Steam ironing over the crumpled shirt - called the Indian democracy...

Sunday, September 6, 2009

YSR’s Copter Crash: The Inside Story

Even days after the crash, the ELT on the CM’s chopper remains missing. Why? Because the locals may have just walked away with it as a souvenir, this even as the forces were busy clicking pictures of themselves in front of the mangled chopper. The crash site had become a tourist spot.

It was as if all of Andhra Pradesh had converged at the Idupulapaya estate; YS Rajasekhara Reddy’s favourite retreat and sadly his final resting place, a befitting (though chaotic) farewell that reaffirmed the popularity of the former CM and the diehard following that he had. But even as the human tsunami that hit Reddy’s funeral receded, people had one burning question in their minds – What/Who caused the death of their beloved Chief Minister? From the roadside tea stalls to the drawing rooms of the rich and powerful – that’s the one consuming question in Andhra Pradesh. From Naxals who shot down the chopper to political rivals who murdered YSR to natural causes, no conspiracy theory is being discounted.

Now a full fledged inquiry has been ordered into the crash, the DGCA is taking the matter ‘seriously’ and even representatives of Bell Helicopters have been roped in to ascertain the cause of the crash. However there is slim chance that this belated action would yield any tangible results. The reason for that is the government did not even follow the very basic rules of crash site investigations, failing to cordon off the site, allowing ‘souvenir hunters’ a free run and trampling over hundreds of pieces of helicopter debris that was strewn over a 500 meter radius. The Chief Minister’s helicopter had crashed in the most inaccessible of places – and yet even as the elite Greyhounds looked on, the crash site became a tourist spot.

3rd September – 8.00am: It was close to twenty-four that the CM’s helicopter had disappeared. We had air dashed from New Delhi the previous evening and driven all night to reach Rollapenta (74 kilometres east of Kurnool) which had been the last contact point for the CM’s helicopter. But soon we got word that YSR’s copter had indeed crashed in the core forest area of Nallamala (near Atmakur)

10.00am: With no motorable road to speak of – it was a combination of SUV’s, tractors and walking that brought is close to ‘Pavurala Konda’ (Doves Hill) where the copter had crashed. Not long ago this was the area where the Naxal ruled – and for good reason; no mobile or road connectivity, undergrowth so think that you could not see beyond five feet, an area so remote that even the GPS gave up on us.

1.00pm: Hours later the fifty member search party had thinned down to a dozen and with no GPS data – we were just roaming aimlessly. By now all the five bodies had been extricated from the mangled remains of the helicopter and airlifted to Kurnool and we thought it best to retreat from the area before the light faded. But even as we were returning dejected, we came across a team of the Greyhounds, the elite anti-naxal force that knew the Nallamala jungle like the back of their hands. Since the Greyhounds were headed for the crash site we tagged along… another ten kilometres of steep rocky terrain and we finally managed to reach the crash site.

4.00pm: We were the first journalists to make it to the crash site and my cameraperson Manhoar Reddy was worried that we may not be allowed to shoot at the crash site. But what we witnessed next was most startling. After airlifting the bodies – the government had virtually abandoned the site, even as the Greyhounds and the CRPF men lounged around – local villagers and tribals walked all over the crash site. Picking up stuff and kicking pieces of metal. Far from cordoning off the area – people were allowed to pick up pieces of the helicopter and walk away. More than twenty hour hours after the crash there was the reeking smell of Aviation Fuel and burnt human skin. It was as if the helicopter had rammed into the hill at full speed – then rolled upwards – before exploding in a fireball, YSR would have had very little or no time to react. With two hours worth of fuel in its tanks – the Bell 430 must have created quite an explosion the remote jungles of Nallamala. That’s why the Emergency Location

Transmitter (or ELT) might not have worked – the force of the impact and the ensuing fire may have reduced it to a heap of metal and as for the Cockpit Voice Recorder (or CVR) not much will come from it. Even if the CVR has not been damaged with people walking over it – it will only replay the voice of the pilot and not the aeronautical data of the helicopter (like a full fledged black box that stores data like speed – altitude – engine performance) Going by the way the helicopter slammed into the hill – even the pilot might not have had time to realise that he was flying so low that he slammed into a hill.

5.00pm: Before I left the crash site, a local pointed out a dismembered leg to me, clear indication that the commandoes who had airlifted the bodies had done a shoddy job out of it. We had arrived at the crash site just hours after it was identified from air – it’s impossible that the experts had conducted a survey of the area before we came – and by the time we left the crowds were swelling, curious locals thronging the area for a quick dekko. The YSR’s crash site had become a public spectacle.

4th September – 2.00am: After more than 24 hours on the road (with forty kilometres of walking in the jungles) we were back in Kurnool feeding visuals of the crash site to the newsroom. But even before the questions about the crash/sabotage could be raised the next morning – our tired souls knew the answer. With this kind of ham handed investigations into the crash – YSR’s death will remain just another unsolved air crash. It’s only in India that even a Chief Minister’s death does not merit a proper scientific investigation. Surely the king of Cuddapah deserved better.

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NEW DELHI, NCR, India
Over the last few years I’ve had opportunity of covering some of the biggest stories in India. I specialize in conflict reporting and political coverage, be it 26/11 attacks or the Mangalore air crash, West Bengal elections or the protestations of Anna Hazare. You can catch me on Headlines Tonight @ 8pm weeknights on Headlines Today or follow me on twitter @akashbanerjee. I am a voracious reader and my first book, is due to hit the stands later this year. You can track my photo-blog on www.flickr.com/photos/akash