Conspiracy theories as whether the helicopter crash that killed Chief of Defence General Bipin Rawat was an accident of a conspiracy flooded social media Wednesday as India saw another tragic crash that killed a high profile army man. Rawat died after the Air Force helicopter carrying him and 13 others crashed shortly after take-off in Tamil Nadu. General Rawat's wife Madhulika Rawat was also killed.

NEW DELHI – Conspiracy theories as whether the helicopter crash that killed Chief of Defence General Bipin Rawat was an accident of a conspiracy flooded social media Wednesday as India saw another tragic crash that killed a high profile army man.

Rawat died after the Air Force helicopter carrying him and 13 others crashed shortly after take-off in Tamil Nadu.

General Rawat's wife Madhulika Rawat was also killed.

The crash took place shortly after the Russian-made Mi-17 V5 chopper took off from the Air Force base in Sulur, Coimbatore, for Wellington in the Nilgiri Hills.

The helicopter was already making its descent and would have landed in 10 more minutes. It came down around 10 km from the nearest road, forcing emergency workers to trek to the accident site, said news agency AFP.

Reports of the crash emerged around 12.20 pm.

Videos showed wreckage scattered on a hillside and rescuers struggling through thick smoke and fire to locate bodies. Charred bodies were pulled out by locals and cops from under mangled metal and fallen trees.

General Rawat, 63, took charge as India's first Chief of Defence Staff in January 2019. The position was set up with the aim of integrating the three services - the Army, the Navy and the Air Force.

A former Army Chief, General Rawat was also appointed the head of the newly-created Department of Military Affairs.

Many former army chiefs expressed grief; they described the Mi-17 double engine chopper as a very stable aircraft used for VVIP flights.