 The victims were working for Western forces, but military officials rule out  hostile fire as a cause. It is the second deadly crash in less than a week  involving a Russian-made civilian helicopter.
The victims were working for Western forces, but military officials rule out  hostile fire as a cause. It is the second deadly crash in less than a week  involving a Russian-made civilian helicopter.Reporting from Kabul, Afghanistan -- Sixteen civilians  working under contract to Western forces were killed today when their helicopter  plunged to the ground just after takeoff from NATO's main base in southern  Afghanistan, military officials said.  It was the second deadly crash in  less than a week involving a Russian-made helicopter operated by a civilian  contractor. It also came a day after an American F-15E jet fighter crashed in  eastern Afghanistan, killing the two-member crew.  
Military officials said they had ruled out hostile fire as  a cause of today's helicopter crash, which took place at Kandahar airfield, a  sprawling installation that is the hub of coalition operations in the  south.
The crash, believed to be the most lethal to date involving  civilian contractors, raised urgent new questions about the safety of the often  aging fleet of helicopters operated by contractors from former Soviet  republics.
Six Ukrainian contractors were killed when their helicopter  went down Tuesday in Helmand province, adjacent to Kandahar province. The  Moldovan contractor operating that craft, supported by Moldovan civil aviation  authorities, said the Mi-26 helicopter was shot down by  insurgents.
But military officials said the cause of that crash had not  been established, and an investigation was continuing.
Tens of thousands  of civilians from around the world work under contract to the Western forces in  Afghanistan. Their jobs range from mundane support tasks such as construction  and kitchen work to quasi-military roles that have caused Afghan authorities to  call for tighter restrictions on their use of firearms.
Lt. Col. Paul  Kolken, a Dutch spokesman for the North Atlantic Treaty Organization's regional  command in the south, said no military personnel were among the dead or injured  in today's crash. He identified the helicopter as a Mi-8 transporter, which can  carry as many as 24 people.
Russia's Interfax news agency said the craft  was carrying 17 passengers and three crew members.
Civilian contractors  and the Western military alike are heavily reliant on helicopters for ferrying  supplies and personnel around Afghanistan. That is because ground travel is  unsafe in much of the country, distances are great, and the terrain is extremely  rough in many areas.
laura.king@latimes.com
 
No comments:
Post a Comment