The Indian Air Force has
imaginatively employed its new C-130J Super Hercules aircraft -- six of
which were purchased in 2010 from the United States for Rs 3,835 crore
-- to revive flagging rescue and relief efforts at Dharasu, in flood-hit Uttarakhand.
With fuel running out for the Indian Air Force’s
Mi-17 helicopters that were flying relief missions from the small,
1,300-metre Dharasu airstrip, the C-130Js’ game-changing ability to land
on tiny airstrips was brought into play. Fully fuelled C-130Js flew in
from Hindon (near Ghaziabad) and landed in Dharasu, each one unloading
8,000 litres of aviation fuel from its on-board tanks for use by the
Mi-17s. On their return journey, the C-130Js ferried medically
distressed people, making this a two-way air bridge.
This is just
one recent example of military equipment and personnel becoming the
instrument of last resort for overwhelmed administrators in disaster
situations.
The Gujarat earthquake in 2001; the Kashmir earthquake
in 2005; the Ladakh flash floods in 2010; the Sikkim earthquake in
2011; and multiple flood relief operations highlight that the military
is the only effective disaster response force in the country. And that
the vast sums spent on the military and its equipment are not just
insurance for some far-fetched threat of external aggression but real
capability for situations that all too frequently move beyond the
capacity of the other instruments of state.
Read further here at http://www.rediff.com/
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