NEW DELHI: A tough fighter in life, even in death Group Captain Varun Singh gave a good fight.
Even as sad news of his passing away came in on Wednesday, his viral letter to the principal of the Army Public School in Haryana’s Chandimandir—his alma mater—was still doing the rounds.
The thoughts of the retired army colonel’s air warrior son who had written that ‘it is okay to be mediocre’ resonated brilliantly among the country’s young and only highlighted his fighting qualities that are the core essence of a soldier.
“Group Cap Varun Singh had suffered about 90-95 percent burns and that is very serious. Looking at the wreckage of the ill-fated MI-17V chopper, it is impossible that anyone would survive such a crash. But he gave it quite a fight and held on till the very end,” a senior IAF official told ETV Bharat.
A week ago, the Group Cap was stretchered to a military hospital in Wellington after the chopper he was flying in crashed near Tamil Nadu’s Coonoor in the Nilgiris district on a foggy noon.
“He was barely conscious when the rescue teams reached him. Immediately he was being put on life support at the Wellington military hospital before being shifted to the base hospital at Bengaluru,” the official added.
Chief of Defence Services General Bipin Rawat and 12 others died in the crash sending the entire nation into mourning.
Watch: Visuals from the IAF chopper crash site in TN's Coonoor
Posted to the prestigious Defence Services Staff College at Wellington, Gp Cap Singh was rostered on that fatal day to oversee and accompany Gen Rawat from the Sulur IAF base to Wellington.
A fighter test pilot—indicating his ace status in the IAF—Grouo Cap Singh had flown a range of fighter aircraft.