidents involving military aircraftAccidents and incidents involving the Mil Mi-17Aviation accidents and incidents in 2021
Aviation accidents and incidents in IndiaCoonoorDecember 2021 events in IndiaUse Indian English from December 2021
Indian Mil Mi 17 V5
Indian Mil Mi 17 V5

On 8 December 2021, a Mil Mi-17V-5 transport helicopter operated by the Indian Air Force (IAF) crashed between Coimbatore and Wellington in the state of Tamil Nadu, after departing from Sulur Air Force Station. The helicopter was carrying Chief of Defence Staff General Bipin Rawat and 13 others, including his wife and staff. Everyone on board was killed in the immediate aftermath, except Group Captain Varun Singh, who died from his injuries at a hospital a week later.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article 2021 Indian Air Force Mil Mi-17 crash (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

2021 Indian Air Force Mil Mi-17 crash
Coonoor-Mettupalayam Rd,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 11.3325 ° E 76.807777777778 °
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Coonoor-Mettupalayam Rd

Coonoor-Mettupalayam Rd
643103
Tamil Nadu, India
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Indian Mil Mi 17 V5
Indian Mil Mi 17 V5
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Wellington, Tamil Nadu
Wellington, Tamil Nadu

Wellington (Native name: Jakkatalla (Badaga)) is a town in the Nilgiris District of the Indian state of Tamil Nadu, located at three kilometres to the north of Coonoor on the NH-181. The town includes a Wellington Bazaar, and the Wellington Cantonment. The Wellington Cantonment is home to The Madras Regimental Centre (MRC) and The Defence Services Staff College (DSSC). The Nilgiri passenger train passes through Wellington, which also has a railway station. The settlement of Wellington lies immediately outside of Wellington Cantonment, which was earlier known as Jakkatalla (or Jacketallah) from the Badaga Village of that name to the north of it. In 1852, Sir Richard Armstrong, the then Commander-in-Chief, recommended that the name should be changed to Wellington in honour of the Iron Duke, who had previously evinced an interest in the establishment of a sanatorium in the Nilgiris. In 1860, Sir, Charles Trevelyan held that this interesting Military Establishment could not be connected with a more appropriate name than Wellington. He, therefore, ordered that Jakkatalla Station be called henceforth Wellington. The construction of the barracks began in 1852 and was completed in 1860, popularly known as Wellington Barracks. It assumed importance in the Station, and since February 1942 is occupied by the Madras Regimental Centre. The Wellington Barracks is now named as Srinagesh Barracks in memory of the First Indian Colonel of the Madras Regiment Gen. S.M.Srinagesh. The native Bazaar, now known as the Cantonment Market, is away from the Barracks and is on the other side of the stream after crossing the Waterloo Bridge (commonly known as Black Bridge, a tarred wooden construction, reconstructed in March 2009, and renamed as Manekshaw Bridge in memory of Field Marshal SHFJ Manekshaw) onto NH 181.