close

Navy extends watch over the Indian Ocean region: Ministry of Defence

Now the IFC-IOR's partnership with the RCOC, Seychelles, allows the Indian Navy to focus its watch further south

Ajai Shukla New Delhi
Navy extends its watch over Indian Ocean region

The IFC-IOR primarily watches over the Northern Indian Ocean, through which run sea lines of communications (SLOCs) that carry 75 per cent of the world’s maritime trade and half of daily oil consumption

To enhance cooperation in the realm of maritime security, India’s high-tech control centre for monitoring traffic through the Indian Ocean Region agreed on Tuesday to cooperate with a similar body in Seychelles, in the southern Indian Ocean.
Set up by the Indian Navy in 2019 in Gurugram, the Information Fusion Centre for the Indian Ocean Region (IFC-IOR) signed a memorandum of understanding with the Regional Coordination Operations Centre (RCOC), Seychelles.

“(This) aims to promote collaboration between the two centres towards enhancing maritime domain awareness, information sharing and expertise development,” the Ministry of Defence (MoD) stated on Wednesday.
The IFC-IOR is a diplomatic initiative that underlines India’s status as the guardian of the Indian Ocean — a “net security provider” that brings together regional countries to safeguard global commons, freedom of navigation and to provide security against challenges such as piracy, terrorism, gun-running, narcotics, human migration and illegal fishing.

Towards this, it obtains feeds from a range of space-based and terrestrial sensors and sources, to track fishing boats and commercial vessels near India’s coast and in the vast maritime domain beyond.
“IFC-IOR, hosted by the Indian Navy, was established by the Government of India at Gurugram on December 22, 2018, to enhance collaborative maritime safety and security in the Indian Ocean Region in line with India’s vision of Security and Growth for All in the Region (SAGAR),” said the MoD.

Also Read

New ensign pays tribute to Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj: Indian Navy

World's oldest dock: Lothal set to get National Maritime Heritage Complex

A match not made in start-up heaven

Navy proposes operationalising Indian Ocean partnership initiative

Navy buys 'enhanced range' BrahMos missiles for Rs 1,700 crore

G20: India stresses diplomacy as world marks a year of war in Europe

RBI MPC minutes show deepening concerns over inflation pressures

Yogi govt tables budget worth Rs 6.9 trn targeting $1 trn-economy by 2027

Railways on fast track to achieve its 100% electrification target by 2024

Market regulator Sebi proposes to introduce 5 new categories in ESG funds


The IFC-IOR primarily watches over the Northern Indian Ocean, through which run sea lines of communications (SLOCs) that carry 75 per cent of the world’s maritime trade and half of daily oil consumption.
Now the IFC-IOR’s partnership with the RCOC, Seychelles, allows the Indian Navy to focus its watch further south.

To enable better cooperation, IFC-IOR also hosts International Liaison Officers (ILOs) from 12 partner nations: Australia, France, Italy, Japan, Maldives, Mauritius, Myanmar, Sri Lanka, Seychelles, Singapore, the UK and the US, said the MoD.
The maritime security architecture in the Western Indian Ocean is supported by the Regional Maritime Information Fusion Centre (RMIFC), the RCOC in Seychelles and the national centres of seven signatory countries: Comoros, Djibouti, France, Kenya, Madagascar, Mauritius, and Seychelles, said the MoD. 

The thrust of this initiative remains to track civil, commercial shipping. For tracking its own and hostile warships, the Navy maintains a separate “Operations Room.” There is a deliberate firewall between the two.
The IFC-IOR obtains inputs from a range of sensors. Primary inputs come from India’s coastal radar network that is manned by the Coast Guard.

Information is also generated from White Shipping Agreements that India has with 36 countries, and three multinational agencies. These feed in details of all commercial shipping passing through their ports.
IMAC also incorporates inputs from LRIT (long range identification and tracking). This mechanism, which works under the International Maritime Organisation, paves the way for 174 countries to provide real-time information on their commercial shipping.

Custom-designed software feeds this diverse data, obtained from multiple sources, into a “common operating picture.” 

First Published: Feb 22 2023 | 7:45 PM IST

Explore News