A military aviation disaster on June 10 claimed the lives of 22 soldiers when their helicopter went down in Muzaffarabad, the regional capital of Pakistan-administered Kashmir, according to Pakistan’s military, which attributed the crash to an apparent technical fault. Pakistan held a mass funeral on June 11 for the fallen soldiers, in what officials are calling one of the country’s deadliest aviation disasters in years.
The aircraft, a Russian-built Mi-17 transport helicopter, crashed in the disputed region, and rescuers spent hours sifting through badly burned wreckage before determining there were no survivors. Officials said the remains of all 22 soldiers had been recovered by the morning of June 11, when Pakistan held the mass funeral ceremony that drew the nation’s senior military and civilian leadership.
Senior Officers Among the Casualties
The dead included a colonel and two army majors, two security officials said on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to brief reporters publicly. The presence of multiple senior officers underscored the magnitude of the loss for Pakistan’s armed forces.
An Associated Press reporter counted 22 coffins draped in Pakistan’s national flag at the funeral ceremony, where rows of uniformed soldiers carried their fallen comrades past mourning family members and government dignitaries. Witnesses and regional officials described the recovery operation as grim, with the soldiers’ remains pulled from charred debris scattered across the crash site.
Deployment Tied to Security Concerns
The soldiers had been traveling to carry out security duties after a call for a march on Muzaffarabad by the Joint Awami Action Committee, an alliance of various groups banned in early June that has clashed repeatedly with authorities, according to the security officials. The planned protest had raised concerns within Pakistan’s security apparatus, prompting the deployment of additional personnel to the region.
Authorities have not indicated any connection between the planned protest and the crash, however, and Pakistan’s military has pointed to a technical fault as the apparent cause. An investigation is underway to determine the exact circumstances that brought the aircraft down, and the findings are expected to be closely scrutinized given the high-profile nature of the casualties and the volatile political climate in the region.
Prime Minister of Pakistan-administered Kashmir Faisal Mumtaz Rathore attended the funerals alongside other senior government and military officials. Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Army Chief Field Marshal Asim Munir each issued separate statements expressing sorrow and extending condolences to the families of the fallen.
Escalating Tensions Across Kashmir
Pakistan has deployed additional security forces across Kashmir, where tensions had been escalating for days. Coordinated attacks on police posts on June 6 and June 7 killed four officers, and further clashes erupted on June 8 in Rawalakot between security forces and supporters of the banned group, leaving at least 11 people dead — setting off a wave of unrest that authorities are still working to contain.
The Joint Awami Action Committee, an umbrella body that emerged from grassroots grievances over economic and political issues, was outlawed by authorities in the lead-up to the planned protest. Its activities have drawn a heavy security response, with checkpoints and patrols increasing across Pakistan-administered Kashmir.
Muzaffarabad and the surrounding territory have long been a flashpoint, but the convergence of armed attacks on security forces, a banned political alliance pushing for street demonstrations and now a military catastrophe has left the region on edge.
History of Aviation Accidents
Military helicopter crashes are not uncommon in Pakistan, where rugged terrain, aging fleets and challenging weather conditions have contributed to a long history of aviation accidents. In September 2025, an army helicopter on a routine flight crashed in northern Pakistan, killing two pilots and three technicians.
That earlier disaster prompted similar official inquiries and renewed calls for updated equipment. The crash represents one of the highest single-incident death tolls for Pakistan’s army in recent years, surpassing the September 2025 disaster and drawing comparisons to earlier tragedies involving troop transports in the country’s mountainous border regions.
For families of the fallen, the politics surrounding the deployment provided little comfort. The mass funeral instead became a moment of collective grief, with mourners lining streets near the ceremony to pay respects as the flag-draped coffins were carried to their final resting places.
As Pakistan absorbs the shock of losing 22 service members in a single moment, the focus now turns both to honoring the dead and answering urgent questions about what went wrong in the skies above Muzaffarabad. Military officials have not yet released a timeline for the conclusion of the technical investigation, though the outcome could have implications for fleet maintenance practices and operational decisions across the Pakistani military for years to come.







