Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
International

That's All I'm Supposed To Tell You: Pilot Abhinandan Varthaman's Grit

Darpan News Desk IANS, 28 Feb, 2019 09:59 PM

    It appears Indian MiG-21 pilot Wing Commander Abhinandan Varthaman, who landed in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir after ejecting from his plane on Wednesday, made a valiant attempt to scare away locals who descended on him immediately after he landed on ground. He also made an effort to destroy the documents present on his person to avoid them ending up in Pakistani hands.


    This bit of information can be gleaned from a story carried by Dawn on Thursday, which has quoted a prominent local resident to give an account of what happened in the immediate aftermath of landing of ‘Abhi’—as the officer’s name tag reads—in adversarial territory.



    Mohammad Razzaq Chaudhry of Horra’n village, 7 km from the Line of Control (LoC) in PoK’s Bhimber district, noticed a dogfight going on in the skies around 8.45 am on Wednesday, according to the Dawn account.

     

    The “58-year-old political and social activist of the area noticed that two aircraft had caught fire but while one of them sped across the LoC, the other burst into flames and came down speedily.”

     


    The wreckage fell more than a kilometre away from Razzaq’s house in a deserted field. He soon saw a parachute descending towards the ground, which also landed around a kilometre from his house in a different direction.

     


    Razzaq immediately made calls to youth of the village, “asking them not to go close to the wreckage until arrival of the army personnel but get hold of the pilot,” Dawn reports.

     

    “A pilot emerged out of the parachute safe and sound,” the report quotes Razzaq, who is said to have spoken to the newspaper on telephone.



    The pilot, holding a pistol, asked the youngsters if it was India or Pakistan. One of them responded “India”. At this Wing Commander Abhi Nandan, according to Razzaq, raised some slogans and asked which place exactly it was in India. “To this, the same boy responded that it was Qilla’n,” Dawn reports.


    The pilot told them his “back was broken” and he needed water to drink. At this, some youth, “who could not digest the slogans [possibly patriotic Indian slogans], responded with “Pakistan Army zindabad”.



    Immediately sensing his circumstances, Abhinandan shot a fire in the air even as the boys picked up stones in their hands. According to Razzaq, “the Indian pilot ran a distance of half a kilometre in backward direction while pointing his pistol towards the boys who were chasing him,” Dawn writes.


    “During this brisk movement, he fired some more gunshots in the air to frighten them but to no avail, he said. Then he jumped into a small pond where he took out some documents and maps from his pockets, some of which he tried to swallow and soaked others in water.”


    This was a brilliant display of presence of mind by Wing Commander Abhinandan, who under duress attempted to ensure the documents did not end up in wrong hands, while also attempting to escape from a mob of hostile villagers.



    According to the Dawn report, “The boys kept on asking him to drop his weapon and in the meanwhile one boy shot at his leg, Razzaq said.”


    The officer was thus captured by the villagers, but not before valiant resistance and watching out for national interest.

     

     

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Trump Calls French President Macron's Idea For European Army 'Very Insulting'

    Trump Calls French President Macron's Idea For European Army 'Very Insulting'
      US President Donald Trump, who just arrived in Paris for WWI 100th anniversary commemorations, said on Friday that French president Macron's suggestion of Europe building its own military to protect itself from US and other nations "very insulting".

    Trump Calls French President Macron's Idea For European Army 'Very Insulting'

    Top US IT Companies Say H-1B Visas Being Held Up

    Top US IT Companies Say H-1B Visas Being Held Up
    The H1B visa, popular among Indian IT firms and professionals, is a non-immigrant visa that allows US firms to employ foreign workers in speciality occupations that require theoretical or technical expertise.

    Top US IT Companies Say H-1B Visas Being Held Up

    Google Sorry, Will Change Sexual Misconduct Policy

    Google is promising to be more forceful and open about its handling of sexual misconduct cases, a week after thousands of high-paid engineers and others walked out in protest over its male-dominated culture.

    Google Sorry, Will Change Sexual Misconduct Policy

    Trump Wants H-1B Visas In Highly-Skilled, Not Outsourcing Jobs: Official

    Trump Wants H-1B Visas In Highly-Skilled, Not Outsourcing Jobs: Official
    The White House said that there is need to carry on reforms in H-1B to keep more talented graduates in this country.

    Trump Wants H-1B Visas In Highly-Skilled, Not Outsourcing Jobs: Official

    Indian Worker Found Hanging In UAE Accommodation

    Indian Worker Found Hanging In UAE Accommodation
    A 25-year-old Indian worker was found hanging in his accommodation here, a Sharjah Police official said.

    Indian Worker Found Hanging In UAE Accommodation

    PICS: Sikh Soldier Statue Honouring Sikh Sacrifices Vandalised After Less Than A Week In UK

      A statue of a Sikh soldier honouring South Asian soldiers' role in the First World War, which was unveiled less than a week ago has been vandalised.

    PICS: Sikh Soldier Statue Honouring Sikh Sacrifices Vandalised After Less Than A Week In UK