Giving assessment of the ever challenging task of coast guard and the ICGS Vaibhav, Indian High Commissioner, Jawed Ashraf, said "the spectrum of activities that they perform are truly head on. The range of the duties that they are performing truly deserved our greatest gratitude and admiration."
The High Commissioner highlighted and praised their efforts and ever ready spirit to keep the sea safe.
"It is their wonderful compassion at hands and the duty that they perform at saving these beautiful but endangered species to locating and rescuing fishermen caught in storms," he said.
The global economy in some sense is driven in what happens in this region, he pointed out.
"The Navy and Coast Guard (force) are doing an extraordinary job of keeping the sea lanes safe," said the High Commissioner of the regional navies and coast guards that interact with their Indian counterparts.
"They learn a great deal from each other and share the best practices, they understand that when the time comes, and a call of duty summons them, they have the capacity and familiarity with each other to respond in a coordinated and cooperative manner to any distress in this region whether it is in term of national disaster or crime on sea or in terms of piracy," he underlined.
ICGS arrived in Singapore yesterday on a goodwill- training visit. It will leave tomorrow for Darwin in Australia and stop at Kuantan in Peninsular Malaysia on the way back in March.
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