CGS Huravee during an exercise | |
History | |
---|---|
India | |
Name | INS Tillanchang |
Namesake | Tillanchang |
Commissioned | 17 March 2001 |
Identification | T62 |
Fate | Transferred to Maldives Coast Guard on 16 April 2006 |
Maldives | |
Name | MCGS Huravee |
Commissioned | 16 April 2006 |
Decommissioned | 2 May 2023 |
Fate | Transferred back to India |
India | |
Name | INS Tarmugli |
Namesake | Tarmugli Island and ex-INS Tarmugli (T91) |
Commissioned | 14 December 2023 |
Fate | Ready for re-commissioning |
Status | Recommissioned after refit |
General characteristics | |
Class and type | Trinkat-class patrol vessel |
Displacement | 260 tons (full load) [1] |
Length | 46 m (150 ft 11 in) |
Beam | 7.5 m (24 ft 7 in) |
Draft | 3.9 m (12 ft 10 in) |
Propulsion | |
Speed | 30 knots (56 km/h; 35 mph) |
Range | 2,000 nmi (3,700 km; 2,300 mi) at 12 knots (22 km/h; 14 mph) |
Complement | 33 including 4 officers |
Armament | 1 × 2A42 Medak 30 mm gun |
INS Tarmugli, formerly MCGS Huravee was originally INS Tillanchang, a Trinkat-class patrol vessel of the Indian Navy. The vessel was designed and constructed by Garden Reach Shipbuilders & Engineers in Kolkata, West Bengal. Tillanchang was named after Tillangchong Island sometimes also called Tillanchang [2] and was commissioned into the Indian Navy on 17 March 2001. She was transferred to the Maldivian Coast Guard on 16 April 2006 as MCGS Huravee. As part of the transfer, technical and material assistance was provided by the Indian Navy for a period of three years. The Indian Navy also stationed a team of personnel for a preliminary period and on-the-job training of the Maldivian crew. [1] Huravee was successfully refitted at Visakhapatnam Naval Dockyard in November 2018. The refit was an initiative by Indian Navy to boost its diplomatic outreach to friendly foreign navies in the Indian Ocean Region. [3]
In Maldivian service, the Huravee was replaced by a newer INS Tarmugli (T91) in May 2023<, [4] [5] and the former INS Tillanchang was transferred back to India. After inspections, the decision was taken to refit and recommission the older patrol vessel. The former Tillanchang was recommissioned into the Indian Navy as INS Tarmugli in memory of the patrol vessel donated to the Maldives as the newer MCGS Huravee. [6]
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INS Sukanya is the lead vessel of the Sukanya-class patrol vessels of the Indian Navy. In Sanatan Dharma, Sukanya was the daughter of Shryayati, son of Vaivasvata Manu and the wife of the great sage Chyavana. It was commissioned into service on 31 August 1989.
Mazagon Dock Shipbuilders Limited (MDL), formerly called Mazagon Dock Limited, is a shipyard situated in Mazagaon, Mumbai. It manufactures warships and submarines for the Indian Navy and offshore platforms and associated support vessels for offshore oil drilling. It also builds tankers, cargo bulk carriers, passenger ships and ferries.
Garden Reach Shipbuilders & Engineers Ltd, abbreviated as GRSE, is one of India's leading shipyards, located in Kolkata. It builds and repairs commercial and naval vessels. GRSE also builds export ships.
The Maldivian Coast Guard is the naval or maritime arm of the Maldives National Defence Force (MNDF). Because the Maldives does not have a navy, the MNDF Coast Guard functions as the armed maritime force of the nation with a charter to contribute to national defence and by and large to respond to issues related to the maritime security of the nation. Therefore, the Coast Guard is documented as the custodian of the Maldives Maritime Domain. Maritime security is a constituent ingredient of the national security in a maritime nation such as the Maldives and its significance is best understood when one perceives the island or the archipelagic nature of the country.
The Car Nicobar class of high-speed offshore patrol vessels are built by Garden Reach Shipbuilders and Engineers (GRSE) for the Indian Navy. The vessels are designed as a cost-effective platform for patrol, anti-piracy and rescue operations in India's exclusive economic zone. In 2023, one of the ships, INS Tarmugli, was donated to the Maldivian Coast Guard.
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PS Topaz is a Trinkat-class patrol vessel owned and operated by the Seychelles Coast Guard. She was formerly operated by the Indian Navy as INS Tarmugli (T64). India, like China and the United Arab Emirates, have helped equip the Seychelles Coast Guard with patrol vessels. India, China, and the UAE helped equip the tiny Seychelles with these patrol vessels due to its strategic location, very near the area off the Horn of Africa that is notorious for pirate attacks.
The Trinkat-class patrol vessels of the Indian Navy were designed and constructed by Garden Reach Shipbuilders and Engineers.
The following ships of the Indian Navy have been named INS Tarmugli:
MCGS Huravee, formerly INS Tarmugli is a patrol vessel of the Car Nicobar-class of Indian Navy and the first ship in the series of four Water Jet Fast Attack Craft (WJFAC). The ship was commissioned by Vice Admiral HCS Bisht AVSM, Flag Officer Commanding-in-Chief, Eastern Naval Command. The indigenously conceived, designed and built ship, named after an island of same name in the Andaman archipelago is capable of operating in shallow waters at high speeds. Built for extended coastal and off-shore surveillance and patrol duties the warship is fitted with advanced MTU engines, water jet propulsion as well as latest communication equipment.
The following ships of the Indian Navy have been named INS Tillanchang:
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The following ships of the Maldivian Coastguard have been named Huravee: