Nepal school revamped in RAF officer's memory

Flight Lieutenant Rakesh Chauhan smiles at the camera.  He is wearing green camouflage fatigues and a blue beretImage source, Family handout
Image caption,

The charity set up in Flt Lt Chauhan's name has been working with the Gurkha Welfare Trust

  • Published

A trust set up in memory of a RAF officer killed in a helicopter crash in Afghanistan has helped fund the redevelopment of a school in Nepal.

Flt Lt Rakesh Chauhan, from Cropston, near Anstey, in Leicestershire, died along with four others in the crash in 2014.

The 29-year-old's family set up a charity, Rak's Trust, in his name which has donated £32,000 to pay for six new classrooms at the Shree Shiksha Bodhini Secondary school near the city of Chitwan.

The charity's trustees said the money had been given to the Gurkha Welfare Trust which has overseen the school's redevelopment.

RAF officer wearing his uniformImage source, Family handout
Image caption,

Rak's Trust was set up in memory of Flt Lt Rakesh Chauhan who died in a RAF helicopter crash during a routine flight in 2014

The intelligence officer's family visited Nepal in February for the official opening of the redeveloped school.

A new education block has been built and other facilities have been refurbished as part of a wider investment programme costing £158,000 overall.

The school, which currently has about 370 pupils, was damaged in an earthquake in 2015 and was in need of renovation.

A two storey building made with red bricks and white concrete, with metal railings on the first floor.Image source, Rak's Trust
Image caption,

The new education block at the Shree Shiksha Bodhini Secondary school near the city of Chitwan in Nepal

Flt Lt Chauhan's father, Kishor Chauhan, said: "The school will make a huge difference to the community. The younger children didn't have very good classrooms and no carpet.

"Now, they have carpets so that they can jump about and run about and do whatever little children do."

The Ghurka Welfare Trust's deputy field director in Nepal, Phatta Bahadur Gurung, said: "The school now is safer, it is cleaner and it is spacious with some modern facilities like a library, so it will help to break the cycle of poverty long-term."

The charities have been recognised with a plaque on the school wall.

Flt Lt Chauhan's brother, Kesh, said: "To have a building with my brother's name on there, that in itself is a legacy, but knowing what they will take from their school is a wonderful legacy".

A classroom with three tables and a patterned carpet. Timetables and English words decorate the walls.Image source, Rak's Trust
Image caption,

The classrooms have been rebuilt with the support of the charities

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