36.1 C
Delhi
Thursday, April 16, 2026

Australian Defence Force helicopters retired following fatal crash

Date:

Share post:

Canberra: The Australian Defence Force’s fleet of MRH-90 Taipan helicopters have been retired early following a fatal crash.

The Minister for Defence, Richard Marles, and Minister for Defence Industry Pat Conroy on Friday announced that the Taipans will not return to flying operations before their planned withdrawal date of December 2024.

It comes after four Australian Defence Force (ADF) personnel were killed in July when their MRH-90 crashed into the ocean off the coast of the state of Queensland during a military training exercise.

“The Government’s highest priority is the safety and wellbeing of our people,” Marles said in a joint statement with Conroy.

“We continue to support the families of the four soldiers who lost their lives earlier this year, and the broader Defence community,” said the minister.

The first of a fleet of 40 UH-60 Black Hawk helicopters that will replace the Taipans have arrived in Australia.

Four crew were flying on board a MRH-90 near Hamilton Island – 900 kilometers north of Brisbane – on the night of July 28 as part of Exercise Tasman Sabre 2023 when the helicopter ditched into the ocean.

In March, the fleet was temporarily grounded when 10 ADF personnel were rescued from the ocean off the coast of New South Wales (NSW) after their Taipan crash during counterterrorism training exercises.

Investigations into both incidents remain ongoing.

Related articles

It is Time We Talk About Anglo-Indians, Outcasts Whom Nobody Mentions: ‘Vermillion Harvest’ Author Reenita Malhotra Hora

April 13 remains etched in India’s collective memory as the day of the Jallianwala Bagh massacre—one of the...

US–China Rivalry and the Thucydides Trap

2,400 years ago, when Thucydides wrote that “it was the rise of Athens, and the fear that this...

The West Asia War: The Endgame Where Nobody Wins, Yet Nobody Loses

There are wars that conclude with decisive victories, marked by surrender documents and victory parades. And then there...

Modi at the Pike Syndrome Crossroads: When Power Stops Pushing Boundaries

There comes a stage in leadership when power is no longer the problem. Mandate is not the problem....