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Indian Navy Undocks Guided Missile Frigate After Accident Last Year

© AFP 2023 / INDRANIL MUKHERJEEIndia Navy's battleship INS Betwa (File)
India Navy's battleship INS Betwa (File) - Sputnik International
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The Indian Navy smoothly undocked its guided missile frigate INS Betwa on Tuesday for refitting. The undocking was planned for June 22 but was postponed due to a minor incident. The Betwa was the winner of the Navy’s “Most Spirited Ship” award in 2016.

Indian sailors walk beside Indian Navy ships, from left, INS Ranvijay (D55), a Rajput class destroyer, and INS Saptura, a Shivalik-class stealth multi-role frigate, as they arrive at Berth 15, South Harbour, in Manila, Philippines on Wednesday, June 12, 2013 - Sputnik International
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New Delhi (Sputnik) The 126.5-meter, 3,850-ton guided missile frigate Betwa was commissioned in 2004. INS Betwa can sail at a speed of 27 knots and is armed with Uran anti-ship missiles, Barak 1 surface-to-air missiles and torpedoes.

“During the flooding of the dry dock, a list of up to 7-8 degrees was observed, which was promptly corrected. However, the ship could not be undocked due to a leakage in the dock-gate of the dry dock and subsequent unfavorable tide. The undocking was, thereafter, undertaken on June 27 when the tide was suitable,” the Indian Navy said in a statement.

The Betwa, a P-16A Class frigate, had tipped over at a Mumbai dockyard last December. On February 23 this year, it was made upright by the unstinted efforts put in by the naval dockyard, Mumbai and the salvage firm Resolve Marine, specially contracted for the operation.

The US-based Resolve Marine Group was contracted by the Indian Navy to bring the ship to a level position as it lacked a crane big enough to lift the ship. Resolve Marine Group salvaged the Indian submarine Sindhurakshak that sank in the Mumbai Naval Dockyard on August 14, 2013. However, the submarine has not been able to perform its operations at full capability till date.

A majority of the equipment and machinery of the ship is safe because the accident occurred when it was undergoing a major refitting and mid-life upgrade since April 2016, so most of the equipment and machinery had already been removed for routine servicing/replacement with upgraded equipment.

The Navy is confident that with in-house expertise and sustained efforts, the ship will be made fully operational by April 2018.

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