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Kfir mishap averted
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Jolyroger
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27 Feb 2010 16:46:06 GMT Report for Abuse
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The Indian Navy chief has stated that Milan-2010 does not indicate the creation of a security bloc targeted against any other nation, an apparent reference to China, which is very sensitive to multinational naval exercises held by other Asian-Pacific states (Thaindian.com, February 5). Three of the navies observing or participating in Milan-2010 (Vietnam, Malaysia and the Philippines) belong to nations engaged in territorial disputes with China over the resource-rich Spratly Islands of the South China Sea (Sunday Island Online (Colombo), February 6).
India has had different responses to multilateral naval and maritime initiatives such as the U.S. proposed Proliferation Security Initiative (PSI - aimed at intercepting weapons of mass destruction being transported by sea) or the Thousand Ship Navy concept (TSN - a global maritime partnership designed to protect sea lanes), and the U.N.- sanctioned International Ship and Port Security Code (ISPS designed to secure sea ports) and Container Security Initiative (CSI a mechanism for the monitoring and surveillance of regulatory and safety mechanisms of container cargo). In essence, India supports multilateral initiatives that have been sanctioned by the United Nations and remains averse to any U.S. proposed initiatives, such as the PSI and TSN.
(1) Operation Cactus , www.bharat-rakshak.com/CONFLICTS/Operation cactus.html. Maldives: The Coup that Failed, Asiaweek, November 18, 1988, pp.37-38.
(2) Prabhakaran Paleri, Role of the Coast Guard in the Maritime Security of India, (New Delhi: Knowledge World, 2007), p.147 Commodore RS Vasan IN(Retd), Alondra Rainbow revisited, A Study of related issues in the light of the recent judgment of Mumbai High Court, South Asia Analysis Group, Paper no.1379, May 13, 2005
(3) Arun Prakash (Former Indian Chief of Naval Staff), From the Crow s Nest, (New Delhi: Lancer, 2007), p.173.
Edited By - Jolyroger - 27 Feb 2010 16:49:20 GMT |
Jolyroger
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27 Feb 2010 17:30:21 GMT Report for Abuse
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Snakey here you go -
Reports indicate that a mini armoured car, designed for use in confined spaces such as airports and hotels targeted in terror attacks, has gone on display at the 2010 Defence Expo - an Indian arms fair.
According to a report by BBC News, the battery operated, two million rupee Anti-Terrorist Assault Cart (Atac) is said to resemble a bullet-proof golf buggy with firing ports.
It has been specially designed to transport two armed security personnel during or after terror attacks.
It was created in the wake of the Mumbai (Bombay) hotel attacks of 2008, in 165 people were killed in the attacks, including nine gunmen.
The company behind the cart, Metaltech Motor Bodies Pvt Ltd, said the Atac had been designed in the aftermath of the attacks.
It can extract civilians or engage terrorists, Metaltech managing director JB Sehrawat said.
It s a product of our sense of helplessness over the casualties we took in the attacks. We put our heads and hearts together and came up with the Atac, he added.
It weighs just under half a tonne, has bullet-proof windows and contains numerous firing ports. Furthermore it is able to negotiate corridors and lifts.
Metaltech said that the squat and heavily armoured vehicle can also withstand grenade blasts and last for six hours on a single charge - with a top speed of 25km/h (15mph).
The company said it was offering a prototype of the vehicle, which drew applause from visitors and military scientists attending the arms fair in Delhi, for trials with the sponsors of the Commonwealth Games, due to be held in the city in November.
Given the growing threats, we need nano-engineering such as the Atac, Metaltech Vice President SW Thatte said.
Link to the picture -
http://news.rediff.com/report/2010/feb/18/anti-terror-golf-buggy-unveiled.htm
:) pissu ney |
Jolyroger
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27 Feb 2010 17:37:31 GMT Report for Abuse
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See the front wheels and the two spot lights, even a blind donkey can hit them from a good distance.
:) |
Jolyroger
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11 Mar 2010 19:15:08 GMT Report for Abuse
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KDU Aeronautic Engineering course open from this year
General Sir John Kotalawala Defence University (KDU) Vice Chancellor Major General Milinda Peiris yesterday stated that the Aeronautic Engineering Faculty of KDU is open from this year for the civil students who are qualified for university entrance.
Vice Chancellor Peiris stating that the Aeronautic Engineering stream of the Engineering Faculty was open only for the officer cadets of the Sri Lanka Air Force told the Daily News that it is open to the civil society as there were a large number of employment opportunities in the international job market.
He also stated that with the Aeronautical Engineering degree from University Grants Commission approved KDU, the talented youth of the country will have a valuable opportunity for the first time in Sri Lanka to begin their career in the aeronautical engineering field.
The Major General said the graduands only have to join the Sri Lanka Air Force Volunteer Force as second lieutenants after the completion of the course and undergo the Air Force physical training for six months and thereafter they can join any local or foreign private institution to begin their employment.
The KDU is the only university in Sri Lanka that can boast of having an Aeronautical Engineering Faculty. The KDU is a member of the Association of Commonwealth Universities - United Kingdom so that the graduands can apply for postgraduate courses from any of the Commonwealth universities. The aeronautical engineering course for civil students will cost around Rs 4 million.
Referring to the course fee the Vice Chancellor stated that it is very cheap compared to the charges made by foreign institutions. Certain institutions charge this amount only for tuition and to complete the course the students have to go abroad.
All the facilities and other allowances given to the officer cadets of the KDU will be given to those civil students including the monthly salary of Rs 23,000 during the three years they study at the KDU.
In addition they would be provided with board and lodging, uniforms, batmen facilities, recreational facilities, and medical facilities free. So that a considerable amount of the fee would be given back to the students during their course Peiris said.
They will be recruited to the KDU with the next intake and the qualifications would be the same as for the others. The applicants should be university qualified, possess a minimum of a credit pass for English language at the GCE (O/L) examination and they will have to sit for a written test held by the KDU that includes general knowledge, IQ, current affairs etc. They will be tested for their physical fitness as well. The closing date of applications is April 9 and the applications can be obtained on the website of kdu.ac.lk. and from the gate of the KDU at Ratmalana. |
Jolyroger
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11 Mar 2010 19:34:40 GMT Report for Abuse
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Double anniversary in aviation and transportation
February 28, 2010 marks two epoch-making events in Sri Lanka s history in the fields of overseas transportation and aviation.
On this day, 72 years ago (February 28, 1938), the formal opening of the Ratmalana Airport for civil aviation and the official inauguration of the first direct regular airmail service under the British Empire Air Mail Scheme (AMS) from Ceylon (as Sri Lanka was then called), was performed by the then Governor Sir Andrew Caldecott.
It should be noted that aviation was something yet new, as a means of overseas transportation. The first successful flight in heavier-than-air mechanically propelled airplane by Orville Wright, took place 35 years earlier on December 17, 1903. His plane rose (from the base of Kill Devil Hill, 4-miles South of Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, U.S.A) 120 feet in 12 seconds. The fourth experimental flight that same day by Orville s elder brother Wilbur, rose 852 feet into the air for 59 seconds and the plane was patented on May 22, 1906.
Major (later Sir) John L. Kotelawala the then Communications and Works Minister, who played a dynamic role in modernising transportation and communication, then called upon Governor Caldecott to declare open the new Ratmalana Airport. After the opening ceremony, Governor Caldecott handed over three official mail bags containing messages to the Secretary of State for the Colonies and the Governors of Bombay and Madras, to Capt of the American Waco 4-Seater cabin plane of Messrs Tata Sons Ltd., of Bombay, India.
The plane which was provided with tricycle landing gear was piloted by Tatas Chief Operational Manager Capt. B. N. Figgins, according to the Posts and Telecommunications Administration Report of 1937-38 by J.R. Walters, the Postmaster General and Director of Telecommunications. |
Jolyroger
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11 Mar 2010 19:35:19 GMT Report for Abuse
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As the plane took off that historic day at 9 a.m sharp, two white pigeons signifying the earlier carriers of the post (the Pigeon Post), were released by a member of the then flourishing Aero Club of Ceylon.
After the inauguration ceremony, several Tiger Moth planes of this pioneer Aero Club staged a fly-past, to the delight of the large and distinguished gathering present, at which Governor Caldecott took the salute.
The State acquired 240 acres of coconut plantations, four years before this opening, for the construction of a 600-yards long airstrip. It should be again noted that the first plane landed on this new air strip on November 27, 1935, long before the official opening in 1938 and the first direct airmail was despatched, 14 months before the inauguration of the EAM scheme.
The first direct airmail was despatched from Ceylon on Christmas Eve (December 24) 1936-the same day the first direct mail came from Europe, all the way by air. This was possible when Messrs Tatas made a goodwill flight to Colombo, bringing the Christmas mail from Britain and other Western Countries, for the first time-the time taken being seven days.
The United States of America Internal Air Service was the first regular air mail service, made use of by the Ceylon Postal authorities for the transportation of mail posted in the Island. This was in September 1928 and two months later, in November, an airmail service for the conveyance of mail was used by Ceylon-between Marseilles in France and Britain. |
Jolyroger
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11 Mar 2010 19:41:34 GMT Report for Abuse
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The United States of America Internal Air Service was the first regular air mail service, made use of by the Ceylon Postal authorities for the transportation of mail posted in the Island. This was in September 1928 and two months later, in November, an airmail service for the conveyance of mail was used by Ceylon-between Marseilles in France and Britain.
The first Airmail left Colombo on Sunday, June 23, 1929 for despatch by air from Karachi (then part of British India) to Britain, Egypt, Palestine and Iraq, the service taking 14.5 days - a gain of only 1.5 days - as compared with 16 days taken, if sent all the way by sea.
Airmail letters were accepted in Ceylon for onward transmission to some selected countries in Europe in October 1929 and to Iran and other Persian Gulf countries, the following year. In 1931, mail was accepted for despatch by air to East Africa.
Until the inauguration of the EAM scheme, all mail for conveyance by the various air services had been despatched by train from Colombo via Talaimannar Pier to Karachi, the journey taking six days, before they were sent by air, from there.
When the Indian Government opened an Air Service between Madras and Karachi in 1932, the local postal authorities began sending the mail for air transportation, first by train to Madras via Talaimannar Pier which was only two days by rail before being transferred onto a plane.
Since 1929, the air services through out the world began to develop and by the end of 1937, Ceylon had extended its airmail services to almost all important countries in the world. Direct contact was subsequently established with almost all countries whilst to countries off the main trunk route by air, mail was transported by surface route to or from the nearest air terminal.
With the inauguration of the British EAM scheme, 72 years ago, a regular service by air between Colombo and Karachi was available-both for the transportation of passengers and the carriage of mail. This service also linked up the island with India and the great Southampton, Marseilles, Baghdad, Karachi, Delhi, Calcutta, Rangoon, Bangkok, Penang, Singapore, Australia air route which girdled almost two-thirds of the earth s surface.
Edited By - Jolyroger - 11 Mar 2010 19:42:00 GMT |
Jolyroger
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11 Mar 2010 19:44:41 GMT Report for Abuse
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The EAM scheme was inaugurated with the mail despatched by Imperial Airways on the East-bound service, from Britain on February 23, 1938 and in the West-bound direction, by the despatch from Ceylon on February 28, 1938. A feeder service provided by Tatas which was under the joint controls of the Ceylon and the Indian Governments, formed the link between Colombo and Karachi. This service established connection at the Karachi airport with the Imperial Airways service.
Owing to the Colombo-Karachi feeder service, it became necessary to increase the postage rate to British Empire countries participating in the All-Up service (by air all the way), from 9 cents per ounce to 20 cents per 1/2 ounce for letters and from 6 cents to ten cents for postcards. Walters, the Postmaster-General in the Administration Report states the rate appears to be the highest rate in force in any Empire country served by the Scheme. All first class mails (ie) articles paid for at the letter rate and postcards to these countries, are despatched by air.
Australia and certain other countries in the East and Far East did not joint the EAM scheme at first. Australia, New Zealand, Fiji and Western Pacific islands joined the Scheme by the latter part of July 1938. HongKong joined the Scheme in September of that year. As the air service became very popular, the frequency of the despatch of airmail from Colombo was increased while the charges were substantially reduced.
The EAM service was suspended following the commencement of World War II on September 3, 1939. Only letters and postcards on which airmail Surcharge of Rs 1/= per 1/2 ounce had been paid, were despatched by air. Two days after the commencement of the war, all countries in the EAM Scheme reverted to the old system of surcharge airmail service, the sea route being reintroduced as the normal means of despatch of mail.
Imperial Airways placed all their aircraft and equipment at the disposal of the British Secretary of State for Air, at the outbreak of World War II. The British Overseas Airways Corporation (BOAC)-now called British Airways (BA) established in November 1939, took over Imperial Airways on April 1, 1940.
Ratmalana was selected as the site for the Island s first International Airport because of its easy accessibility. If originated in the Government s need for a large airstrip near the capital for use of airplanes. Until the early 1960s, Ratmalana was the primary airport for overseas-bound Commercial aircraft flights. |
Jolyroger
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11 Mar 2010 19:45:21 GMT Report for Abuse
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It was selected also because of its easy access to the capital by a broad thoroughfare, close to a railway station and the big hotels. Ratmalana was also ideally situated in that the approaches to the runways were free from obstructions such as powerlines, smokestacks, tall buildings and radio towers. Wind direction which is a vital factor in the selection of an airport site and layout of the runways since aircraft take off and land into the wind-also made the Ratmalana Airport ideally suited, report stated.
At the height of World War II in the early 1940s, Allied military came to the island and established airstrips at Katunayake, Vavuniya, China Bay near Trincomalee, Palaly near Kankesanturai in the North. A sea-plane base was also established in Koggala in the South, for the operation of military aircraft.
The present International Airport-with a modern Terminal building at Katunayake, was established in 1968, with the generosity of the Canadian Government.
Ratmalana had to be virtually abandoned-with the giant strides made in the field of aviation-as the immediate vicinity was getting thickly populated and congested, with hardly any room for expansion and development of the airport.
Today, nearly 20 International Airlines operate in and of Katunayake Airport whilst Ratmalana has been virtually relegated into a military airport with restricted civilian domestic flights, operated by local carriers. |
Jolyroger
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13 Mar 2010 19:56:39 GMT Report for Abuse
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India seek Russian help.
India signed five deals Friday to purchase more than $7 billion in hardware and expertise from Russia, including an aircraft carrier, a fleet of MIG-29 fighters, defense and space technology and at least 12 civilian nuclear reactors.
On the minds of both parties, analysts said, was a nation not present at the signing. 'China will be the ghost in the room,' wrote analyst C. Raja Mohan in an opinion piece this week in the Indian Express.
Having a working aircraft carrier -- India's only carrier, the 50-year-old British-built Viraat, rarely leaves port -- should allow India to expand its presence in the Indian Ocean. India has watched China in recent years forge strategic port alliances with Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Myanmar as part of Beijing's South Asian 'string of pearls' strategy.
China doesn't have an aircraft carrier, although U.S. intelligence reports suggest it could within five years. Nor is it expected any time soon to base military craft in the Indian Ocean. But Beijing is heavily outspending India on defense and is keen to safeguard its seaborne oil trade with the Middle East, a lifeline for its hyper-charged economy.
'China is not now in the Indian Ocean, but we don't know what will happen in 15 years,' said Rahul Bhonsle, a retired Indian brigadier general and head of Security Risks, a military analysis firm. 'They've already showed their capabilities in the Pacific, and we need to be ready.'
Russia is also concerned about China's expansion. Although Moscow and Beijing recently settled several long-simmering border disputes, China's growing economic and political clout has Russia looking over its shoulder, particularly amid fears of encroachment in its sparsely populated Far East region. |
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