Alang is a small town in Bhavnagar district in Gujarat….it
is on the coast and is known Worldwide for its yards, not exceptionally state
of art, mostly manual ….yet something associated with big work ! ~ it is on the
Gulf of Khambat, (formerly known as the
Gulf of Cambay), an inlet of the Arabian Sea that divides the Kathiawar
peninsula.
This post is about a vessel that served Indian
Navy gloriously ~ one which was first ordered to be ‘HMS Hercules’ by the Royal Navy. She was laid down in Nov 1943 on the River Tyne; launched in Sept 1945
~ bought by India
in 1957, modified and served the Indian Navy gloriously. It is the famous ‘INS Vikrant’ [another ship –
an aircraft carrier by the same was launched in 2013] …. Vikrant was
commissioned into the Indian Navy by then Indian High Commissioner to the United Kingdom, Ms Vijayalakshmi Pandit in Mar 1961
in Belfast. The
name Vikrant was taken from Sanskrit vikrānta meaning "stepping
beyond", i.e. "courageous" or "bold". Captain Pritam
Singh was the first commanding officer of the carrier.
Vessel once seen at Mumbai
In the 1971 War with Pakistan,
Vikrant was stationed off the Andaman & Nicobar Islands along with
frigates, INS Brahmaputra and INS Beas; and was redeployed towards Chittagong. On the morning of 4 December 1971, Vikrant’s
eight Sea Hawk aircraft launched an air raid on Cox’s Bazar from 60 nautical
miles (110 km) offshore. On the evening of 4 December, the air group struck Chittagong Harbour. Later strikes targeted Khulna and Port
of Mongla. A Press Trust
of India report of 4 December read, “Chittagong
harbour ablaze as ships and aircraft of the Eastern Naval Fleet bombed and
rocketed. Not a single vessel can be put to sea from Chittagong.” Air strikes continued until 10
December 1971 with not a single Sea Hawk lost.
The Pakistan Navy deployed the submarine Ghazi to
specifically target and sink Vikrant. However, Ghazi sank off Visakhapatnam harbour, due to attacks by INS
Rajput. During the war, the crew of Vikrant earned aircraft carrier is in news
sadly. After a distinguished service, she was decommissioned in January 1997; was
preserved as a museum ship in Cuffe Parade, Mumbai, until it was closed in 2012
due to safety concerns. Now there are reports that Vikrant has been sold
through an online auction to an Alang ship-breaker, and is now berthed off Bhavnagar undergoing
preparations to be broken up. The vessel according to newspaper reports has
been sold at Rs.60 crore.
Earlier, the Maharashtra
government had expressed its inability to maintain Vikrant; and reports
suggested that the condition of the ship had deteriorated and could not be
converted into a museum. In January
2014, during the hearing of a public interest litigation which opposed the plan
to scrap the ship, the Union ministry of defence told the Bombay
high court that it had completed its operational life; the Maharashtra
government stated that to preserve it as a museum would not be viable
financially. The high court subsequently
dismissed the PIL.
The Hindu reports that the Navy sold the iconic INS
Vikrant to a ship-breaking company here for Rs. 63.2 crore. The decommissioned
aircraft carrier is now the property of IB Commercial Private Ltd and could be
moved out for its funeral voyage in a fortnight or less. The buyer reportedly plans to scrap it at the
Darukhana ship-breaking yard in Alang. A Defence Ministry source is quoted as
stating that the deal was in the nation’s interest and that the option of
converting Vikrant into a museum was not economically viable as it would have
cost around Rs. 500 crore. Moreover, the
berthing-space constraints at the Mumbai harbor will ease a bit with Vikrant
being moved out. Around 700 feet of space will be liberated and this will
facilitate navigation of naval vessels in the channel, it is stated.
Photo credit: The Hindu
The sight of a very large vessel floating on water,
carrying goods from one place to another offers imagination beyond dreams. But
just as most things have a shelf life, ships also have a limited span of life. Depending
upon the type of vessel and nature of goods carried, generally after 25-30
years ships are at the end of their sailing life. These vessels who have
outlived its existence are sold and dismantled to recover the valuable steel. A
very major % of the vessel consists of steel which can be rerolled besides
valuable machinery such as generators, marine engines etc., There are various
other miscellaneous material as well.
Ships are launched in big ceremonies and
ceremonially named. Ships like INS Vikrant have a rich history and glorious
past – still some day fate catches up. Every
year hundreds of vessels are taken out of service and sold for scrapping. Asia has emerged as a big market for scrap. Ship breaking
or ship demolition is a type of ship disposal involving the breaking up of
ships for scrap recycling, with the hulls being discarded in ship graveyards. So,
one day, this monumental ship too would be cut into pieces by men, who may
never understand its glory ….it will have to bear the pangs of hammer, tongs
and gas cutting and would go down without much of trace.
With regards – S. Sampathkumar
9th Apr 2014.