A Pakistani government helicopter crash-landed in Taliban-held territory in neighbouring Afghanistan on Thursday and all passengers and crew are feared captured by the insurgents.
The helicopter went down in Logar province, close to the Afghan-Pakistan border - an increasingly lawless area since a two-year Pakistani military operation pushed many Taliban and allied fighters further into Afghanistan.
A Pakistani Foreign Office spokesman confirmed that a helicopter belong to the Punjab provincial government had gone down, saying the fate of the crew was not yet clear.
He said seven passengers were on board, six of them Pakistanis and one a Russian technician. The pilot was also Pakistani.
The aircraft had permission to fly over Afghan air space on its way to Uzbekistan further north, he said.
Pakistani Army chief Gen. Raheel Sharif spoke with top US commander General John Nicholson on Thursday asking for the international military coalition’s help in recovering the Pakistani personnel, military spokesman Lt. General Asim Bajwa revealed.
A senior Pakistani military official said the Russian-made MI-17 transport helicopter was en route from Peshawar in northwest Pakistan to Uzbekistan for maintenance when it experienced technical failure and made an emergency landing.
He said there was no information about the occupants.
Other military officials, also speaking on condition of anonymity, said three of those aboard the helicopter were retired security officials.
(With Reuters Inputs)
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