Chief of Naval
Staff, Admiral R Hari Kumar said the Indian Navy is tackling piracy in the
Indian Ocean Region (IOR) aggressively, and has increased deployment of
warships in the area.
The Indian Navy is running two operations
in the IOR and one of them is an anti-piracy operation. The anti-piracy operation has been going
on since 2008 with constant deployment of herd ships to combat piracy. We have
deployed about 108 ships to counter piracy till date. The presence of warships
deters the pirates. Last year, we thought that piracy was almost over, but
recently hijacking of an Indian vessel and Indian crew took place. We have
increased the deployment and are aggressively going after them,” said the Navy
chief
The Maritime Anti-Piracy Act, 2022, has
strengthened the Navy’s hands and India is among the few countries that have enacted
such a legislation, he said. The Anti-Piracy Act has been helpful for the Navy.
Naval chief
was speaking to the media at Lonavla’s INS Shivaji after the inauguration of a
transcritical CO2-based air conditioning plant built indigenously in
collaboration with the Indian Institute of Science (IISc), Bangalore.
On the third
aircraft carrier, Admiral Kumar said, “It is being processed through the
Ministry of Defense and cleared by the Defense Procurement Board (DPB). Now, it
has to fill up the Defense Security Corps (DSC) so there are some staff work
requirements.”
The Navy chief
asserted that the aircraft carrier, INS Vikrant, will go for a full operation
clearance by the end of this year. “Vikrant after commissioning went through
the initial operation clearance, landings and placing the craft and guarantee
docking. Now, she will go for a full operation clearance,”
On pursuing the Red Sea, the Navy chief
said that the force is presently monitoring the situation there. “We will go inside the Red Sea when our
interests are threatened. We do not have many Indian flag vessels at the region
and, so far, none of it has faced any issue. We are monitoring the situation,”
he said.