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Climber Helicopter Crashes in Pamir Mountains

By Greg Mortenson


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According to Wikipeida the Mi-8 is the second world's most-produced helicopter, and is used by over 50 countries. Photo courtesy of wikipedia.org/wiki/Mil_Mi-8

On March 8th, a Soviet era Mi-8 helicopter owned by the state carrier Tajik Air, which was transporting eleven climbers, crashed in the Pamir mountains, according to a statement issued by the Interior Minister.

The helicopter had three crew, and a Tajik translator, and climbers from Austria, Switzerland, Russia, France, Belgium, Germany and Great Britain.

The helicopter pilot, Tolib Sardorov, was killed, and two crewmembers, the translator, and a Russian and French climber were injured, the ministry said.

Davlat Habibov, the director of the International Mountaineering Center Alp-Mashkov, where the climbers were based, said the climbers had picked up by a helicopter in good weather about 2:00 p.m. in the village of Vir, in the Shugnan district. The helicopter crashed in the Gund valley about 50 miles east of Khorog, the provincial capital of Tajikistan's Gorno-Badakhshan (GBAO) region, near the Afghan border.
 
A black box had been found, but the cause of the crash is unknown and still under investigation.

Date of Crash: The afternoon of March 8, 2008

Sources: en.kyrgyznews.kg

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