Nepal denies entry to 3 big British choppers
Nepal鈥檚 government said yesterday it had denied entry to three British military helicopters sent to help the earthquake relief effort because of fears they could damage buildings when landing.
A foreign ministry spokesman said the Chinook helicopters, which arrived in New Delhi last week en route to the quake-hit country, were too big to land.
鈥淲e have told the British authorities that they cannot fly their Chinook helicopters here because our technical team says they are likely to damage the houses and other buildings in the Kathmandu valley,鈥 spokesman Tara Pokharel said.
鈥淲e are worried about broken windows and roofs being blown off by these big helicopters.鈥
The April 25 earthquake killed more than 8,000 people and left thousands more homeless and in desperate need of food, clean water and shelter.
Getting relief to the worst-hit villages is a huge challenge because many are in remote mountainous terrain that is only accessible by helicopter or on foot.
India, China and the United States have sent helicopters and are helping take food, water and tents to affected communities. But there has been criticism of the US decision to send large Osprey helicopters, which are ill-suited to Nepal鈥檚 mountainous terrain.
Local media reported that the down-draft from an Osprey relief flight blew the roof off a small building in a quake-hit village as it delivered aid.
A US embassy official said that such accidents were rare. 鈥淲e are looking into whether the damage to the roof was caused by the Osprey or the quake... obviously such incidents are rare and if it turns out to be true, we will take care of the damage,鈥 the official said.
So far the Ospreys have delivered 21.5 tons of aid, he said.
Steven Bruce Bokan, chief flying instructor for Nepalese helicopter company Manang Air, said the British Chinooks and US Ospreys were 鈥渂asically useless鈥 in the Himalayas.
鈥淭hey may work in deserts and other places which have huge areas for landing and take-off, but they are too big to land in the Himalayas,鈥 Bokan said. 鈥淭he Osprey is a massive aircraft 鈥 it needs an area the size of a football field to land safely, otherwise it can blow people over. It鈥檚 not rocket science 鈥 smaller helicopters like the French Squirrel helicopters have been flying here for years because they work in this environment,鈥 added Bokan, an Australian who has been flying helicopters for 26 years.
Asked about the decision to reject the twin-rotor Chinooks, Britain鈥檚 defence ministry said: 鈥淭he Chinook helicopters are in the area, and we鈥檙e in discussion with the Nepalese authorities about their needs and basing.鈥
Bokan said that although the Chinooks were not suitable to land in the mountains, they could be useful to transport building materials and heavy equipment to remote areas inaccessible by road.
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