Jakarta (MI) : The Indonesian Navy's (Tentara Nasional Indonesia - Angkatan Laut, or
TNI-AL's) Western Fleet Command (Komando Armada RI Kawasan Barat -
KOARMABAR) will receive an additional four KCR-40 missile attack craft
by the end of 2014 to strengthen its regional maritime interdiction
capabilities.
Speaking to IHS Jane's on 14 August in Jakarta, KOARMABAR
chief of staff Commodore Amarulla Octavian described the additional
vessels, which have a top speed of 30 kt, as instrumental in
strengthening the command's surveillance, patrol, and interception
capabilities in its area of operations. This area includes the
piracy-prone Strait of Malacca, as well as the disputed maritime regions
of Tanjung Datu and the Natuna Islands.
Overall, the TNI-AL currently operates a class of four KCR-40 vessels out of an expected class of up to 24. Two boats, KRI Clurit and KRI Kujang
, are assigned to KOARMABAR and completed sea acceptance trials for the
C-705 surface-to-surface missile fire-control system in July.
"The additional vessels would give us a total class size of six boats
for the command by the end of 2014", said Cdre Octavian, who also
confirmed that KOARMABAR intends to employ the 44 m vessels to assist
with tackling maritime piracy in the Strait of Malacca, as well as
securing Indonesia's maritime borders and wider interests at sea.
Recent figures published by the Regional Cooperation Agreement on
Combating Piracy and Armed Robbery against Ships in Asia (ReCAAP)
suggest a deterioration in the Southeast Asian maritime security
situation. In its first quarter report for 2014, the counter-piracy body
recorded eight incidents in the Malacca and Singapore straits, compared
with a total of five incidents for the whole of 2012 and 2013.
Recent high-profile incidents include the attacks on the cargo ship Naniwa Maru No. 1 in April 2014 near Port Klang, Malaysia, which resulted in 2,500 tonnes of Marine Diesel Oil being siphoned, and on the tanker GPT 21 in November 2013, with 10 armed pirates boarding the vessel off Pulau Kukup in the Strait of Malacca.
Yet despite the debate about whether littoral states should increase
patrols in affected areas, Cdre Octavian argued that regional maritime
piracy cannot be solved with increased vessel numbers alone. "To tackle
the problem, we have to start looking on land rather than at sea", he
said.
"There needs to be greater co-ordination between the anti-piracy
bodies and navies when it comes to investigation efforts and information
sharing. Currently what we have are reports and incident alerts. What
we need are follow-up actions such as joint investigative efforts
between navies in the region and the anti-piracy bodies", said the
commodore, adding that Indonesia stands ready to provide information on
piracy investigations it has conducted should other parties request it.
In terms of whether Indonesia might participate in ReCAAP activities,
Cdre Octavian replied that the TNI-AL respects ReCAAP's work and would
co-operate fully with the organisation with regards to information
sharing. He stopped short, however, of commenting on whether Indonesia
might join the multinational body in the future.
Sumber : Janes
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