A Coast Guard helicopter went down during a training sortie in Gujarat, raising stark questions regarding the operational safety and maintenance protocols of the vital rescue force of India.
Royalty of the seas has fallen
A Coast Guard helicopter, during a routine training sortie, reportedly crashed in Gujarat, the site of the crash being close to the coastal town of Porbandar, further adding to concerns regarding the safety of defense machinery of critical import. Fortunately, preliminary impressions suggest that the crew on board survived with minor injuries by virtue of prompt emergency action.
This isn't the first such incident-in-a-row involving the defense aircraft of India; it just adds to an already swelling number. Unsurprisingly, the public and the experts are already beginning to lose their temper. The Indian Coast Guard, which earns much praise for its efficiency in maritime rescue operations, seems suddenly invoked with the tough questions about its maintenance protocols and training of personnel.
The defense authorities argue that it was an operational failure but several irksome have questions raised: how standard checks would have thrown such complaints early. Ageing fleet and delay in modernization have been cited time and again by senior officials in Coast Guard and above as continuing issues.
Safety improvement advocates are instructing immediate reforms, arguing that failure to do so leads lives at stake and loses important missions. The government must now heed those raising issues for restoring public confidence and operational preparedness.