Helicopter escorting Musharraf crashes; 4 killed
Ghori,
Pakistan,
Oct
8:
A
Pakistani
army
helicopter
escorting
President
Pervez
Musharraf
today
crashed
in
Kashmir
killing
four
people
including
two
commandos
from
his
security
detail,
an
army
spokesman
said.
General Musharraf, who took most votes in a presidential election on Saturday, was visiting Kashmir to mark the second anniversary of an earthquake in the region, had travelled ahead in another helicopter and was unhurt.
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The
president's
spokesman,
retired
Major-General
Rashid
Qureshi,
was
among
eight
injured
in
the
crash,
the
army
spokesman
said.
There
were
a
dozen
people
on
board
the
aircraft,
and
the
four
killed
included
a
brigadier,
two
commandos
from
Musharraf's
security
detail,
and
a
cameraman
from
state-run
television.
''It was a technical fault, that's why it went down,'' army spokesman Major-General Waheed Arshad said, ruling out a militant attack.
''It took off after President Musharraf left,'' he said. ''The president is safe and sound. He has reached his destination.'' US ally Musharraf has survived at least three assassination attempts by al Qaeda linked militants.
The most recent was last July, when assassins tried to shoot down his airplane after it took off from the military airfield at Rawalpindi. The plane was well out of range.
A man in Ghori village said he saw the helicopter trailing smoke as it flew low over the village in a valley 18 km south of Muzaffarabad, the capital of Pakistani Kashmir.
''It was a great effort by the pilot because it was flying low over the houses. The pilot took it to a field,'' Khateeb Gardezi told Reuters.
''I saw General Rashid Qureshi and several other soldiers jumping from a height of 10-11 feet.
''It crashed with a deafening bang. I and another villager tried to help soldiers. General Qureshi was slightly wounded.'' WITNESS HEARD BLAST A neighbour, Waqar Kazmi, said he heard some kind of blast while the helicopter was still airborne.
''Its sound was unusually loud. Then I heard a blast and a few parts of the chopper fell to the ground,'' Waqar Kazmi said.
Villagers rushed to help people on board the flaming helicopter escape as it hit the ground.
''We rescued three soldiers from the burning chopper before the fire intensified,'' said Arshad Kazmi, who was among the first to reach the spot.
Pakistan's Supreme Court says Musharraf cannot be confirmed as the winner of Saturday's election by the parliamentary and provincial assemblies until it rules whether he was eligible to stand while still army chief.
Musharraf has vowed to quit the army and be sworn in as a civilian leader if he is elected.
General Ashfaq Kayani has been named as Musharraf's successor as army chief. Today, he took up his new post as vice chief, having earlier headed the Inter-Services Intelligence spy agency.
Whenever Musharraf travels by helicopter several aircraft are used as potential decoys, and it is not known whether he will be in the lead helicopter or one of those following.
Pakistan's previous military ruler President Mohammad Zia-ul-Haq was killed in 1988 when the Hercules C-130 aircraft carrying him crashed in mysterious circumstances.
Conspiracy theorists have suggested a case of mangoes put aboard Zia's plane shortly before takeoff contained a timer device that released gas that knocked out the cockpit crew.
Reuters
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