UMS Minye Theinkhathu
UMS Minye Theinkhathu
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History | |
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India | |
Name | INS Sindhuvir (S58) |
Builder | Rubin Design Bureau and refitted by Hindustan Shipyard |
Launched | 13 September 1987 |
Commissioned | 26 August 1988 |
Decommissioned | 2020 |
Fate | Transferred to Myanmar, 2020 |
Myanmar | |
Name | UMS Minye Theinkhathu |
Namesake | Mingyi Swe |
Acquired | 2020 |
Commissioned | 24 December 2020 |
Status | in active service |
Service record | |
Part of: |
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General characteristics | |
Class and type | Sindhughosh-class submarine (Kilo Project-877EKM variant) |
Displacement |
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Length | 72.6 m (238 ft) |
Beam | 9.9 m (32 ft) |
Draught | 6.6 m (22 ft) |
Propulsion |
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Speed | |
Range |
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Endurance | Up to 45 days with a crew of 52 |
Test depth |
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Complement | 52 (incl. 13 Officers) |
Sensors and processing systems |
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Electronic warfare & decoys |
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Armament |
UMS Minye Theinkhathu (71) (Burmese: မင်းရဲသိင်္ခသူ; [mɪ́ɴjɛ́ θèiɴgəðù]) is a Sindhughosh (Kilo)-class submarine owned by the Myanmar Navy. It is the service's first and, as of 2021, only serving submarine. Before being acquired by Myanmar, it served in the Indian Navy as INS Sindhuvir (S58).
Background[]
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Beginning in the 1980s and ending in 2000, the Indian Navy acquired ten Kilo-class submarines from the Soviet Union and its successor state Russia. Within India, they are known as the Sindhughosh class.[citation needed]
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Myanmar acquired Sindhuvir in 2020.[3][4][5] The ship was refitted by Hindustan Shipyard before the handover.[6][3]
The submarine was first seen publicly as a Myanmar Navy ship, as UMS Minye Theinkhathu, on 15 October 2020 as part of a naval fleet exercise (‘Bandoola 2020’).[5] The submarine was formally commissioned along with other six new ships at the 73rd Navy Day ceremony on 24 December 2020.[7][8] The ceremony was attended by the Indian and Russian ambassadors to Myanmar, which the military intelligence company Jane's believes could indicate Russian involvement in the submarine's transfer to Myanmar.[8]
It appears to be named after Minye Theinkhathu of Toungoo (Taungoo), who was the father of King Bayinnaung and served as viceroy of Toungoo from 1540 to 1549.[citation needed]
Gallery[]
UMS Minye Theinkhathu at the Bandoola naval exercise
UMS Minye Theinkhathu at the 73rd Myanmar Navy Day ceremony (24 December 2020)
UMS Minye Theinkhathu at the commissioning ceremony
References[]
- ^ "Rosoboron exports - Project 636".
- ^ "Rosoboron exports - Project 636".
- ^ Jump up to: a b Laskar, Rezaul H (21 October 2020). "India gifts a submarine to Myanmar, gains edge over China". Hindustan Times. Retrieved 25 October 2020.
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 19 June 2009. Retrieved 5 August 2009.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- ^ Jump up to: a b Mazumdar, Mrityunjoy (19 October 2020). "Myanmar Navy showcases newly acquired submarine in Fleet Exercise Bandoola". Janes. Retrieved 25 October 2020.
- ^ "HSL finishes refit of INS Sindhuvir before schedule". The Hindu. 21 February 2020. Retrieved 21 February 2020.
- ^ Information Team, Tatmadaw (24 December 2020). "(၇၃)နှစ်မြောက်တပ်မတော်(ရေ)နေ့အထိမ်းအမှတ် တိုက်ခိုက်ရေးရေငုပ်သင်္ဘော စစ်ရေယာဉ် (မင်းရဲသိင်္ခသူ) အပါအဝင် စစ်ရေယာဉ်များ တပ်တော်ဝင်ခြင်း အခမ်းအနား ကျင်းပပြုလုပ်". Tatmadaw. Archived from the original on 24 December 2020. Retrieved 24 December 2020.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Herschelman, Kerry; Rahmat, Ridzwan (30 December 2020). "Myanmar commissions submarine, warships on 73rd Navy Day". Janes. Retrieved 8 March 2021.
- Sindhughosh-class submarines
- Attack submarines
- Ships built in the Soviet Union
- Ships of the Myanmar Navy
- 1987 ships
- Submarine stubs