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Indian chopper forced to land in Olding, Pakistan, after violating airspace

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Come on.

Countries capable of becoming machos dont allow outside drones to whack you day and night. :D

Hiding behind Uncle sam. Good trick.;)

Or else you know yourself what we can are capable of when it comes to Bharat.
 
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Hiding behind Uncle sam. Good trick.;)

Or else you know yourself what we can are capable of when it comes to Bharat.

Oh yeah!

The why keep complaining abt Atlantique...just take ur revenge. Whos stopping u ?
 
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Indian Army chopper lands in Pak, 4 detained - India News - IBNLive

An Indian Army chopper was taken into custody in Pakistan after it strayed across the Line of Control (LOC) on Sunday. Sources reported that it landed near Olding in Pakistan at around 1.00 pm because of extremely bad weather.
The helicopter was forced to land after it allegedly intruded into Pakistani airspace, TV news channels quoted the Inter-Services Public Relations as saying.
Pakistani's Director General (DG) Inter Services Public Relations (ISPR) Major General Athar Abbas confirmed that the chopper had strayed across the LOC.
"The chopper is in Olding sector in Pakistan. It is under safe custody. We have informed our Indian counterparts about the incident," he said.
Abbas added, "investigation are on we are trying to find out how chopper came so deep in Pakistan."
Pakistani authorities have informed their Indian counterparts, adding that the four crew members of the chopper are safe and in Pakistani custody.
A source inside the Pakistani Defence said that once investigations were done the crew will be released.
"This is Olding Sector Skardu. First thing we did was to inform Indian side as a goodwill gesture. The crew are fine and investigations are on. Release will happen only after talks and negotiations. Prima Facie it appears that due to some human error they wrongly estimated and entered 25 kms inside," the source said.

Pakistani military officials have said the Indian Army chopper was escorted to Skardu.
Indian Military sources confirmed that it was an Army Cheetah which had moved from Leh to Bhimbat with engineering officers and a JCO onboard to rectify defect of another chopper.
Initial media reports had said that the Indian helicopter had strayed into Pakistani airspace due to bad weather conditions in Skardu area.
In New Delhi, army sources said the helicopter belonging to Army's Aviation Corps was on its way to Bhimbhat from Leh.
One engineering officer, One JCO and two pilots were onboard Cheetah helicopter when it landed in ***, they said.
The Director-General of Military operations of both the countries are in touch with each other, sources said, adding action is in hand to retrieve them.
 
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A spokesman for Pakistan's army says authorities have forced an Indian military helicopter to land and have taken its four-member crew into custody for violating Pakistani airspace.

Major-General Athar Abbas said the incident occurred at about 1:00pm (08:00 GMT) on Sunday in Olding-Kargil sector near Skardu, a city in northeastern Pakistan fairly close to the border with India-administered Kashmir.

"The helicopter had came deep into our airspace. It was forced to land. Four Indian army officers have been taken into safe custody. They are safe," Abbas told the Reuters news agency. The four include three pilots and one crew chief, the Associated Press reported.

"According to the spokesman for the Pakistani military ... this particular helicopter penetrated across the line of control which divides the two armies, then it went almost 25 km into Pakistani airspace, and that is when the military told this helicopter to land," reported Al Jazeera's Kamal Hyder from Islamabad, the Pakistani capital.

"Even though there were suggestions that it may have been bad weather, it appears that this was a deep penetration. What the Pakistanis now want to find out is was this a reconnaissance mission, was it carrying out some sort of an operation inside Pakistani lines or was this indeed an accident."

Abbas did not say what Pakistan planned to do with them, but said India had been informed and "investigations are under way".

"The helicopter was warned. The Indians would have realised that the were quite deep inside Pakistani airspace, so it landed without any incident we are told," reported Hyder.

"This is unprecedented because both sides have put their forces on the ground - the Indians have deployed troops on their border, so incidents like these unlikely to happen ... they don't happen all the time."

The Associated Press news agency reported that the helicopter was a Lama model that had been modified for high-altitude flight.

The last violation of Pakistani airspace by Indian aircraft occured shortly after the 2008 Mumbai attacks, when two Indian warplanes "inadvertently" incurred into Pakistani airspace at two different locations on December 14, 2008.

Pakistan and India have fought three major wars since they gained independence from Britain in 1947.

Pakistan: Indian helicopter violates airspace - Central & South Asia - Al Jazeera English
 
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Better being trigger-happy than just being an internet complainant phobic (whatever that means).

Wat say?
Indeed
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Better being trigger-happy than just being an internet complainant phobic (whatever that means).

Wat say?

Complaining happens on both sides. No issues with that.:)
 
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