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St Petersburg (Russia),
January 16, 2008 (DefenceIndia News Service)
The delivery of an Indian
Navy diesel submarine, which recently underwent a two-year
refit at a Russian Barents Sea shipyard, will be delayed
by at least six months, a shipyard spokesman said Wednesday.
The Indian Navy refused last week to take delivery of
the Sindhuvijay, a Project 877 EKM diesel submarine,
whose overhaul began at the Zvyozdochka shipyard in
Severodvinsk in late 2005, saying its Club-S cruise
missile system had not met specifications.
"The submarine has
passed all its sea trials and was ready in November
2007, but the delivery had to be delayed due to problems
with the Club-S system," a Zvyozdochka spokesman
said.
The Indian Navy claimed
that cruise missiles failed to find their targets in
six consecutive test firings in September-November last
year.
The Zvyozdochka official
said the submarine would remain at the shipyard awaiting
further missile tests at a White Sea testing site in
July-August.
The much-touted Club-S
submarine cruise missile family includes the 3M-54E1
anti-ship missile and the 3M-14E land-attack versions,
with a flight range of 275 km. The high-precision missile
can be launched from standard torpedo tubes from a depth
of 35 to 40 meters (130 feet).
In a contract signed in
2001, India had sent 10 Kilo-class submarines to Russia
for refitting to make them capable of firing the Club-class
cruise missiles.
The Sindhuvijay is the
fourth Indian Navy submarine that has been overhauled
at the Zvezdochka shipyard.
Russia earlier announced
a delay in the overhaul of the Admiral Gorshkov aircraft
carrier, sold to India under a 2004 contract, citing
time and cost overruns.
The delivery of the carrier
has been pushed back to 2012-13, according to some sources,
while Russia asked for an additional $1.2 billion for
the warship, which was originally sold for $1.5 billion.
RIA Novosti
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