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IAF''s Surya Kiran has had its share of accidents

NEW DELHI: The midair collision between two Hawk aircraft of the aerobatic team Surya Kiran in Bengaluru on Tuesday is probably the first after the elite unit was regrouped in 2015 after a gap of four years but the showstopping highrisk display flying arm of the Indian Air Force IAF has had its share of serious accidents
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The Surya Kiran team with Kiran Mk-II aircraft was wound up in 2011 but not before a series of accidents. AFP
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New Delhi, February 19

The mid-air collision between two Hawk aircraft of the aerobatic team Surya Kiran in Bengaluru on Tuesday is probably the first after the elite unit was re-grouped in 2015 after a gap of four years, but the show-stopping high-risk display flying arm of the Indian Air Force (IAF) has had its share of serious accidents.

Surya Kiran, used as a mascot for the IAF to inspire youngsters to take up military aviation, is in its second avatar flying sub-sonic advanced jet trainers Hawk-132 that made an appearance in new livery four years ago after replacing jaded Kiran Mk-II intermediate jet trainers.

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The Surya Kiran team with Kiran Mk-II aircraft was wound up in 2011 but not before a series of accidents.

In January 2009, Wing Commander R. S. Dhaliwal died in a crash near Surya Kiran’s home base Bidar in Karnataka.

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Another aircraft crashed in December 2007. In March 2006, another crash took place in Bidar killing two pilots.

The British-origin Hawks are made in India by Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd (HAL). These are used to train pilots in advanced fighter flying skills.

Apart from the IAF, the Royal Air Force aerobatics team Red Arrows also flies the Hawks.

Surya Kiran had returned to Aero India air show in Bengaluru in 2017 after a gap of nearly four years.

The IAF started inducting the Hawks in 2008 and till 2016 four had crashed. — IANS

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