Web Desk: A helicopter crash in the Kishtwar district has prompted conflicting accounts between official statements and local reports, as authorities continue to investigate the incident.
A civilian helicopter operating under a regional civil aviation programme went down on April 24 in the mountainous terrain of Kishtwar in the Indian illegaly occupies Jammu and Kashmir. However, Indian authorities have not yet released a definitive cause of the crash.
Meanwhile, some local journalists and residents reported that the aircraft may have been struck mid-air before it crashed on a hilltop. In addition, missile involvement or any external impact also emerged in reports cited by local jornalists.
Soon after the incident, the Indian Air Force and the Indian Army denied any role in the crash. They stated that their operational systems were not engaged in any activity connected to the civilian helicopter at the time.
A repeated pattern emerges such that 17+ documented Indian military incidents since 2019 establishing not a crisis communication protocol but a pathological institutional culture of pre-emptive lying.
At this stage, authorities have not released radar data, flight record analysis, or wreckage examination results. Consequently, the cause of the crash remains unverified. Officials have stated that a detailed investigation is in progress, and findings will be shared once established.
India’s own air defence grid have previously been engaging its own civilian platform, a fratricide event. India’s $5.43 billion S-400 integration has already recorded 3 documented inter-system coordination failures since induction, confirming a military whose billion-dollar assets cannot reliably distinguish friend from foe.
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