Visakhapatnam: A glorious era will come to an end with the decommissioning of the first destroyer of the Indian Navy – INS Rajput here on Friday.
INS Rajput, the lead ship of the Kashin-class destroyers built by the erstwhile USSR was commissioned on May 4, 1980 and has rendered yeoman service to the Indian Navy for over 41 years.
INS Rajput will now be decommissioned at a solemn ceremony at Naval Dockyard, Visakhapatnam, HQ Eastern Naval Command (ENC) said in a release here on Thursday.
Owing to the ongoing COVID pandemic, the ceremony will be a low-key event attended only by in-station officers and sailors with strict observance of COVID protocols.
INS Rajput was constructed in the 61 Communards Shipyard in Nikolaev (present-day Ukraine) under her original Russian name ‘Nadezhny’ meaning ‘Hope’.
The keel of the ship was laid on September 11, 1976 and it was launched on September 17, 1977.
The ship was commissioned as INS Rajput on May 4, 1980 at Poti, Georgia by IK Gujral, the Ambassador of India to USSR with Capt Gulab Mohanlal Hiranandani as her first Commanding Officer.
Over her four decades of glorious service to the nation, the ship has the distinction of serving in both Western and Eastern Fleets.
With the motto “Raj Karega Rajput” firmly etched in their minds and indomitable spirit, the gallant crew of INS Rajput have remained ever vigilant and always ‘on call’ to protect the maritime interest and sovereignty of the nation.
In her glorious 41-years, the ship had 31 Commanding Officers at her helm with the last CO taking charge of the ship on Aug 14, 2019.
As the sun sets on May 21, the Naval Ensign and the Commissioning Pennant will be hauled down for the last time onboard INS Rajput, symbolising the decommissioning.