AIRCRAFT
CARRIER VIKRAMADITYA INDUCTED INTO INDIAN NAVY
The long-delayed and much-awaited USD
2.3 billion aircraft carrier INS Vikramaditya was on Saturday inducted into the
Indian Navy in Severodvinsk, Russia, in a strategic boost to India's maritime
warfare capabilities.
The mammoth
44,500-tonne warship was commissioned into the Indian Navy at the Sevmash
Shipyard in this northern Arctic port at a handing over ceremony attended by
Defence Minister A K Antony and Russian Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin
and senior government and naval officials of the two countries.
The Russian flag on the vessel was lowered and the flag of the Indian Navy was
raised in its place.
In a traditional Indian ritual, a coconut was broken against the ship's side.
The commissioning papers were signed by deputy director of Russia's arms
exporter Rosoboronexport, Igor Sevastyanov and the ship's captain Suraj Berry,
Russia's RIA Novosti news agency reported.
The warship was first scheduled to be delivered in 2008, but the deadline was
repeatedly postponed over the period.
The carrier will be escorted to India on a near two-month voyage by a group of
warships to secure a safe sail to its base at Karwar on the Arabian Sea coast.
INS Vikramaditya is a Kiev class aircraft carrier which was commissioned by
Russian Navy in 1987 under the name Baku.
It was later renamed as Admiral Gorshkov and last sailed in 1995 in Russia,
before being offered to India.
The warship with a length of 284 metres will have MiG-29K naval combat aircraft
along with Kamov 31 and Kamov 28 anti-submarine warfare and maritime
surveillance helicopters.
The MiG 29-Ks would provide a significant boost to Indian Navy with their range
of over 700 nautical miles, extendable to over 1,900 nautical miles with
mid-air refuelling, and an array of weapons like anti-ship missiles, beyond
visual range air-to-air missiles and guided bombs and rockets.
After almost nine years of negotiations the initial USD 1.5 billion contract
for retrofitting the carrier and buying 16 MiG-29K, K/UB deck-based fighters
was signed in 2004.
The aircraft carrier deal had become a major irritant in bilateral relations
between India and Russia.
By the end of 2007, when it became clear that Russia will not deliver the
radically redesigned vessel by the 2008 deadline, ties dipped to an all-time low.
However, the two countries inked an additional agreement under which India
agreed to pay a higher price for its refit.
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