The Royal New Zealand Navy Anzac Class Frigate HMNZS TE KAHA and replenishment tanker HMNZS ENDEAVOUR will today begin a joint exercise with the Republic of Singapore Navy’s Frigate RSS STALWART off the East Coast of the North Island.

Joint Exercise with Republic of Singapore Navy

 

HMNZS TE KAHA and ENDEAVOUR conducting Replenishment at Sea exercises.
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HMNZS TE KAHA and ENDEAVOUR conducting Replenishment at Sea exercises.

Media Release 
15 October 2012

Joint Exercise Increases Interoperability with Republic of Singapore Navy

The Royal New Zealand Navy Anzac Class Frigate HMNZS TE KAHA and replenishment tanker HMNZS ENDEAVOUR will today begin a joint exercise with the Republic of Singapore Navy’s Frigate RSS STALWART off the East Coast of the North Island.

Exercise LION ZEAL is an annual bilateral exercise which strengthens the already close working relationship between the two Navies. It has been conducted annually since 2004 and provides a chance for the two Navies to practice their roles in maintaining regional security.

“LION ZEAL gives us a valuable opportunity to work alongside the highly regarded Republic of Singapore’s Navy,” says TE KAHA’s Commanding Officer, Commander Jon Beadsmoore.

“RSS STALWART was commissioned in 2009 and is a very technologically advanced warship. I’m looking forward to testing ourselves against her and increasing interoperability between our two Navies”.

“Our Navy’s Anzac Frigates are a valuable contributor to regional security so it’s important that we work seamlessly with other navies. It’s also important that we are interoperable and combat capable so this will be the last major exercise we undertake before TE KAHA is upgraded with latest cutting-edge technology next year,” says Commander Beadsmoore.

Exercise LION ZEAL will take place from 15 October through to 18 October. It consists of both a sea and shore phase, allowing both Navies to develop closer ties.

ENDS 

© Scoop Media

 
 
 
   

RNZ Navy band burgled during parade

Navy band burgled during parade

By Lindy Laird of The Northern Advocate

11:23 AM Monday Oct 15, 2012

Photo / File

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Photo / File

New Zealand Navy Band members’ personal possessions were stolen during a weekend break-in while the band was taking part in a military parade through Whangarei.

With bayonets fixed, drums beating, bands playing, colours flying and swords drawn, New Zealand Defence’s 3rd Auckland (Countess of Ranfurly’s Own) and Northland Battalion Group staged the first charter parade in Whangarei for 11 years.

“It went really well, it was brilliant, but the break-in of the navy band bus left a nasty taint to the day and given them a horrible reflection of Whangarei to take away with them,” Major Roberta Wilkinson said.

Police said the door of the locked bus parked in Rust Ave was jemmied open, and wallets, cellphones and other items stolen.

Although bad weather delayed the parade’s start, many people turned out to watch the colourful and archaic ritual that acknowledges a city’s appreciation for a unit’s service to the country. A charter parade is also a way for the services to pay tribute to the support of families, friends and work colleagues that enables local soldiers to deploy on operations overseas, Ms Wilkinson said.

When the parade reached the Whangarei Library plaza in Rust Ave, Mayor Morris Cutforth was presented with his New Zealand Defence Service Medal and then he conducted the ceremonial inspection.

The parade of 100 personnel was led by Commanding Officer Lieutenant Colonel Chris Powell, with Northland Army, Navy and Air Force Cadets forming a cordon at Rust Ave before falling into the parade.

– NORTHERN ADVOCATE

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Navy welcomes public to tour an active warship

Navy welcomes public to tour an active warship

  
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Rod Matthews reacts to the wind blowing up his uniform collar during tours of the guided-missile destroyer USS Sampson on Saturday in Seal Beach. The vessel recently returned from a six month deployment to the Western Pacific and Indian Ocean. Free tours for the public continue Sunday.
ANA VENEGAS, THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER

By JAIMEE LYNN FLETCHER / THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER

SEAL BEACH – It’s not every day Orange County residents get to tour a Navy warship.

Lucky for Orange County residents, they do once a year, and it’s this weekend.

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Go and do

What: Tour the guided missile destroyer USS Sampson

When: 10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Sunday

Where: The Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station. The public must enter at the base’s Wharf Gate, off of Seal Beach Boulevard just south of Pacific Coast Highway.

Cost: Free

Extra info: Cameras are allowed and walking shoes are encouraged. No bags or backpacks will be allowed on the ship. The ship is not handicapped accessible.

The Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station opened to thousands Saturday so the public could tour the guided missile destroyer USS Sampson.

The open house continues Sunday, and the weekend events have been known to draw anywhere from 4,000 to 10,000 people, Navy officials said.

Hundreds waited in line Saturday morning as guided tours of groups with 25 people walked the ship’s deck, got a first-hand look at the control room and learned about the weapons on board.

“It’s good from both points of view; for the public and the Navy,” said Placentia resident Selwyn Ramsay, 82.

Ramsay served on the aircraft carrier USS Randolph, built during WWII. He served as the aircraft maintenance officer on that ship from 1954 to 55 and stayed in the Navy until 1991, he said.

Ramsay moved easily through the narrow corridors and up and down the steep stairways, while others who weren’t used to the inner workings of a destroyer navigated with a little more hesitation and caution.

“This is how we get new sailors,” Ramsay said of the tour. “For us old sailors, we get to see how the Navy works now.”

The USS Sampson, featured in the movie “Battleship,” can handle a crew of up to 360 people, said LT LeeAnn Darland, Information Warfare Officer

The destroyer was commissioned in 2007 and recently returned from a six-month deployment in the Western Pacific and Indian Ocean.

The ship docked in Seal Beach on Friday to unload some of its Tomahawk missiles, Darland said.

“Seal Beach is primarily (about) ammo,” she said

Darland said the duties of the USS Sampson vary.

Its main mission is to support an aircraft carrier strike group, but the ship has also carried out counter-piracy missions and recently was deployed in the Strait of Hormuz between the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman off the coast or Iran to keep it open and safe for sea travel, Darland said.

While the tours are a huge draw for locals, military members and Navy enthusiasts from across Southern California made the trip for Saturday’s open house.

Department of Defense Engineer David Gonzalez, 51, brought his three daughters from Riverside to tour the destroyer. His middle child, Jatha, was celebrating her 11th birthday.

“We’re here because it’s my daughter’s birthday weekend, but since I’m in the Navy, we’re also here to show a little pride and patriotism,” Gonzalez said.

Jatha, wearing a blue Navy cap, said after taking the tour, that she might become a sailor.

“It was awesome, I liked the guns,” she said. “I want to be in the Navy.”

The USS Sampson will be open for free tours again from 10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. today.

Contact the writer: 714-796-7953 or jfletcher@ocregister.com

Ashes to be spread off Newfoundland coast where ferry was torpedoed in 1942

 
 
 
 
 
 

Ashes to be spread off Newfoundland coast where ferry was torpedoed in 1942

 
 
 
 

PORT AUX BASQUES, N.L. – Dozens of innocent people caught up in one of Canada’s worst wartime disasters are to be remembered Sunday with a ceremony marking the 70th anniversary of the sinking of the passenger ferry Caribou.

Members of the Royal Canadian Navy were planning to spread the ashes of two people with links to the tragedy into the icy waters of the Gulf of St. Lawrence where the civilian vessel was torpedoed by a German U-Boat in 1942.

Of the 237 people aboard the Caribou, which was sailing on its regular route from Nova Scotia to Newfoundland, 136 died in the frigid waters.

“It was warfare, and the U-boats were determined to shut down the trade between North America and Europe because they understood that (it) was going to tip the balance in who won the war,” said Royal Canadian Navy Commander Larry Trim from Sydney, N.S., on Saturday.

“It was one of the most tragic events during the Second World War. It was an immense tragedy that is still felt today.”

Members of the Canadian navy and Marine Atlantic officials were to hold a ceremony during a ferry crossing from Port aux Basques, N.L., to North Sydney, N.S, to mark the sinking seven decades ago.

Wreaths were to be tossed into the waters over the same spot where the Marine Atlantic vessel sank after the attack by the submarine U-69.

The ashes of Eric Andrews are to be spread into the waters during the ceremony, which was expected to take place Sunday afternoon. Trim said Andrews not only survived the sinking of the Caribou, but six other submarine attacks on ships during the Second World War.

“His story is amazing. He was torpedoed seven times… and the S.S. Caribou was the seventh,” said Trim. “He said it was the worst experience he went through, was the sinking of the S.S. Caribou, because there was so many men, women and children and so much confusion.

“He said the screaming of the women and children was awful.”

The ashes of Robert Cutler will also be spread at sea during the ceremony. Cutler’s father, Howard Cutler, was the mail room clerk aboard the Caribou and was among the 31 of 46 crew members who died during the attack, he said.

Both Cutler and Andrews had requested that their ashes be spread at the site.

Historical accounts say the Caribou was hit around 3:20 a.m. on Oct. 14, about 37 kilometres off the shores of Newfoundland in the Cabot Strait during its crossing from North Sydney, N.S.

Within five minutes, the ferry had sunk. Only one rescue boat carrying about 20 people made it into the water. Other survivors were left bobbing in the frigid Atlantic, clinging to debris and overturned life boats.

A warship that was escorting the ferry, HMCS Grandmere, had to hunt the U-boat before attempting to rescue survivors. The Grandmere located and attacked the sub, but it escaped.

Some historians have said the Caribou’s sinking was Canada’s worst naval disaster of the Second World War for Canada.

The tragic event instilled panic across Eastern Canada about whether it was safe for ships to sail in coastal waters.

Paul Griffin, president and CEO of Marine Atlantic, said it was an event that brought a war largely fought overseas to Canada’s doorstep.

“This and a number of other events were close to home,” said Griffin from St. John’s, N.L., on Saturday. “The fact that it happened so close to our shores really impacted people at the time.”

The ceremony was expected to take place during the ferry’s noon crossing, but poor weather could postpone the vessel’s departure, said Griffin.

— By Aly Thomson in Halifax

 

Read more:http://www.theprovince.com/news/Ashes+spread+Newfoundland+coast+where+ferry+torpedoed+1942/7387192/story.html#ixzz29Gp2NJdn

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