Chinese cutter Haijing 1126

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Haijing 1126 (Chinese: 海警1126) is a 1,000 ton Type II cutter[1] (NATO reporting name: Shuke III class) of the China Coast Guard.[2]

NameChina Haijian 26 (CMS 26)
OwnerNorth China Sea Bureau [zh], State Oceanic Administration
CommissionedApril 22, 2011
Quick facts History, China ...
History
China
NameChina Haijian 26 (CMS 26)
OwnerNorth China Sea Bureau [zh], State Oceanic Administration
Operator1st Marine Surveillance Flotilla, North China Sea Fleet, China Marine Surveillance
CommissionedApril 22, 2011
DecommissionedJuly 22, 2013
Home portQingdao, Shandong
FateTransferred to China Coast Guard
History
China
NameHaijing 1126
OperatorChina Coast Guard
AcquiredJuly 22, 2013
Home portShanghai
StatusIn service
General characteristics
Class & type
  • 1,000 ton Type II cutter (Chinese name)
  • Shuke-III class cutter (NATO reporting name)
Displacement1,125 metric tons
Length77 meters
PropulsionMan SE diesel engine × 2
Speed20 knots (maximum)
Range5,000 nm
Close

She is a member of the 1st Bureau of the China Coast Guard and is stationed in Shanghai.[3]

Design

The Haijing 1126 is 77 meters long.[2] It has a speed of 20 knots, a range of 5000 nm.[1]

History

Haijian 26 (Chinese: 中国海监 26) was commissioned on April 22, 2011, as a China Marine Surveillance (CMS) ship in the 1st Marine Surveillance Flotilla of the North China Sea Fleet.[1]

On May 27, 2013, the Haijian 26's cruise group (including Haijian 26, 46, and 66) entered the disputed waters around the Diaoyu Islands to expel fishing boats sailed by Japanese right-wing Ganbare Nippon activists.[4]

Haijian 26 was renamed Haijing 1126 on July 22, 2013, after being transferred to the China Coast Guard.[2][5]

On August 7, 2013, she was deployed off the Diaoyu Islands.[6] She was deployed to the same region again on October 1, 2013.[7]

References

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