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Malaysians mourn helicopter crash victims, some demand top navy officers resign

  • The 10 victims’ families and Malaysians hail them as heroes as the country unites in grief over the tragedy
  • Some Malaysians accuse the military of poor planning that led to the crash and having defence assets of questionable quality

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Rescue personnel inspect the crash site of two helicopters in Lumut, Perak, on April 23. Photo: Fire & Rescue Department of Malaysia via AP

Petty officer Nor Rahiza Anuar was supposed to celebrate a special Eid gathering with her family this Friday. Able Seaman Joanna Felicia Rohna last spoke to her younger sister on Saturday, asking her to take care of their grandparents and eat well.

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All these plans and conversations are now just memories held by their distraught families after the two servicewomen died along with eight others in a twin helicopter crash during a rehearsal on Tuesday for the navy’s 90th-anniversary celebration at its naval base in Lumut, Perak.

A viral video of the horrific moment shows the two helicopters appearing to clip each other’s rotor blades and swiftly spinning out of control towards the ground where plumes of smoke spew upwards on impact.

The incident has shocked Malaysians and raised questions about the Malaysian military’s preparedness, assets and training given to its staff.

“The navy will form an investigative board [on the crash], assisted by the air force and the director general of technical airworthiness,” Defence Minister Khaled Nordin told a news conference on Tuesday.

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10 killed in mid-air helicopter collision at Malaysia naval base

10 killed in mid-air helicopter collision at Malaysia naval base

Khaled also gave more details about the two helicopters involved in the tragedy. The Eurocopter Fennec lightweight helicopter started service in 2003 while the Maritime Operations Helicopter (HOM) built by Italy’s Leonardo, which carried seven of the victims, was delivered to the navy in 2021, he said.

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