Harman Patil (Editor)

2016 Colombia army helicopter crash

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Passengers
  
12

Aircraft type
  
Mil Mi-17

Date
  
26 June 2016

Operator
  
National Army of Colombia

Survivor
  
0

Crew count
  
5

Survivors
  
0

Registration
  
EJC-3393

Site
  
Pensilvania, Caldas

Total fatalities
  
17 (all)

Passenger count
  
12

2016 Colombia army helicopter crash

Summary
  
Investigation ongoing, bad weather suspected

Flight origin
  
Quibdo, Choco, Colombia

A Mil Mi-17 of the National Army of Colombia was reported missing after taking off from the city of Quibdó on 26 June 2016. The wreckage of the helicopter was found the following day in mountainous terrain in the department of Caldas, 180 km north-west of the capital city Bogotá. It was the third helicopter crash in Colombia in 2016, and with seventeen killed was the worst accident in eleven years for the Colombian military.

History

On 26 June, the Colombian air force took part in an offensive against the National Liberation Army (ELN) guerilla group in the department of Chocó, in the west of the country. Following the operation the helicopter, registration number EJC-3393, took off at 2 p.m. local time from Quibdó, the capital city of the Chocó department, bound for the Tolemaida Air Base in the department of Tolima Its final report was made from a position 35 miles north of the town of Mariquita before disappearing.

Local people in the municipality of Pensilvania in the department of Caldas reported seeing the helicopter and hearing an explosion. The search team consisted of the 22 Infantry Battalion along with members of the civil defnse corps, the police, the fire brigade, the Red Cross, and volunteer members of the public from Pensilvania. The wreckage was located on 27 June on a mountain side at an altitude of between 2300 and 2400 metres above sea level. Contrary to the locals' reports of an explosion, the army confirmed that no explosion appeared to have taken place, and that the helicopter appeared to have crashed directly into the mountain and broken apart on impact. All 17 people on board died in the accident.

Preliminary investigations into the cause of the accident pinpointed bad weather as the most likely cause. The head of the Colombian army, General Alberto José Mejía Ferrero, said that the helicopter had hit the mountain almost head-on and blamed poor visibility. However, he indicated that a full investigation would be carried out in order to determine the exact causes of the accident.

The accident occurred less than a year after a similar incident that killed 16 military personnel, which may have been shot down. Earlier in 2016 two other helicopters had crashed in Colombia, one killing 4 and one killing 3. Another recent crash also injured 4 people.

References

2016 Colombia army helicopter crash Wikipedia