Indian Naval ship Sandhayak, the first of the indigenously designed and built hydrographic survey ships of the Indian Navy, will be decommissioned on Friday after serving the nation for 40 years.
The decommissioning ceremony of INS Sandhayak will be held at the Visakhapatnam Naval Dockyard. It will be a low-key event to be attended only by in-station officers and sailors with strict observance of Covid protocols.
Sandhayak was conceptualised by then chief hydrographer to the government, Rear Admiral F.L. Fraser, a Padma Shri awardee who had a strong desire for indigenously designed and built hydrographic survey vessels in India.
The design was finalised by the Naval Headquarters and the construction of the ship began at GRSE Kolkata (then Calcutta) by laying the keel in 1978.
The ship was commissioned to the Indian Navy on February 26, 1981 by Vice Admiral M.K. Roy, then Flag Officer Commanding-in-Chief of Eastern Naval Command (ENC).
Since commissioning, the ship has been the alma mater nurturing the hydrographers of the Indian Navy, thereby laying the foundation for complete hydrographic coverage of the peninsular waters.
Also, the success of her design paved the way for all the survey ships of the Indian Navy in various modifications till recently.
The ship, during her commissioned service, has undertaken approximately 200 major hydrographic surveys and numerous minor surveys in both East and West coasts of the country, the Andaman seas as well as the neighbouring countries.
Apart from survey missions, the ship has been an active participant in many significant operations such as Op Pawan- assisting the Indian Peace Keeping Force in Sri Lanka in 1987 -- Op Sarong, Op Rainbow, rendering humanitarian assistance post the Tsunami in 2004 and participation in the maiden joint INDO-US HADR Exercise 'Tiger-Triumph'.
In its glorious 40 years, the ship saw 22 Commanding Officers at the helm, with the last Commanding Officer taking charge of the ship on June 17, 2019.
With the sunset on Friday, the Naval Ensign and the Commissioning Pennant will be hauled down for the last time onboard INS Sandhayak, in the presence of Vice Admiral Ajendra Bahadur Singh, Flag Officer Commanding-in-Chief ENC, symbolising the decommissioning.
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