Crashed chopper is Venezuela's second military aircraft down in Bolivia
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| The Venezuelan Armed Forces helicopter, one of the three choppers donated by Chávez, was overflying the village of Colomí when it crashed (Photo: AP) |
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In 2007, three Bolivian soldiers and one Venezuelan died in a similar accident
EL UNIVERSAL
Last Sunday four Venezuelan military officers and one Bolivian
officer died when a Super Puma helicopter donated to Bolivia
by the Venezuelan government -which used to transport President
Evo Morales and high ranking officials-, crashed in central
Bolivia. Last year, another chopper donated by Venezuela crashed
in a suburb of the city of Cochabamba.
The accident occurred mid-afternoon Sunday, a couple of hours
after Bolivian President, Evo Morales, used the same aircraft
in a trip on the Western plateau, Defense Minister Walker
San Miguel said in a phone interview with official radio network
Patria Nueva.
"President Morales used the same helicopter on Sunday when
he was traveling from the Huanuni tin mine to the city of
Oruro. We are deeply concerned because, according to the first
report of a witness, the helicopter blew up upon reaching
the ground," the Defense Minister said, as Reuters reported
from Bolivia.
The aircraft, with a capacity for more than 20 people, took
off around 3:00 p.m. from Bolivia's central city of Cochabamba
and headed for the northern Amazon city of Cobija, San Miguel
explained.
At 3:13 p.m. the Bolivian authorities made the last contact
with the crew. They reported that the helicopter was overflying
the Colomí village, at an altitude of some 14,500 to
15,500 feet.
The Airport Administration and Auxiliary Services to Air
Navigation (AASANA) in La Paz contacted the Bolivian Air Force
(FAB) at 7:10 p.m. on Sunday to report that the helicopter
had not reached its destination.
The accident was publicly reported on Monday at 1:30 a.m.
Romaldo Arispe, who lives in the village of Colomí, called
the authorities to report that he had heard the noise of a
helicopter and later an explosion.
There were four Venezuelan military officers reported killed
in the accident: Major (Air Force) Rodolfo Rivas, 37; lieutenant
(Air Force) Deyvis Bustillos, 29; warrant officer 2nd class
(Air Force) Carlos Jatar, 40 and aeronautical technician César
Bastidas, 39. The Bolivian officer was Major Raúl Paz,
AFP reported.
Rivas headed in 2006 the Rescue Coordinating Center (RCC)
for Search and Rescue (SAR) at the Maiquetía Airport,
in coastal Vargas state, north Venezuela.
The Bolivian Minister of Defense informed in a press conference
held in Palacio Quemado, that a FAB commission that was sent
to the village of Colomí would investigate the causes
of the crash, Venezuelan news agency ABN reported.
Translated by Gerardo
Cárdenas
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