Published 13:08 IST, October 22nd 2020
Indigenously-built 'INS Kavaratti' to be commissioned into Indian Navy at Vizag
The last of the four indigenously built ASW corvette ‘INS Kavaratti’ is set to be commissioned into the Indian Navy by General MM Naravane at Visakhapatnam
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The last of the four indigenously built Anti-Submarine Warfare (ASW) stealth corvette ‘INS Kavaratti’ under the Project 28 is set to be commissioned into the Indian Navy by Army Chief General MM Naravane, at the Naval Dockyard in Visakhapatnam on Thursday.
Kavaratti is designed by the Indian Navy’s in-house organisation Directorate of Naval Design (DND) and built by Garden Reach Shipbuilders and Engineers (GRSE) in Kolkata. The initiative depicts India's growing capability in becoming self-reliant, in tune with the objective of ‘Aatmanirbhar Bharat’. The warship has up to 90% indigenously built content and the use of carbon composite for the superstructure is a remarkable feat achieved in Indian shipbuilding, the Defence Ministry said in a statement.
Indigenously built ASW Corvette ‘Kavaratti’ to be Commissioned at #Visakhapatnam today 22 Oct 20 by General MM Naravane #COAS.#हरकामदेशकेनाम#AatmaNirbharBharat@SpokespersonMoD@adgpi @makeinindia @DefenceMinIndia @PMOIndiahttps://t.co/bsvnwW16IX pic.twitter.com/oGPfF3e66W
— SpokespersonNavy (@indiannavy) October 22, 2020
'Kavaratti' last of four indigenously built Anti-Submarine Warfare (ASW) stealth corvettes is all set to join #IndianNavy.
— SpokespersonNavy (@indiannavy) October 22, 2020
Designed by #IndianNavy's Directorate of Naval Design, the ship portrays the growing capability of the nation in becoming self-reliant through indigenization pic.twitter.com/Z3d0R9uloM
Kavaratti has modern weapons and sensor suite which can detect and destroy submarines. In addition to this, the ship has a reliable self-defence capability and good endurance for long-range deployments. The ship will be commissioned into the Indian Navy as a combat-ready platform as it has completed the sea trials of all the systems onboard. Kavaratti takes her name from the former INS Kavaratti, an Arnala class missile corvette which played a key role during the 1971 war.
Becoming self-reliant
The government has unveiled a number of policy initiatives in the last few months with an aim to boost domestic defence production. On August 9, the defence minister announced that India will stop the import of 101 weapons and military platforms like transport aircraft, light combat helicopters, conventional submarines, cruise missiles and sonar systems by 2024.
In a related development, the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) identified 108 military systems and subsystems like navigation radars, tank transporters and missile canisters for the domestic industry to design, develop and manufacture.
13:08 IST, October 22nd 2020