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Kirpan (P44) entering Cam Ranh International Port, Vietnam | |
Name | INS Kirpan |
Namesake | Ceremonial dagger worn by Khalsa Sikhs |
Builder | Garden Reach Shipbuilders and Engineers |
Laid down | 15 November 1985 |
Launched | 16 August 1988 |
Commissioned | 12 January 1991 |
Decommissioned | 22 July 2023 [1] |
Identification | Pennant number: P44 |
Status | Decommissioned & handed over to the Vietnamese Navy |
History | |
---|---|
Vietnam | |
Acquired | 22 July 2023 |
Identification | Ship 26 [2] |
General characteristics | |
Class and type | Khukri-class corvette |
Displacement | 1350 tons (full load) |
Length | 91.1 metres |
Beam | 10.5 metres |
Draught | 4.5 metres |
Propulsion |
|
Speed | 25 knots (50 km/h) |
Range | 4,000 nmi (7,400 km) at 16 knots (30 km/h) |
Complement | 79 (incl. 10 officers) |
Sensors and processing systems |
|
Armament | |
Aircraft carried | 1 helicopter (HAL Chetak) |
INS Kirpan is the name of a Khukri-class corvette formerly commissioned by the Indian Navy. [3] It was recently decommissioned and handed over to Vietnam People's Navy in a ceremony presided over by Adm. R. Hari Kumar and Rear Adm. Pham Manh Hung, Deputy Commander-in-Chief and Chief of Staff, Vietnam People's Navy. [4]
It is the first active warship that India has ever gifted to another country, that is the Vietnam People's Navy, which will use it in the future with as Ship 26. The warship was gifted to Vietnam after a visit by Vietnam's Defence Minister Gen Phan Van Giang in June, 2023. [5]
It is another in a long list of warships gifted by India to other countries. The indigenously built missile corvette INS Kirpan entered Cam Ranh International Port on July 8 after sailing out of Visakhapatnam on 29 June 2023 [6] and was to be officially handed over to Vietnamese People’s Navy by month end. [7]
Kirpan was transferred to Vietnam People's Navy and was decommissioned from Indian Navy service on 22 July 2023 after 32 years of service. [1]
It is the namesake of INS Kirpan that was a Type 14 Blackwood-class frigate commissioned in 1959 into the Indian Navy, that participated in 1971 India-Pakistan War and was almost sunk by PNS Hangor. [8]
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Admiral Radhakrishnan Hari Kumar is retired flag officer in the Indian Navy. He served as 25th Chief of the Naval Staff (CNS). Previously, he served as the Flag Officer Commanding-in-Chief, Western Naval Command. In his prior appointments, he served as the Chief of Integrated Defence Staff, Chief of Personnel, Controller Personnel Services, the Flag Officer Commanding Western Fleet, Flag Officer Sea Training and the Chief of the Staff of the Western Naval Command. He was the Commandant of the Naval War College, Goa and served as a naval advisor to the government of Seychelles. He is an alumnus of National Defence Academy, the Naval War College, the Army War College, Mhow and the Royal College of Defence Studies.
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