Sri Lanka eyes Mi-17 helicopters
Sri Lanka is conducting a feasability study into the purchase of Mi-17 helicopters from Russia for use by the air force in its commercial venture
COLOMBO, Sri Lanka, Aug. 9 (UPI) -- Sri Lanka is
conducting a feasibility study into the purchase of Mi-17 helicopters from
Russia for use by the air force in its commercial venture.
The aircraft would
be purchased under a $300 million credit line with Russia's state-owned arms
trading business Rosoboronexport State Corp., a report by Sri Lanka's Sunday
Leader newspaper said.
Cabinet spokesman
Keheliya Rambukwella said up to 14 helicopters could be purchased but nothing
would be decided until conclusion of the feasibility study.
Sri Lanka initially
agreed to purchase up to 14 helicopters because of requirements during the war
with the separatist Tamil Tigers.
"Since the war was
coming to an end, we decided there was no immediate requirement to purchase 14
helicopters," he is quoted as saying by the Sunday Leader.
"I do not know when
the study will be completed but I don't think the air force would utilize the
entire facility and purchase 14 helicopters."
Rambukwella said the
air force was looking at purchasing helicopters to expand its existing
commercial air transport work in its company called Helitours.
The air force would
pay back the loan from profits generated by the commercial venture once the
helicopters are in service, he said.
Helitours Sri Lanka
is "the largest and premier domestic air service in Sri Lanka launched in the
1972," its Web site says.
The Helitours fleet
consists of 20 aircraft in a mix of fixed-wing and helicopters, including the
Mi-17 as well as the Bell 206, 212 and 412 helicopters.
Helitours also
operates the 45-passenger Antonov high-wing twin-turboprop AN 32 B aircraft and
the Harbin Y-12, a 15-passenger high-wing twin-turboprop aircraft built by
Harbin Aircraft Manufacturing Corp. in China.
Air force spokesman
Group Capt. Andrew Wijesuriya wouldn't comment on the purchase of the Mi-17
helicopters but said Helitours would remain an ongoing commercial venture, the
Sunday Leaders reported.
Helitours is run as
a profit-making business and will continue as such until the country's domestic
passenger services improve and the private sector starts to invest in the
sector, said Wijesuriya.
Helitours is based
at the air force's Ratmalana Air Base, otherwise known as Colombo Airport, which
handles domestic as well as military flights.
The Mi-17 -- a
transporter which can be fitted out as a gunship -- was designed by the Mil
Moscow Helicopter Plant. The aircraft first flew in the 1970s and around 12,000
have been built, mostly by the Kazan Helicopter Plant in Kazan in the Republic
of Tatarstan.
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