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Read more about India navy set to open third base in strategic islands to counter China on Business Standard. About 1,20,000 ships pass through the Indian Ocean each year and nearly 70,000 of them pass through the Malacca Strait
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Business Standard India navy set to open third base in strategic islands to counter China About 1,20,000 ships pass through the Indian Ocean each year and nearly 70,000 of them pass through the Malacca Strait India's naval force will open a third air base in the Andaman and Nicobar islands on Thursday to amplify observation of Chinese ships and submarines entering the Indian Ocean through the adjacent Malacca Straits, military authorities and specialists said. New Delhi has become worried over the nearness of China's greater naval force in its neighborhood and the system of business ports it is working in a curve extending from Sri Lanka to Pakistan that India fears could wind up maritime stations. The Indian military has seized upon the Andamans that lie close to the passage to the Malacca Straits to
counter the Chinese test, conveying boats and flying machine since Prime Minister Narendra Modi took office in 2014 promising an increasingly strong arrangement. Indian naval force boss naval commander Sunil Lanba will commission the new base, called INS Kohassa, around 300 km (180 miles) north of the archipelago's capital, Port Blair, the naval force said in an announcement. The office, the third in the islands, will have a 1,000-meter runway for helicopters and Dornier observation air ship. Be that as it may, in the end the arrangement is for the runway to be stretched out to 3,000 meters to help warrior air ship and longer-run observation flying machine, naval force representative Captain D.K. Sharma said. Around 1,20,000 boats go through the Indian Ocean every year and almost 70,000 of them go through the Malacca Strait. "The basic thing is the extending Chinese nearness. On the off chance that we need to truly screen Chinese nearness, we should be enough prepared in the Andaman islands," said previous naval force commodore Anil Jai Singh. "In the event that you have air bases you can cover a bigger zone," he stated, adding he anticipated that the naval force should forever send more ships to the islands in the following period of the development. A Chinese submarine docked in Sri Lanka's Colombo port in 2014 that attracted such alert New Delhi that Modi's legislature raised the issue with the Sri Lankan specialists. The two India and China have been secured a challenge for impact, with New Delhi attempting to push back against Beijing's extensive discretion in the district.