All 15 helicopter passengers and crew survived a close brush with death today when their aircraft crash-landed in woods in the Russian Far East, a rare happy ending for a country prone to aviation disasters.
The Mi-8 helicopter, which carried forest firefighters and was conducting aerial reconnaissance, landed near the village of Chekunda in the Khabarovsk region, the Federal Forestry Agency said.
A senior emergencies ministry official, Vitaly Darchy, said the helicopter managed to land but "was damaged by a forest fire", forcing its passengers and crew to abandon the helicopter.
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Officials had said earlier said the helicopter carried 14 people.
A spokeswoman for regional investigators, Oxana Polshakova, had earlier reported that the helicopter had crashed and burned, and that a team of investigators went to the site.
Deadly aviation disasters are common in Russia, often blamed on ageing aircraft and poor maintenance.
Aviation experts say the Soviet-era Mi-8 has an especially poor safety record.
On June 1, a Mi-8 helicopter carrying 18 people crashed into a lake in northern Russia, killing all but two of the passengers.