Nepalese rescuers on Friday found three bodies near the wreckage of a
U.S. Marine helicopter that disappeared earlier this week while on a
relief mission in the earthquake-hit Himalayan nation, and officials
said it was unlikely there were any survivors from the crash.
"The wreckage of the helicopter was found in pieces and there are no
chances of any survivors," Nepal's Defense Secretary Iswori Poudyal
said. He gave no details about the nationalities of the three victims,
only saying their remains were charred.
The helicopter was carrying six Marines and two Nepalese army soldiers.
A separate team sent by the U.S. Marines also said they identified the wreckage as the missing helicopter, the UH-1 "Huey."
"The assessment of the site is ongoing and a thorough investigation
will be conducted," a statement from the Marine-led joint task force
said.
The wreckage was found about 15 miles from the town of Charikot, near
where the aircraft had gone missing on Tuesday while delivering
humanitarian aid to villages hit by two deadly earthquakes, according to
the U.S. military joint task force in Okinawa, Japan.
The area is near Gothali village in the district of Dolakha, about 50 miles northeast of Nepal's capital Kathmandu.
The discovery of the wreckage, first spotted by Nepalese ground
troops and two army helicopters Friday, followed days of intense search
involving U.S. and Nepalese aircraft and even U.S. satellites.
The U.S. relief mission was deployed soon after a magnitude-7.8 quake
hit April 25, killing more than 8,200 people. It was followed by
another magnitude-7.3 quake on Tuesday that killed 117 people and
injured 2,800.
The helicopter had been delivering rice and tarps in Charikot, the
area worst hit by Tuesday's quake. It had dropped off supplies in one
location and was en route to a second site when contact was lost.
U.S. military officials said earlier this week that an Indian
helicopter in the air nearby had heard radio chatter from the Huey
aircraft about a possible fuel problem.
A total of 300 U.S. military personnel have been supporting the aid
mission in Nepal, which includes three Hueys, four Marine MV-22B
Ospreys, two KC-130 Hercules and four Air Force C-17 Globemaster
heavy-lift aircraft.
The Huey helicopter that crashed was from Marine Light Attack Helicopter squadron 469 based at Camp Pendleton, California
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